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QUANTITATIVE REASONING AND COMMERCIAL LOGIC IN REBUILDING PLANS AFTER THE GREAT FIRE OF LONDON, 1666

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2020

AVITAL LAHAV*
Affiliation:
The Hebrew University in Jerusalem
*
The Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel School for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, The Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Mount Scopus Campus, 9190501, Israel[email protected]

Abstract

Rebuilding plans submitted after the Great Fire of London in 1666 have been widely treated by historians of the Great Fire and in wide-scope histories of London and modern city planning. However, few attempts have been made to assign an overarching logic to all of them, while paying attention to their texts as well as to their maps. The following article highlights certain common features in these abortive efforts to plan London, assigns a common logic to all of them, and traces the origins of this logic. Such an analysis illuminates the economic principles in plans that are usually examined for their architectural features, and places them in a different historical context. Rather than seeing them as manifestations of contemporary architectural trends, or as a continuation of ongoing attempts to regulate London's cityscape, the plans are presented here as a response to emerging ideas in mid-seventeenth-century England about the nature of value and the economic function of cities within the world of commerce. Such a view reveals the complex interplay between London's early modern growth and the emergence of new forms of knowledge in seventeenth-century England and reasserts the importance of these plans as forerunners of present-day city planning.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2020

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Footnotes

I wish to thank Dror Wahrman for his ongoing counsel and support, and the Mandel foundation for funding the research for this article, as a part of a larger project about the Great Fire of London. I am also grateful to Ted McCormick, Jaap Evert Abrahamse, the members of the Renaissance and Early Modern Studies Forum at the Hebrew University, and two anonymous reviewers of the Historical Journal for constructive comments on earlier drafts.

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