Online Encyclopedia

TOTTENHAM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 92 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TOTTENHAM  , an

urban
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district in the Tottenham
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parliamentary division of Middlesex, England, forming a north suburb of
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London, 61 m. north of London
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Bridge, adjoining
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Edmonton on the south . Pop . (Igor), 102,541 . Its full name, not now in use, was Tottenham High
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Cross, from the cross near the centre of the township . The origin and significance of this cross are doubtful . The
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present structure was erected c . 1600, and ornamented with stucco in 18(39 . In the time of Isaak Walton there stood by it a shady arbour to which the
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angler was wont to resort . Formerly Tottenham was noted for its " greens," in the centre of one of which stood the famous old
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elm trees called the " Seven Sisters "; these were removed in 184o, but the name is pre-served in the Seven Sisters Road . Bruce castle, on the site of the old mansion of the Bruces, but built probably by
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Sir William Compton in the beginning of the 16th century, was occupied by a boarding-school founded by Mr (afterwards Sir) Rowland Hill in 1827 on the
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system instituted by him at Hazlewood,
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Birmingham . It became public
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property in 1892 . The church of All Hallows, Tottenham, was given by David, king of Scotland (c .

1126) to the canons of the church of

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Holy Trinity, London . It retains Perpendicular portions, a south porch of brick of the 16th century and numerous ancient monuments and brasses . The grammar school was enlarged and endowed in 1686 by Sarah, dowager duchess of Somerset . The urban district formerly included Wood Green to the west, but this became a
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separate urban district in 1888 (pop . 34,233) . In the reign of
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Edward the
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Confessor the
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manor of Tottenham was possessed by
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Earl Waltheof . It was inherited by his daughter Maud, who was married first to Simon de St Liz and after-wards to David, son of Malcolm III., king of Scotland, who was created by Henry I. earl of Huntingdon, and received possessionof all the lands formerly held by Earl Waltheof . The manor thus descended to William the Lion, king of Scotland, and was granted by him in 1184 to his
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brother David, earl of Angus and Galloway, the grant being confirmed in 1199 by King John of England, who created him earl of Huntingdon . He married Maud, heiress of
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Hugh, earl of Chester, and his son John inherited both earldoms . The son married
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Helen, daughter of
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Llewelyn, prince of Wales, by whom he was poisoned in 1237, dying without issue . She retained possession till 1254, when the manor was divided between his coheirs Robert de Brus, John de Baliol and Henry de Hastings, each division forming a distinct manor bearing the name of its owner . In 1429 they were reunited in the possession of John Gedeney, alderman of London .

William Bedwell, the Arabic

scholar, was vicar of Tottenham, and published in 1632 a Briefe Description of the Towne of Tottenham, in which he printed for the, first time the burlesque poem, the Turnament of Tottenham .

End of Article: TOTTENHAM
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