
I need a decent list of street names (from main roads to back alleys to marketplaces). Please help!
I figured you weren't looking for that, but there's at least one street here in my home city that has more than one name along its length. And, of course, there were no such things as street signs in most midieval cities/towns. Want to know where you are? Ask!It's a fictional city in a game book describing a magical fantasy world, not a real life historical documentary!
Names need to serve only a single purpose: be evocative. Etymology isn't relevant.![]()
Dast! You got me! I guess I'll just quietly slink away from thread...That's because you live in the US, which did not have a medieval period.
Here are a few real English street names.
The Side
Cowgate
Gallowgate
Skeldergate
(Gates are streets leading to city gates)
Bigg Market
Groat Market
Clothmarket
Greenmarket
(Markets are, er, streets with markets) - there may even be a Market Street.
Highbridge
Sandhill
Sandgate
Side
Dog Bank
Dogleap Stairs
Cox Chare
Pudding Chare
(a chare is a narrow street) except of course, for:
Broad Chare
Fenkle (or Finkle) Street/Lane, etc. Are always (in my experience) at an odd angle to other streets and often have a sharp bend in them.
Foss, Fosse, The Foss, Fosse Street, Fossway, Foss Lane etc. usually run alongside an old defensive ditch.
Aldwark
The Stonebow
Pavement
Green Batt
The Batts
The Butts
I think Batts/Butts are low lying areas near a river or an expanse of meadow. But the name stays after the meadow has been built on.
The Peth (dialect word for path?)
The Lonnen (dialect word for lane?)
Dere Street - a road the Romans built.
Alnwick boasts a Bondgate Within and a Bondgate Without, separated of course by Bondgate Tower.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.