Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-tj2md Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T03:34:37.770Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Numbering the streetscape: mapping the spatial history of numerical street names in Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2012

JANI VUOLTEENAHO*
Affiliation:
Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

Abstract:

In contrast to North American cities, numerically named streets are a very rare occurrence in Europe. This article explores the exceptions to this rule by charting the history of street numbering in 10 European countries. The medieval and early modern ‘new towns’ of New Winchelsea, Mannheim and a section of St Petersburg (Vasilievsky Island) were each designed with grid-plan layouts in which the streets were identified according to an alphanumerical system. Although a range of gridiron plans have been subsequently built across the continent, the newer instances of street numbering are characteristically inconspicuous and peripherally located in suburbs or industrial estates. As a result, most European cases of street numbering play a limited role in constituting the broader urban fabric of the streetscape, with the exception of cities such as Milton Keynes that conform more to the North American model. The relative absence of street-numbering plans in European cities can largely be explained by the much longer history of urbanism in Europe compared to North America and, above all else, the privileging of the nationalistic-pedagogic imperative to name streets with the aim of instilling historical ‘lessons’, which has left little room for the use of street numbering as a means of rationalizing the spatial organization of European cities.

Type
History of Urban House Numbering
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Rose-Redwood, R., ‘Indexing the great ledger of the community: urban house numbering, city directories and the production of spatial legibility’, Journal of Historical Geography, 34 (2008), 286310CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 Simmel, G., Soziologie (Munich and Leipzig, 1923), 476–8Google Scholar.

3 de Certeau, M., The Practice of Everyday Life (Berkeley, 1984)Google Scholar.

4 In fact, numbered and lettered streets characteristically amount to a minority even in the towns and cities of the United States. In Baldwin and Grimaud's inter-state comparison, the highest percentage of alphanumerical street names was found in the mid-western North Dakota (51.1%), whereas in Massachusetts on the Atlantic coast the respective share was only 1.0%. See Baldwin, L. and Grimaud, M., ‘Washington, Montana, the Dakotas – and Massachusetts: a comparative approach to street naming’, Names, 37 (1989), 131CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 For example, see Langenfelt, G., ‘Streets-names, old and new’, in Sahlgren, J., Hasselrot, B. and Hellberg, L. (eds.), Quatrième Congrès International de Sciences Onomastiques. 2. Actes et mémoires (Uppsala, 1954)Google Scholar; Steger, H., ‘Institutionelle innerörtliche Orientierungssysteme – Fallstudien’, in Eichler, E., Hilty, G., Löffler, H., Steger, H. and Zgusta, L. (eds.), Namenforschung/Name Studies/Les Noms Propres, vols. I–II (Berlin, 1995)Google Scholar; Therborn, G., ‘Monumental Europe: the national years: on the iconography of European capital cities’, Housing, Theory and Society, 19 (2002), 2647CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Azaryahu, M., ‘Naming the past: the significance of commemorative street names’, in Berg, L.D. and Vuolteenaho, J. (eds.), Critical Toponymies (Farnham, 2009), 5370Google Scholar; J. Vuolteenaho and T. Ainiala, ‘Planning and revamping urban toponymy: ideological alterations in the linguistic landscaping of Vuosaari suburb, eastern Helsinki’, in Berg and Vuolteenaho (eds.), Critical Toponymies, 227–53.

6 Many colleagues have provided me with invaluable assistance in bridging language barriers and collecting data for this study. In this respect, special thanks belong to Tatiana Artemeyeva, Maoz Azaryahu, Mike Crang, Charles Husband, Hanna Ikonen, Irina Kruglova, Duncan Light, Gerco and Helene van Maanen, Mark Mallon, Anaïs Marin, Andreas Matschenz, Peeter Päll, Guy Puzey, Reuben Rose-Redwood, Fernando Sánchez Costa, Johanna Sänger and Alan Warde.

