Referat London2
Mai jos puteti citi fragmente din
Referat London2 si de asemenea puteti face
Download Referat London2Citeste fragmente din Referat London2
REFERAT LA ENGLEZÃ
LONDON
London (England), city, capital of the United Kingdom. It is situated in
south-eastern England at the head of the River Thames estuary. Settled
by the Romans as an important shipping point for crops and minerals, it
gradually developed into the wealthy capital of a thriving industrial
and agricultural nation. The expansion in the 19th century of the
British Empire increased London’s influence still further. Since World
War II the city’s prominence on the international stage has
diminished, but it remains a flourishing financial centre and home to
one of the world’s most important stock exchanges., Havering,
Hillingdon, Hounslow, Kingston upon Thames, Merton, Redbridge, Richmond
upon Thames, Sutton, and Waltham Forest.
Transport
Transport is essential to the operation of a city such as London. Its
very development was significantly affected by the advent of the
railways, and more recently the construction of roads (particularly the
orbital M25 motorway) has influenced patterns of settlement and economic
activity. London has one of the most extensive urban railway systems in
the world; in addition to the Underground railway, there is a network of
suburban railways covering London and the surrounding region. Most of
the passenger-carrying Underground lines in central London were built
before 1914. Suburban extensions were added before and after World War
II. The most recent line, the Jubilee, opened in 1979 and in the 1990s
was extended eastward to Stratford. The Docklands Light Railway connects
the City of London with Docklands and other east London destinations.
Most travel is done by rail and Underground, although there is also
considerable commuting by car, particularly in the outer boroughs.
London has about 18,000 licensed taxis.
Railway services from London to Paris or Brussels through the Channel
Tunnel run from the terminal at Waterloo station.
London has three main airports. Heathrow, about 25 km (15 mi) west of
London, is the world’s busiest airport for international passengers
and is Britain’s most important airport for passengers and air freight
(handling about 55 million passengers and over 1 million tonnes of
freight in 1996). Gatwick (south of London) is Britain’s
second-busiest airport in terms of passenger traffic, and Stansted (to
the north-east, in Essex) is the sixth-busiest. London City Airport,
based in the rejuvenated Docklands area, links Docklands and the City to
continental Europe.
The Port of London, covering about 150 km (93 mi) of waterway along the
Thames to the east coast, is the largest port in Britain in terms of
total tonnage of cargo handled and in terms of non-fuel traffic. The
total tonnage handled in 1995 was about 52 million tonnes.
Museums and Art Galleries
London’s museums and art galleries contain some of the most
comprehensive collections of objects of artistic, archaeological,
scientific, historical, and general interest. The British Museum in
Bloomsbury is one of the biggest and most famous museums in the world.
Its collections range from Egyptian and Classical antiquities through
Saxon treasures to more recent artefacts.
The Victoria and Albert Museum in South Kensington is an assembly of
fine and decorative art collections from all over the world. There are
magnificent examples of porcelain, glass, sculpture, fabrics and
costume, furniture, and musical instruments, all set in a building of
Victorian grandeur. Nearby are the Museum of Natural History and the
Science Museum. On the other side of London, in the City itself, is the
Museum of London, which has exhibits dealing with the development of the
capital from its origins to the present day.
The National Gallery in Trafalgar Square contains one of the finest
mixed collections of paintings in the world. Next door is the National
Portrait Gallery, whose collection includes more than 9,000 portraits.
The Tate Gallery, situated on the Embankment between Chelsea and
Westminster, houses the largest collection of British painting from the
16th century to the present day. In 1987 an extension opened to house
the paintings bequeathed to the nation by J. M. W. Turner. There are
plans to establish a new Tate Gallery of Modern Art in Southwark, near
the reconstructed Shakespearean theatre, the Globe.
Other important collections in the capital include the Imperial War
Museum, the National Army Museum, the Royal Air Force Museum, the
National Maritime Museum, the Wallace Collection (of paintings,
furniture, arms and armour, and objets d’art), Sir John Soane’s
Museum (founded by the architect of the Bank of England in the City),
and the London Transport Museum. The Queen’s Gallery in Buckingham
Palace has exhibitions of pictures from the extensive royal collection.
The Theatre Museum displays the history of the performing arts, while
the Museum of the Moving Image traces the history of film and
television.
The British Library, the national library of Britain, has a collection
of more than 150 million separate items. Publishers must deposit in the
Library a copy of everything they publish.
Performing Arts
London is one of the world’s leading centres for theatre, and there
are about 100 theatres in the capital. These include the three
auditoriums of the Royal National Theatre in the South Bank Centre; the
two auditoriums in the London base of the Royal Shakespeare Company at
the City’s Barbican Centre; and the Royal Court Theatre in Sloane
Square, home of the English Stage Company, which stages work by new
playwrights. The largest concentration of commercial theatres is in the
West End, around Shaftesbury Avenue, Charing Cross Road, and the Strand.
In 1989 the partial remains of the Globe Theatre, where Shakespeare
acted, and the Rose Theatre, where his plays were performed during his
lifetime, were excavated on the south bank of the Thames in central
London: a modern reconstruction of the Globe Theatre, near its original
site, was unveiled in 1996.
The principal concert halls in central London are the Royal Festival
Hall in the South Bank Centre (next to which are the Queen Elizabeth
Hall and the Purcell Room, which accommodate smaller-scale
performances), the Barbican Hall, the Royal Albert Hall in Kensington,
the Wigmore Hall, (behind Oxford Street); and St John’s Church in
Smith Square, Westminster.
The leading symphony orchestras in London include the London Symphony,
the London Philharmonic, the Royal Philharmonic, the Philharmonia, and
the BBC Symphony. There are also several London chamber orchestras and
choirs. The Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet, which rank among the
world’s finest companies, perform at the Royal Opera House, Covent
Garden. Seasons of opera in English are given by the English National
Opera at the London Coliseum. English Festival Ballet (founded as London
Festival Ballet) performs at the Royal Festival Hall, and the Rambert
Dance Company provides regular seasons of modern dance in the capital.
There is a wide range of cinemas throughout London. The National Film
Theatre on the South Bank, administered by the British Film Institute,
annually mounts the London Film Festival.
Highly respected music, dance, and drama colleges in London include the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the Royal College of Music, the Royal
Ballet School, and the London Contemporary Dance School.
Parks
Two thirds of London is intensively built up, yet the capital is well
endowed with parks and open spaces. Hyde Park, adjoining Kensington
Gardens, was formerly known as the “lung of Londonâ€Â. Regent’s
Park, to the north of the West End, is surrounded by elegant buildings
designed by John Nash for the Prince Regent (hence its name) and
contains the Zoological Gardens (the London Zoo). Other important open
spaces in London, some of them royal parks, include Green Park, St
James’s Park, Hampstead Heath, Holland Park, Battersea Park,
Parliament Hill Fields, and Primrose Hill. In outer London there are
some extended green areas such as Richmond Park, Bushey Park, Kew
Gardens (incorporating the famous Royal Botanic Gardens), and Greenwich
Park.P
Ü¥hÃÂ