This is a list of the etymology of street names in the London district of Holborn. Holborn has no formally defined boundaries - those utilised here are: Theobald’s Road to the north, Gray's Inn Road and the City of London boundary to the east, Victoria Embankment/the Thames to the south, and Lancaster Place, the north-west curve of the Aldwych semi-circle, Kingsway/Southampton Row to the west.
Aldwych – from Old English ‘Ealdwic’ or ‘Aldwic’, meaning ‘old settlement’, given by Anglo-Saxons referring to a Danish settlement here of the 9th century[1][2][3]
Andrews Crosse – after a former Tudor-era inn here of this name[4]
Arundel Street – after Arundel House which formerly stood on this site[5][6]
Bedford Row – from Peter Harpur of Bedford, a local landowner who laid this street out in the early 18th century[7][8]
Bell Yard – after the Bell Inn, which stood here in the 16th century[7][9]
Bishop’s Court – formerly led to the palace of the Bishop of Chichester, built in the 13th century[10][11]
Brownlow Street – after William Brownlow, who built this street in the 17th century; his family had held land in the area since the 16th century[12][13]
Carey Street – after Nicholas Carey, who lived in this area[14] or Sir George Carey[15]
French Horn Yard – unknown; the entrance to this yard is now covered by development, and though it still exists between nos. 87 and 90 and High Holborn it is no longer generally accessible to the public
Fulwood Place – after Sir George Fulwood, 16th century member of Gray's Inn[38][39]
Grange Court – thought to a descriptive name dating from the Middle Ages when this was farmland[40]
Gray’s Inn Place, Gray's Inn Road and Gray's Inn Square – from Lord Gray of Wilton, owner of a local inn or town house which was later leased to lawyers in the 16th century[41][42]
Greyhound Court – thought to be after a former inn of this name[45]
Hand Court – thought to be from a former shop sign advertising gloves or a tailors[46]
High Holborn, Holborn, Holborn Circus and Holborn Place – thought to be from ‘hollow bourne’ i.e. the river Fleet which formerly flowed in a valley near here. The ‘High’ stems from the fact that rode led away from the river to higher ground. Circus is a British term for a road junction.[47][48][49][50]
Houghton Street – after John Holles, Second Baron Houghton, who built the street in the 1650s[51][52]
Jockey’s Fields – thought to date from the old custom of the Lord Mayor and retainers on horseback inspecting the nearby conduit on the river Tyburn[54]
Lamb’s Conduit Passage – after a conduit built by William Lambe in the 16th century to bring clean water from the countryside north of London[57][58]
Lancaster Place – former site of the Savoy Palace. It passed into the ownership of the earls of Lancaster in the 13th century, the most famous of which was John of Gaunt, who owned the palace at the times of its destruction in Peasant’s Revolt of 1381[57][58]
Lincoln's Inn Fields – after Lincoln’s Inn, the townhouse of the Lacy family, earls of Lincoln, later leased to lawyers in the 14th century[59][60]
Maltraver’s Street – built on the site of the former Arundel House; one of the 16th century earls of Arundel was Henry Fitzalan who was also Baron Maltravers[61][6]
Portugal Street – named in honour of Charles II’s Portuguese queen Catherine of Braganza,[71] or possibly after the Portuguese embassy which was formerly located here[72]
Princeton Street – formerly ‘Prince Street’, though after which prince exactly is unknown. It was changed so as to avoid confusion with other Prince Streets.[73][74]
Strand and Strand Lane – from Old English ‘stond’, meaning the edge of a river; the river Thames formerly reached here prior to the building of the Thames Embankment[89][90]
Surrey Steps and Surrey Street – built on the site of Arundel House, owned by the Howard family who had a branch holding the earldom of Surrey[91][6]
Vere Street - between Clare Market at its eastern end and Duke Street (which, via Prince's Street, itself connected to Drury Lane) at its western end. Demolished around 1900.
Warwick Court – site of the townhouse of Gray’s Inn lawyer Robert Rich, Baron Rich who was created Earl of Warwick in 1618[98]
Water Street – formerly ran to the waterline of the Thames, prior to the building of the Thames Embankment[99][100]
Whetstone Park – built by William Whetstone in 1636[101][102]
Yorkshire Grey Yard – named after a local inn of this name in the 18th century, presumably referring to the breed of horse[103][104]
References
^Fairfield, S. The Streets of London – A dictionary of the names and their origins, p6
^Hobley B, Lundenwic and Lundenburh: two cities rediscovered, AHDS Archaeology, University of York (PDF)