CHAPTER XX LONDON The City The London County Council Finance Education Public Assistance Housing, Health and Safety Development General Problems The Metropolitan Boroughs Ad hoc Authorities In the early Middle Ages, London held pre-eminence among English cities because of its nearness to the larger civilisadon of Europe. Those Kings of England who had great interests in France found it a convenient capital; the presence of the Court provided a market. The fact that London was a port, which has at all times been of first importance, gained fresh significance when the discoveries of the sixteenth century made Western Europe the centre rather than the edge of the world. While the Industrial Revolution increased the importance of the North of England, it also swelled the number of artisans in London; and the development of a world economy added yet again to London's importance as a centre of trade and finance. To-day there is still the old "City" keeping its boundaries, street names, and forms of Government much as they were centuries ago, but crowded with banks, with insurance, shipping and trading companies, and financial houses, so that the words "the City" denote not so much a place as an economic institution. Round this City have grown the dwellings of millions, rich and poor, who get their livings ftom the town's commerce and industry, or by •ministering to the wants of their fellow citizens; systematic 322