St Albans has many faces. It's a vibrant, modern Hertfordshire city with
attractive buildings and surprising architecture. It's a buzzing market
town on Wednesdays and Saturdays. It's a cathedral city with the abbey
at its heart, the Easter Pilgrimage that draws thousands of pilgrims
from near and far, and the Alban Pageant with larger-than-life puppets
that recreate Alban's story along its streets every June. A rich seam of
history runs from the time of Julius Caesar and Roman Verulamium,
through the time of King Offa of Mercia and the monastery built to
honour Alban in 793 to the twelfth-century Sopwell Nunnery with its
adventurous abbess, author of a book on fishing, thought to be the first
book written in the English language by a woman. Yet there is the darker
side with murder and mayhem at its core. Today's St Albans Registry
Office was once a prison where hangings were carried out and prisoners
allotted gruelling tasks. The extensive fifteenth-century traveller and
chronicler Fynes Moryson found St Albans 'a pleasant towne, full of
faire innes'. It is still that and much more. This book takes you on an
alphabetical tour of St Albans through the ages.