7 Langenfelt, ‘Streets-names, old and new’, 331.

8 Ibid., 331–2; G. Harling-Kranck, , ‘Kaupunkinimistö. kaupunkiasutus ja kadunnimet Ruotsissa ja Suomessa’, in Bladh, G. and Kuvaja, C. (eds.), Kahden Puolen Pohjanlahtea I (Helsinki, 2006), 216, 218Google Scholar.

9 Beresford, M.W., New Towns of the Middle Ages: Town Plantation in England, Wales and Gascony (London, 1967), 16Google Scholar; Beresford, M.W., Time and Place: Collected Essays (London, 1984), 1415Google Scholar; Steane, J., The Archaeology of Medieval England and Wales (Beckenham, 1985), 128Google Scholar; Frost, C., Time, Space and Order: The Making of Medieval Salisbury (Bern, 2009), 90–1Google Scholar.

10 Beresford, New Towns, 14, 44.

11 Ibid.; The Ancient Town of Winchelsea, www.winchelsea.net (2010).

12 For instance, see F. Tarpley, ‘Street names as signposts of world cultures’, in Eichler et al. (eds.), Namenforschung/Name Studies, 1482.

13 Hamlin, F.R., ‘Numbers in placenames’, Names, 47 (1999), 239CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Farvacque-Vitkovic, C., Godin, L., Leroux, H., Verdet, F. and Chavez, R., Street Addressing and the Management of Cities (Washington, DC, 2005), 3, 158–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

14 Steger, ‘Orientierungssysteme’, 1510–18; Probst, H., Kleine Mannheimer Stadtgeschichte (Regensburg, 2005)Google Scholar.

15 Also, see Langenfelt, ‘Streets-names, old and new’, 333–4.

16 Steger, ‘Orientierungssysteme’, 1510–15.

17 Nikitenko, G.Y., ‘Toponymy of St. Petersburg’, in Saint Petersburg Encyclopaedia (www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2804017552) (St Petersburg, 2010)Google Scholar.

18 Lincoln, B.W., Sunlight at Midnight. St. Petersburg and the Rise of Modern Russia (Oxford, 2001), 29Google Scholar; Gorbatenko, S., ‘Amsterdam in St. Petersburg of Peter the Great: the Cartesian principles of the urban layout and development of the Russian capital’, Geschiedenis van de wijsbegeerte in Nederland: Documentatieblad van de werkgroep sassen jaargang 12 * 2001. Tussen Amstel en Neva; Filosoficshe ontmoetingen tussen Nederland en Rusland (Budel, 2004), 2937Google Scholar.

19 Hellberg-Hirn, E., Imperial Imprints: Post-Soviet St Petersburg (Helsinki, 2003), 188Google Scholar.

20 Cracraft, J., The Petrine Revolution in Russian Architecture (Chicago, 1988), 156Google Scholar; Lincoln, Sunlight, 23; Cross, A. (ed.), St. Petersburg, 1703–1825 (Basingstoke, 2003)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

21 Nikitenko, G.Y., ‘Lines of Vasilievsky Island’, in Saint Petersburg Encyclopaedia (www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2804017891) (St Petersburg, 2010)Google Scholar; Nikitenko, G.Y., ‘Vasilievsky Island’, in Saint Petersburg Encyclopaedia (www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2803998688) (St Petersburg, 2010)Google Scholar

22 Lincoln, Sunlight, 55.

23 In contrast, it is well known that Venice and Amsterdam, in particular, were models that Peter the Great had in mind when the development of Vasilievsky Island was about to start. For instance, the tsar ordained that the island's ‘canals and streets on both sides of them are to be in breadth as against the Herengracht in Amsterdam’. Cited in Anisimov, E.V., The Reforms of Peter the Great (New York, 1993), 240.Google Scholar

24 E.g. Troyat, H., Peter the Great (New York, 1987)Google Scholar.

25 Hughes, L. (ed.), Peter the Great and the West: New Perspectives (Basingstoke, 2001)Google Scholar. Appleby, J.H., ‘The founding of St. Petersburg in the context of the Royal Society's relationship with Russia’, Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London, 57 (2003), 277–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

26 A Dutchman Franz Timmermann, for instance, who had been a teacher of geometry and fortification of the tsar, took part in the rebuilding of Mannheim at the turn of the eighteenth century. See Cracraft, J., The Church Reform of Peter the Great (London, 1971), 3Google Scholar; Troyat, Peter the Great.

