Edgware Road is a major road in London, England. The route originated as part of Roman Watling Street and, unusually in London, it runs for 10 miles in an almost perfectly straight line. Forming part of the modern A5 road, Edgware Road undergoes several name changes along its length, including Maida Vale, Kilburn High Road, Shoot Up Hill and Cricklewood Broadway; but the road is, as a whole, known as the Edgware Road, as it is the road to Edgware.
Edgware Road facing south from Church Street
Edgware Road at Paddington
Shoot-up Hill, one of several names for Edgware Road.
Roman Britain, with the route of Watling Street in red
Watling Street is a historic route in England that crosses the River Thames at London and which was used in Classical Antiquity, Late Antiquity, and throughout the Middle Ages. It was used by the ancient Britons and paved as one of the main Roman roads in Britannia. The route linked Dover and London in the southeast, and continued northwest via St Albans to Wroxeter. The line of the road was later the southwestern border of the Danelaw with Wessex and Mercia, and Watling Street was numbered as one of the major highways of medieval England.
A stretch of modern-day Watling Street in Buckinghamshire
Watling Street near Crick in Northamptonshire
The road at Richborough Castle, one of the Romans' Kentish ports and a Saxon Shore fort.
Modern Watling Street in Canterbury