The East End of London is the historic core of wider East London. It lies east of the Roman and medieval walls of the City of London and north of the River Thames. It does not have universally accepted boundaries to the north and east, though the River Lea is sometimes seen as the eastern boundary.
About East End of London in brief

Beyond the small eastern extramural wards, the narrowest definition restricts theEast End to the modern London Borough of Tower Hamlets. A more common preference is to add to Tower Hamlet the former parish and borough of Shoreditch, which is now the southern part of the modern Borough ofHackney. The first known written record of East End as a distinct entity, as opposed its component parts, comes from John Strype’s 1720 Survey of London, which describes London as consisting of four parts: the City, Westminster, Southwark, and ‘That Part beyond the Tower’. Later, as London grew further, the fully urbanised Tower Division became a byword for wider East East London, before East London growing further still, east ofThe area is taken to include the small ancientextramural City wards of Bishopsgate Without and the Portsoken. The various channels of the river Lea are sometimes viewed as the east boundary. The walls were such a constraint to growth, that the position of the gates has been fundamental to the shaping of the capital. Even beyond the walls, the land outside the gates separated Cripplegate and Sokelegate to the west and Cornhill to the east. During the Anglo-Saxon period the two sides were separate administration and had distinct economies, with separate customs and customs regulations. The gates, built in the late 1300s, were the first or early third century, built with the second or third entrance to the city.
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This page is based on the article East End of London published in Wikipedia (as of Dec. 03, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