27 Tarpley, ‘Street names as signposts’, 1483–5. In both Philadelphia and Vasilievsky Island, parallel streets are designated by names in one direction and by numbers in the other.

28 My line of reasoning here echoes Rose-Redwood's critique of the attempts to explain the historical diffusion of the grid-patterned urban layouts through a doctrine in which innovations are seen as spreading outward ‘from a single source region rather than being independently invented in multiple locations’. See Rose-Redwood, R., ‘Genealogies of the grid: revisiting Stanislawski's search for the origin of the grid-pattern town’, Geographical Review, 98 (2008), 4258CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

29 Choay, F., The Modern City: Planning in the Nineteenth Century (London, 1969)Google Scholar; Hall, T. (ed.), Planning and Urban Growth in the Nordic Countries (London, 1991)Google Scholar.

30 Benjamin, W., The Arcades Project (Cambridge, 1999)Google Scholar; Ferguson, P., Paris as Revolution: Writing the Nineteenth-Century City (Berkeley, 1997).Google Scholar

31 Farvacque-Vitkovic et al., Street Addressing, 158.

32 Benjamin, The Arcades.

33 Ferguson, Paris as Revolution, 27–8.

34 Steger, ‘Orientierungssysteme’, 1501–6; Langenfelt, ‘Streets-names, old and new’, 333–4.

35 Ferguson, Paris as Revolution, 25–30; Bauer, L., ‘De la diachronie à la synchronie: étude de la dénomination des voies de Cergy-Pontoise', Langage et Société, 96 (2001), 21CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

36 Langenfelt, ‘Streets-names, old and new’, 337; Vuolteenaho and Ainiala, ‘Planning and revamping’, 229.

37 Azaryahu, ‘Naming the past’, 59, 67.

38 On history of the deliberate clustering of adjacent streets and other landscape elements through odonyms, see Langenfelt, ‘Streets-names, old and new’; Vuolteenaho and Ainiala, ‘Planning and revamping’; Harling-Kranck, ‘Kaupunkinimistö’.

39 Notably, however, the French rulers and authorities seem to have felt more free to apply rationalistic street-numbering designs in the state's overseas departments and ex-colonies. For instance, see Bigon, L., ‘Names, norms and forms: French and indigenous toponyms in early colonial Dakar, Senegal’, Planning Perspectives, 23 (2008), 479501CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

40 Mounin, G., ‘The semiology of orientation in urban space’, Current Anthropology, 21 (1980), 493CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

41 Redmonds, G., Names and History (Hambledon, 2004), 171Google Scholar; Room, A., The Street Names of England (Stamford, 1992)Google Scholar.

42 A nationwide street and postcode Internet-database lists, for instance, even 176 Second Avenues, 66 Fifth Avenues and 13 Tenth Avenues in the United Kingdom. The respective figures are 11–10–3 for numbered Streets, 1–0-0 for Closes, 1–0-0 for Crescents, 1–0-0 for Drifts, 1–0-0 for Drives, 6–0-0 for Droves, 1–0-0 for Lanes, 2–1-0 for Rows and 2–0–0 for Ways. See streetmap.co.uk (www.streetmap.co.uk).

43 Kirkup, M., Ashington and its Mining Community (Stroud, 2008)Google Scholar.

44 Newtongrange, Midlothian (www.scottish-places.info/towns/townfirst255.html); McKinnon, A., ‘Nitten aliens: researching an immigrant community’, Locscot, 4 (2006), 47Google Scholar.

45 Room, Street Names, xi; Charlesworth, J.A. and Cochrane, A., ‘Anglicising the American dream: tragedy, farce and the post-modern city’, in Westwood, S. and Williams, J. (eds.) Imagining Cities (London, 1996), 219–32Google Scholar.

