is erected

  • 11distended scales — erected scales, a symptom of various fish diseases involving swellings such as dropsies …

    Dictionary of ichthyology

  • 12(St.) Anne, Chapel of —    Erected by John de Grantham near the church of St. Antonin, 1345 (Ct. H.W. I. 476), in honour of St. Anne and other saints. He to be buried in the chapel of St. Anne and St. John the Baptist near the church of St. Antonin 1350 1 (ib. 648).… …

    Dictionary of London

  • 13Conduit by St. Mary Magdalen, Old Fish Street —    Erected 1583 and castellated with stone for the receipt of Thames water, conveyed to it at the charges of Barnard Randolph (S. 18, 356, 371).    In 1582 the Lord Mayor addressed a letter to the Lord Chancellor, begging for his assent to this… …

    Dictionary of London

  • 14Conduit in Lothbury —    Erected at the charges of the City in 1546, Sir Martin Bowes being Mayor. Water was brought from springs lying between Hoxton and Iseldon. In Coleman Street Ward (S. 18 and 285).    Not shown in the maps …

    Dictionary of London

  • 15Converts (House of) —    Erected in Chancery Lane (New Street as it was then called) by Henry III. for converted Jews (S. 282). Wheatley says in 1233.     Houses in the close of the site of the place of the Converts, 50 H. III. (Cal. P.R. H. III. 1258 66, p. 634).… …

    Dictionary of London

  • 16Fleet Market —    Erected over the course of the Fleet or New Canal, after it had been enclosed and arched over, above Fleet Bridge, 1737 (Rocque, 1746 Greenwood, 1827).    It had stood formerly on the bank of Fleet Ditch (Hatton, 1708).    For corn, etc.… …

    Dictionary of London

  • 17Forcier, near Broken Wharf —    Erected by Bevis Bulmer in 1594 within the gate of an old stone house belonging to the Duke of Norfolk, 11 H. VI., by Broken Wharf, to convey Thames water into men s houses of West Cheape, St. Paul s, Fleet Street, etc. (S. 18, 364) …

    Dictionary of London

  • 18Forcier, near London Bridge —    Erected by Peter Moris, a Dutchman, in 1582, for the supply of water to the eastern part of the City (S. 18).    Water was conveyed over the steeple of St. Magnus Church at the north end of London Bridge to houses in Thames Street, New Fish… …

    Dictionary of London

  • 19Leathersellers' Almshouses —    Erected by the Leathersellers in Clarke s Court, Bishopsgate, founded 1544.    In White s Alley, Coleman Street, 1617. In Hart Street, Cripplegate, 1612, on the north side (Lockie, 1816 Elmes, 1831) …

    Dictionary of London

  • 20Little Conduit by the Stocks Market —    Erected about 1500 (S. 18). In Walbrook Ward. Removed after the Fire 1666 (Strype, ed. 1720, I. i. 28).    Strype describes it as a little postern of stone set up with a cesterne of lead inside it, 1 H. VIII. opposite the south east corner of… …

    Dictionary of London