Origins The Lace Market is located on a hill that was the site of the original
Saxon settlement of Nottingham. It boasts the oldest Christian foundation in the city, predating the
Norman Conquest.
St Mary's Church, on High Pavement is believed to be the third church to have stood there but was itself completed in 1474 and is an excellent example of early English
Perpendicular architecture. The Saxon settlement was originally surrounded by a substantial defensive ditch and rampart, which fell out of use following the Norman Conquest and was filled by the time of the
Domesday Book (1086). Following the Norman Conquest the Saxon settlement developed into the
English borough, which housed a Town Hall and Law Courts. At the same time the
French borough developed around the Norman castle on the hill opposite. Eventually the focus of the city became the
Old Market Square, situated between the two boroughs, leaving the site of the Saxon settlement to concentrate on the lace industry.
The lace industry The area's name, and much of its character, derives from it becoming the heart of the world's
lace industry during the days of the
British Empire. This transformation followed on from the invention of the
stocking frame in 1589 by
William Lee, who probably came from the nearby village of
Calverton. Although Lee emigrated to France, the stocking knitting trade became centred on Nottingham in the mid-18th century, boosted by the supply of yarn from
Richard Arkwright's
Derwent Valley Mills. The local hosiery industry employed 25,000 mostly female workers at its peak in the 1890s. The lace would be finished on the top floors of the large
Victorian brick-built warehouses, which are recognisable by their large windows, and then displayed in the downstairs showrooms to buyers from the fashion and domestic furnishing businesses. == Landmarks ==