Islington

From Free net encyclopedia

Template:Infobox London placeIslington is an inner-city district in north London. The area usually referred to as Islington is now part of the London Borough of Islington to which it gave its name.

The street that forms the linear centre of Islington is Upper Street and contains numerous restaurants, clothes boutiques, present shops and pubs. It is also home to Arsenal F.C., who are situated in Highbury.

Contents

History

Because of its proximity to the City of London, Islington developed as a fashionable area in the nineteenth century, with large well-built houses. However changes in residential patterns led to a decline in its popularity, and by the mid-twentieth century it was largely run down and a by-word for urban poverty.

Gentrification

From about the 1980s the district was rediscovered, and experienced a rapid process of gentrification, becoming very popular among fashionable people, particularly of a younger generation. A number of the central figures in the New Labour movement lived there, including Tony Blair before his victory in the 1997 General Election, and the district has become synonymous with a new class of left-leaning fashionable professionals, dismissed by some as "Guardian readers" and/or "champagne socialists". Despite this, parts of Islington still suffer from urban deprivation, and grim council estates sit cheek by jowl with elegant Georgian houses. It is one of the most socially diverse boroughs in the UK and contains the parliamentary constituencies of Islington North and Islington South and Finsbury.

In literature

Image:Islington E Baker 1805.jpg Islington features extensively in modern English literature and culture. Notably, Douglas Adams lived in Islington and used it as a setting in his novels. In Neil Gaiman's best selling novel Neverwhere Islington is an angel that lives under London, named after the Angel tube station. Knife and Packer's cartoon It's grim up North London, published in Private Eye, satirises the stereotypical Islingtonian. Holloway Road was the home to the fictional Charles Pooter in the classic 19th Century Novel Diary of a Nobody.

Residents

Fame

Image:IslingtonTownHall.jpg Islington is well known for its antique shops. The area is also well-known through the British version of Monopoly which features The Angel, Islington. However, in the game the Angel is the third cheapest property on the board, and is said to have been included as the licensees considered the names of places they were to use on the board over tea in the Lyon's Corner House built on the site of the original Angel Inn.

Universities

Islington is home to two universities;

See also

External links

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