Origin The wards appear to have taken shape by the 11th century, before the
Norman conquest of England. Their administrative, judicial and militia purposes made them equivalent to
hundreds in the shires. The primary purpose of wards that had a gate on the city wall appears to be the defence of that gate, as gates were the weakest points in any fortification.
Civic representation In 1322 it was settled that an assembly consisting of two people elected from each ward would create ordinances for the whole city; in 1346 the number of representatives from each ward was formally linked to the size of the ward. The Common Council as we know it today, as a representative body of the wards, was realised in 1384 when the city's guilds no longer elected members. The number of members of the Common Council grew to 240 by the mid-nineteenth century, but is today fixed at 100. Each ward was divided into precincts, each of which elected one common councilman. As the number of precincts grew over time, the number of councilmen elected therefore also increased. The precincts have now been abolished.
Changes over time The wards are ancient and their number has only changed three times since their creation in
time immemorial. Their number was stated as 24 in the year 1206. In 1394
Farringdon was divided into Farringdon Within and Farringdon Without. In 1550 the ward of
Bridge Without was created
south of the river, with the ward of Bridge becoming Bridge Within. These two wards were merged in 1978, into the present-day
Bridge ward. Thus the number of wards was 24 prior to 1394, 25 from 1394 to 1550, then 26 from 1550 to 1978, and has been 25 since 1978. (no detached parts exist from 2003).
London Wall The words "Without" and "Within" indicate whether the ward fell outside or within the
London Wall, though only Farringdon and (formerly) Bridge have been split into separate wards in this way (Bridge Without was beyond the gates on
London Bridge). Some wards—Aldersgate, Bishopsgate and Cripplegate—cover an area that was both within and without the Wall and, although not split into separate wards, often the part (or
division) within the Wall is denoted (on maps, in documents, etc.) as being "Within" and the part outside the Wall as being "Without". Archaically
"Infra" (within) and
"Extra" (without) and the terms "intramural" and "extramural" had the same meaning.
1994 boundary changes Changes were made in 1994 to the City of London's external boundary with several
London boroughs, which meant consequential changes to boundaries of several wards, where areas were transferred either to or from the City – the wards affected were: Farringdon Without, Cripplegate, Coleman Street, Bishopsgate, Aldgate, Portsoken, and Tower.
Boundary reviews Following a significant reform of the business vote in the city, all the wards underwent a major boundary and electoral representation revision in 2003. The ward boundaries, and electoral representation at the Court of Common Council, were reviewed again in 2010 for change in 2013, though the change was less extensive this time. The reviews were conducted by senior officers of the corporation and senior judges of the
Old Bailey. The wards are not reviewed by the
Electoral Commission or a local government boundary commission under the
Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 and (unlike other local government electoral reviews) the number and the names of the wards do not change. The final decision on changes to ward boundaries and representation was made by the Court of Common Council and an Act of Common Council was passed on 4 November 2010 to give effect to the changes from 8 March 2013. ==Electoral representation==