46 Room, Street Names, 179–87.

47 Place Names Board of Estonia (www.eki.ee/knn/index2.htm) (Tallinn, 2011). Interestingly, the main underlying motif for the ban on new number-based street and place names in Estonia was the excess of numerical landmarks (in the names of institutions, in particular) inherited from the Soviet period. I thank Dr Peeter Päll for bringing this to my attention.

48 To my knowledge, the European record in the quantity of numbered streets within a discrete neighbourhood is held by La Cañada in Paterna, an upper-class and vacationing-related development near Valencia (with little less than 200 relatively unsystematically numbered streets), located in the Spanish national context not systematically screened for this study.

49 In Prenzlau, for instance, spatially clustered names Strasse A, Strasse B and Strasse C are still in use. Some of the Prussian cities that have had reminiscent odonyms, such as Wroclaw (Breslau), are located east of the Oder–Neisse line and thus currently belong to the Polish territory. I am grateful to Dr Johanna Sänger for her insights into this largely unexplored topic.

50 ‘Liste der Straßen und Plätze in Berlin-Lichtenberg’, in Wikipedia. Die freie Encyklopädie (de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_der_Stra%C3%9Fen_und_Pl%C3%A4tze_in_Berlin-Lichtenberg) (Berlin, 2011).

51 Consequentially, a plan by James Hobrecht from 1862 incorporated numbered designations for many projected streets and squares around Berlin. I am thankful to Andreas Matschenz for bringing this fact to my attention. See also Bernet, C., ‘The “Hobrecht Plan” (1862) and Berlin's urban structure’, Urban History, 31 (2004), 400–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

52 According to Elisabeth Fuchshuber-Weiß, there were 411 numbered odonyms in official use in East Berlin in 1968. See E. Fuchshuber-Weiß, ‘Straßennamen: Deutsch’, in Eichler et al. (eds.), Namenforschung/Name Studies, 1473.

53 See Azaryahu, M., ‘Street names and political identity: the case of East Berlin’, Journal of Contemporary History, 21 (1986), 581604CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Azaryahu, M., ‘German unification and the politics of street names: the case of East Berlin’, Political Geography, 16 (1997), 479–93CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sänger, J., Heldenkult und Heimatliebe. Strassen- und Ehrennamen im offiziellen Gedächtnis der DDR (Berlin, 2006).Google Scholar

54 Alexeev, A.A., ‘Sovetskie streets, first – tenth’, in Saint Petersburg Encyclopaedia (www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2804018161) (St Petersburg, 2010)Google Scholar; Bondarchuk, Е.А., and Yudin, P.Y., ‘Peski’, in Saint Petersburg Encyclopaedia (www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2803999959) (St Petersburg, 2010)Google Scholar.

55 Isachenko, V.G., ‘Krasnoarmeiskie streets, first – thirteenth’, in Saint Petersburg Encyclopaedia (www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2804017843) (St Petersburg, 2010)Google Scholar.

56 Murray, J., Politics and Place-Names: Changing Names in the Late Soviet Period (Birmingham, 2000)Google Scholar; Marin, A., ‘Bordering time in the cityscape: toponymic changes as temporal boundary-making: street renaming in Leningrad/St Petersburg’, Geopolitics, 17 (2012), 192216CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

57 Hellberg-Hirn, Imperial Imprints, 125; Nikitenko, ‘Toponymy of St. Petersburg’; Marin, ‘Bordering time’.

58 Ibid.

59 Isachenko, ‘Krasnoarmeiskie streets’; Alexeev, ‘Sovetskie streets’; Hellberg-Hirn, Imperial Imprints; 126.

60 On the influences of St Petersburg on urban planning in Finland in the nineteenth century, see M. Sundman, ‘Urban planning in Finland after 1850’, in Hall (ed.) Planning and Urban Growth, 65–9; Aaltonen, E., Entisajan Forssaa ja Sen Väkeä (Forssa, 1947)Google Scholar.

