Right in front of you, the market bursts into color: stalls piled with fruit, vegetables, and fresh flowers, all tucked under big white canopies. Behind them rises the unmistakable silhouette of Great St Mary’s Church, keeping watch like it’s been appointed official supervisor of Cambridge shopping. Spot the large green umbrella and follow your nose toward the freshest produce.
Welcome to Market Hill, the liveliest and most historic square in Cambridge. Picture this place centuries ago: merchants rolling in early, boots crunching on gravel, and a constant buzz of bargaining as people hunted for the best deal. This square has been the city’s beating heart since Saxon times. The narrow lanes around you act like little streams, funneling in curious visitors, stallholders, and hungry students, all drifting toward the market the way bees home in on honey.
But Market Hill hasn’t only been about apples and asparagus. In the Middle Ages, it hosted a day Cambridge never forgot. On 16 June 1381, during the Peasants’ Revolt, townspeople, led even by the mayor, turned on the University, fed up with its privileges. Imagine the square packed with an angry crowd, and Margery Starre, a remarkably bold woman, dancing right in the middle while shouting, “Away with the learning of clerks, away!” And you thought Cambridge rebellion meant skipping your reading list. Within hours, the University’s records were destroyed here in a whirlwind of dust, chanting, and very determined dancing.
There was also a famous fountain. In 1855, after a major fire cleared away old houses, a beautiful Gothic fountain was built, fed by clean water from Hobson’s Conduit, a man-made water channel. Sadly, it was almost completely demolished in 1953. Close your eyes: can you almost hear the splash of water, and the thud of apples hitting wooden counters? This square is a time machine with shopping bags.


