
University of London
School of Advanced Study
Institute of Historical Research
CMH
CENTRE
FOR METROPOLITAN HISTORY
Institute of Historical Research,
Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU
Tel: 020 7862 8790
Fax: 020 7862 8793
Email: ihrcmh@sas.ac.uk
Welcome to the CMH Website
Established in 1988, in collaboration with the Museum of London and other organisations, the Centre for Metropolitan History fulfils a long-standing need in London. It promotes the study and wide appreciation of London's character and development from its beginnings to the present day, and is concerned to set the history of London in the wider context provided by knowledge of other metropolises.
Latest News
Call for Papers: Restoration London (22-23
September 2010)
In collaboration with the Centre for Hearth Tax Research (Roehampton) and Birkbeck,
University of London, the Centre is organising a conference to reassess life
and living in Restoration London, to be held at the IHR on 22-23 September 2010.
Proposals for papers on any aspect of life in later Stuart London are welcomed,
but particularly encouraged are those on 'London and its hinterlands', 'crime',
'employment', 'European and wider comparisons', 'health', 'housing and the built
environment', 'hearths in domestic and work contexts', and 'religious observance'.
Abstracts of 400 words should be sent to John
Price or Andrew Wareham.
Deadline: 31 May 2010. For further information see: www.history.ac.uk/events/conferences/1162.
Metropolitan History Seminar
The final seminar in the 2009-10 Metropolitan History programme, will take place
on Wednesday 10 March at 5.30 pm in the Pollard Room, First Floor, Institute
of Historical Research. Jordan Landes (CMH) will give a paper on 'London Quakers
in the Atlantic world before 1725'. The seminar is free of charge and is open
to all. No advance booking is necessary.
CMH Staff Changes
Congratulations are due to Dr Mark Merry on his appointment, from 1 January,
as IHR Digital Projects and Training Officer. Although Mark will continue to
lend his expertise to the 'Life
in the Suburbs' project, we are delighted to welcome his replacement as
Research Officer, Dr Mark Latham. Mark joins us from the Centre for Urban History,
University of Leicester where he recently completed his PhD on 'The London Bridge
Improvement Act of 1756: a study of early modern urban finance and administration'.
Gresham College Lecture
The Centre's Director, Dr Matthew Davies, gave a lecture at Gresham College
on 29 April as part of the 'Tudor Ports of London' series celebrating the centenary
of the Port of London Authority. Entitled 'Merchants
and Heroes: London's history in the time of John Stow', an audio
file and video of the lecture are both available on the Gresham
College website.
'People
in Place' Project Website
The new website for the 'People in Place:
families, households and housing early modern London' project is now online.
The project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (Ref: AN4417/APN16429)
and undertaken by the Centre in collaboration with Birkbeck and the Cambridge
Group for the History of Population and Social Structure, examined the crucial
role of family and household in the social and economic transformations which
took place in London between 1550 and 1720. It reconstructed and analysed the
dense matrix of families, households, properties, and buildings in the sample
areas of Cheapside, St Botolph Aldgate, and Clerkenwell, tracing their evolution
over time, to gain new insights into social structures and the agents and circumstances
of change. The website not only introduces the methods and findings of the project,
but also provides access to the project's data, published and unpublished papers.
MA in Historical Research
The Centre, in conjunction with the Victoria County History, offers an MA
in Historical Research. Students take two 15-week training modules, 5000-word
special project on a topic of their choice and a 15,000-word dissertation. The
course can be taken either full-time (over one academic year) or part-time (two
years). For information on this and other postgraduate degrees available at
the IHR, see the Study
and training section of the IHR website.

'London's Past Online' Click here to
access the bibliography
Browse the London History Research in Progress list here
Links
External links:
Last updated: 9 March, 2010
Please email comments to Olwen.Myhill@sas.ac.uk