61 P. Slotte, ‘Helsingin “amerikkalaiset” linjat’, www.kotus.fi/index.phtml?s=1135 (Helsinki, 2001).

62 On the early history of Kallio as a poor neighbourhood in the immediate vicinity of the core of the national capital, see Waris, H., Työläisyhteiskunnan Syntyminen Helsingin Pitkänsillan Pohjoispuolelle (Helsinki, 1973)Google Scholar; Paunonen, H., Vuolteenaho, J. and Ainiala, T., ‘Industrial urbanization, working-class lads and slang toponyms in early twentieth century Helsinki, Urban History, 36 (2009), 449–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

63 Aminoff, B. and Pesonen, L.A., ‘Helsingin kadunnimistön synty ja kehitys vuoteen 1946 mennessä’, in Terho, O., Granlund, Å., Itkonen, T., Oja, A., Pesonen, L.A. and Valpas, O. (eds.), Helsingin Kadunnimet (Helsinki, 1981), 50–5, 94Google Scholar; P. Slotte, ‘Vallis gratiaesta Westendiin: “eurooppalaisia” aineksia paikannimistössämme’, in Paikannimet – Paikan Muisti (1999), 21.

64 See also Vuolteenaho and Ainiala, ‘Planning and revamping’, 230.

65 Mounin, ‘The semiology of orientation’, 493.

66 E.g. Withers, C.W.J., ‘Authorizing landscape: “authority”, naming and the Ordnance Survey's mapping of the Scottish Highlands in the nineteenth century’, Journal of Historical Geography, 26 (2000), 532–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Eller, N., Hackl, S. and L'upták, M. (eds.), Namen und ihr Konfliktpotential im europäischen Kontext (Regensburg, 2008)Google Scholar; Peckham, R.S., ‘Map mania: nationalism and the politics of place in Greece, 1870–1922’, Political Geography, 19 (2009), 7795CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Vuolteenaho, J. and Ainiala, T., ‘Naming and making places: excavating the connection between nation-building and toponymic research’, in Jänicke, N. and Lenehan, F. (eds.) Language and the Moulding of Space. An Interdisciplinary Discussion (Leipzig, 2010), 1132Google Scholar.

67 Anderson, B., Imagined Communities (London, 1990), 6784Google Scholar; Bourdieu, P., Language and Symbolic Power (Cambridge, 1991)Google Scholar; Haugen, E., The Ecology of Language (Stanford, 1972)Google Scholar; Jones, P., The 1848 Revolutions (Harlow, 1981), 25Google Scholar.

68 Bennett, T., ‘The exhibitionary complex’, in Boswell, D. and Evans, J. (eds.) Representing the Nation: A Reader. Histories, Heritage and Museums (London, 1999), 332361Google Scholar; Therborn, ‘Monumental Europe’.

69 Weber, M., The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (New York, 1958; originally published in 1904–5), 71Google Scholar; see a more recent example on the investment of a numbered street name with more or less patriotic overtones in New York City, Rose-Redwood, R., ‘“Sixth Avenue is now a memory”: regimes of spatial inscription and the performative limits of the official city-text’, Political Geography, 27 (2008), 875–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

70 For a critique of the alleged neutrality of street numbering, see Rose-Redwood, R. and Alderman, D., ‘Critical interventions in political toponymy’, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 10 (2011), 34Google Scholar.

71 Costa, F. Sánchez, ‘Cultura histórica y nombres de calles: aproximación al nomenclátor contemporáneo de Barcelona y Madrid’, Memoria y Civilización, 12 (2009), 217–19Google Scholar.

72 The quote is from L.A. Pesonen, ‘Kadunnimistön tarkistus vuoden 1946 alueliitoksen johdosta ja nimistön laatiminen uusiin kaupunginosiin’, in Terho et al. (eds.), Helsingin kadunnimet, 80.

73 Curry, M.R., ‘Toward a geography of a world without maps: lessons from Ptolemy and postal codes’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 95 (2005), 680–91CrossRefGoogle Scholar.