Finsbury division
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The Finsbury Division was one of four divisions of the Hundred of Ossulstone, in the county of Middlesex, England. The other divisions were named Holborn, Kensington and Tower. Ossulstone hundred was divided in the seventeenth century, with each of the four divisions replacing the hundred for most administrative purposes.
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[edit] Area
The division stretched from the boundary of the City of London north to the border between Middlesex and Hertfordshire. In 1899 the area, with the southern section becoming part of the new County of London, and the northern section remaining in Middlesex.
The area is now covered by three London Boroughs: Islington, parts of Barnet, Haringey, and Hackney.
[edit] Later use of the name "Finsbury"
Under the Reform Act 1832, part of the Division became the Parliamentary Borough of Finsbury. A smaller area became the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury in 1900. The placename "Finsbury" now generally refers to part of the London Borough of Islington formerly the Metropolitan Borough.
[edit] Constituent Parishes
The Finsbury Division contained the following "parishes, townships, precincts and places":
Inner Parishes (Included in the district of the Metropolitan Board of Works 1855, County of London 1889
- The parish of St Luke
- The liberty of Glasshouse Yard
- The parish of St Sepulchre
- The parish of St James, Clerkenwell
- The parish of St Mary, Islington
- The parish of St Mary, Stoke Newington
- The Charterhouse
- The liberty of the Rolls
- The parish of St Pancras
- The parish of St John, Hampstead
- The parish of St Marylebone
- The parish of Paddington
- The precinct of the Savoy
Outer Parishes