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Queen's Crescent Market is an outdoor street market held every Thursday and Saturday on Queen's Crescent in Kentish Town, Camden between the junction with Malden Road in the West and the junction with Grafton Road in the East. Licences to trade are issued by Camden London Borough Council.
The name of Kentish Town is probably derived from Ken-ditch or Caen-ditch, meaning the "bed of a waterway" and is otherwise unrelated to the English county of Kent. [1] In researching the meaning of Ken-ditch, it has also been noted that ken is the Celtic word for both "green" and "river", while ditch refers to the River Fleet, now a subterranean river. [2]
The street is located in Kentish Town, part of the London Borough of Camden, and is next to the B518 and the Gospel Oak to Barking train line. [1] It is also on Bus route 88 and route 214, being a short distance from stops on both routes. [2] [3]
Bluewater Shopping Centre (commonly referred to as Bluewater) is an out-of-town shopping centre in Stone (postally Greenhithe), Kent, England, just outside the M25 motorway ring, 17.8 miles (28.6 km) east south east of London's centre.
Gospel Oak is an area of north west London in the London Borough of Camden at the very south of Hampstead Heath.The neighbourhood is positioned between Hampstead to the north-west, Dartmouth Park to the north-east, Kentish Town to the south-east, and Belsize Park to the south-west.
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This is a list of settlements in Kent by population based on the results of the 2011 census.Another United Kingdom census took place in 2021.In 2011, there were 44 built-up area subdivisions with 5,000 or more inhabitants in Kent, shown in the table below.
John Strype's map of 1720 describes London as consisting of four parts: The City of London, Westminster, Southwark and the eastern 'That Part Beyond the Tower'. [1] As London expanded, it absorbed many hundreds of existing towns and villages which continued to assert their local identities.