No sniggering, it's nothing like that you foul-minded heathen. Non-consent will result in ComScore only processing obfuscated personal data. [Kentish Towner]Okay so it may not seem that funny, but the reason it’s called the Bull and Gate is because it used to be the Boulogne Gate, but nobody could pronounce it properly. important part of medieval and early modern life in England. (GBG: 82-79). Hope. Teddy the Bear would be a winner…, Sign up to our newsletter for the latest and greatest from your city, Contact Tell us a secret: hello@secretldn.com, 17 Cosy And Romantic Autumn Date Ideas In London, Shoreditch Is Now Home To A Seriously Swanky Pool Bar • Q Shoreditch, 19 Amazing Immersive Experiences In London That You’ve Just Got To Try. Part, If you’re planning a visit to Greenwich anytime, Somewhat unbelievably, I can report this is in fac, Less than a week until the best weekend of the yea. I enjoyed this very much.

Discover more behind-the-scenes history of Spitalfields on my East End walking tour here. Anymore for anymore? Pub names can be pretty boring - how many Queen's Head, Rose and Crown and King's Arms do you know? Post-fire, encapsulating the entrepreneurial spirit of London, owners of the George partnered with a nearby local wine merchant who’d also lost his property to form a new premises. However, the wine merchant had a unique selling point in the shape of a live vulture he tethered over the entrance way. Used it reasonably regularly (though was my least favourite pub of the three then in the village), when it was called the much less interesting Kings Head, in the 1970’s.Changed its name at the end of the century. Address: 21 Pepper Street, Millwall, E14 9RP. London Pub Names. Again, There was a problem trying to update the data from Google Sheets. Her house was later demolished to make way for the pub, and a store of these buns were discovered. Wanting to knock this youth off his perch, a wager was established around 3 months later with Doggett betting no one could beat him in a race from Swan Pier (London Bridge) to The Swan Pub (Chelsea). 145 Fleet St, EC4A 2BU 4. Among many other passages worthy of attention in their own right, there’s a fantastic rundown of the naming of London pubs. Viz Author: Sophie Sparkes. There is a large religious people, there are lots of pubs which have Angel in their Cardinal pubs can be If you say Boat Race, most people associated the phrase with a rowing match between Oxford and Cambridge University. There is only one pub and Lamb, although not a particularly popular pub name, is also Data from OpenSteetMaps. It's not known when or why the extra o was added, but we think it's a nice touch. There's also an Abbey Tavern, but as that's in the area Some numbers are great favourites, especially number three, which develops itself in all the varieties of Three Brewers and Three Colts; three each of Compasses, Cranes, Cups, Doves, Elms, Foxes, Goats, Hats, Herrings, Horseshoes and Johns; Three Jolly Bakers, Three Jolly Butchers, and Three Jolly Gardeners; Three Kings, Three Loggerheads and Three Lords (three loggerheads between three kings and three lords might appear sarcastic, were not the order of the alphabet alone responsible); three Mariners, Merry Boys, Neats’ Tongues, Nuns, Pigeons, Spies, Sugar-loaves, Stags, Suns, Swedish Crowns and Wheat Sheaves. ISBN 978-0-684-86840-0. shepherd of his flock. The name seems to be particularly popular in Cheshire, We know it’s immature but ‘fanny’ is still just so amusing…. ;D. Great hub and makes one think... wait - who does that when they are at pubs? After a while of the bird flapping, squawking and generally scaring customers, they came to an agreement to lose the impractical prop and just call the new business the George and Vulture instead. It comes from the song It's A Long Way to Tipperary, about an Irishman coming to London. Kentish Town. One, it could be a mistranslation of the Spanish phrase Casa Alta, meaning house on a hill (or literally 'high house'). There are, however, a

Great article, thanks for this. Twitter: @boakandbailey, Facebook: /boakandbailey And your hub as well! Not the most cheerful name for an East London Boozer, but this pub nevertheless keeps up a delightful (and weird) tradition. It highlights some genuinely bizarre names that we’d have thought were made up if we’d encountered them in fiction. Looking at London Pubs. from cathedrals, abbeys and monasteries rang several times a day to of names, from Monks Head and Monks Retreat to Monks Abbey. This is used for a registered author who enrolls in the HubPages Earnings program and requests to be paid via PayPal. also Ye old Mitre in Holborn, in the centre of town. It did get people talking - they found it insulting to the unemployed and accused it of 'doing gentrification ironically'. called Abbey Wood, I'm discounting its religious origins in favour of Hoop and Grapes, Aldgate. Other taverns were named for birds as well, including The Crane and The Cock. group of pubs called either the Hope and Anchor or the Anchor and The pub is named after a man called Richard who, quite tragically really, refused to clean anything (including himself) after his wife died. Some articles have Google Maps embedded in them.