Clerkenwell
Clerkenwell, neighbourhood in the inner borough of Islington, London. It is composed of the parishes of St. James and St. John.
The area developed around the Nunnery of St. Mary (replaced by St. James, Clerkenwell Green, in 1792) and the Priory of St. John of Jerusalem, both founded in the 12th century by Jorden de Briset. The name Clerkenwell refers to the “clerks’ well” (rediscovered in Farringdon Road in 1924) that adjoined the nunnery and was the scene of medieval miracle plays. Until the dissolution of the monasteries (1536–39), the Priory of St. John was a headquarters of the Knights of Malta (Hospitalers). Only the 16th-century gatehouse, known as St. John’s Gate, and the priory’s 12th-century crypt remain.
Clerkenwell grew with the overflowing population of central London. In the mid-17th century it was home to many Huguenot refugees, merchants, and tradesmen, as well as to such uncouth locales as the Red Bull Theatre. It was a focus of suffering during the Great Plague of London.
The “Little Italy” section of Clerkenwell recalls immigrations of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Clerkenwell’s traditions of making clocks and watches began in the 18th century and survive in a villagelike district with a mixture of housing, workshops, and business services for the adjacent City of London.