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neIntroducing the city
With a population of just under eight million, and stretching more than
thirty miles at its broadest point, London is by far the largest city in
Europe. It is also far more diffuse than the great cities of the
Continent, such as Rome or Paris. The majority of the London’s sights
are situated to the north of the River Thames, which loops through the
centre of the city from west to east, but there is no single predominant
focus of interest, for London has grown not through centralized
planning but by a process of agglomeration - villages and urban
developments that once surrounded the core are now lost within the
amorphous mass of Great London. Thus London’s highlights are widely
spread, and visitors should make mastering the public transport system,
particularly the Underground (tube), a top priority.
One of the few areas of London witch is manageable on foot is
Westminster and Whitehall, the city’s royal, political and
ecclesiastical power base for several hundred years. It’s here
you’ll find the National Gallery and the adjacent National Portrait
Gallery, and a host of other London landmarks: Buckingham Palace,
Nelson’s Column, Downing Street, the House of Parliament and
Westminster Abbey. From Westminster it’s a manageable walk upriver to
the Tate Gallery, repository of the nation’s largest collection of
modern art as well as the main assemblage of British art. The grand
streets and squares of Piccadilly, St James’s, Mayfair and Marylebone,
to the north of Westminster, have been the playground of the rich since
the Restoration, and now contain the city’s busiest shopping zones:
Piccadilly itself, Bond Street, Regent Street and, most frenetic of the
lot, Oxford Street.
East of Piccadilly Circus, Soho and Covent Garden form the heart of the
West End entertainment district, where you’ll find the largest
concentration of theatres, cinemas, clubs, flashy shops, cafes and
restaurants. Adjoining Covent Garden to the north, the university
quarter of Bloomsbury is the traditional home of the publishing industry
and location of the British Museum, a stupendous treasure house that
attracts more than five million tourists a year. Welding the West End to
the financial district, The Strand, Holborn and Clerkenwell are
little-visited areas, but offer some of central London’s most
surprising treats, among them the eccentric Sir John Soane’s Museum
and the secluded quadrangles of the Inns of Court.
A couple of miles downstream from Westminster, The City – the City of
London, to give it its full title – is at one and the same time the
most ancient and the most modern part of London. Settled since Roman
times, it became the commercial and residential heart of medieval
London, with its own Lord Mayor and its own peculiar form of local
government, both of which survive, with considerable pageantry, to this
day. The Great Fire of 1666 obliterated most of the City, and the
resident population has dwindled to insignificance, yet this remains one
of the great financial centres of the world ranking just below New
York and Tokyo. The City’s most prominent landmarks nowadays are the
hi-tech offices of the legions of banks and insurance companies, but the
Square Mile boasts its share of historic sights, notably the Tower of
London and a fine cache of Wren churches that includes the mighty St
Paul’s Cathedral.
The East End and Docklands, to the east of the City, are equally
notorious, but in entirely different ways. Impoverished and
working-class, the East End is not conventional tourist territory, but
to ignore it is to miss out the crucial element of the real,
multi-ethnic London. With its abandoned warehouses converted into
overpriced apartment blocks for the city’s upwardly mobile, Docklands
is the corner of the down-at-heel East End, with the Canary Wharf tower,
the country’s tallest building, epitomizing the pretensions of the
Thatcherite dream.
Lambeth and Southwark comprise the small slice of central London that
lies south of the Thames. The South Bank Centre, London’s little-loved
concrete culture bunker, is the most obvious starting point, while
Southwark, the city’s low-life district from Roman times to the
eighteen century, is less known, except to the gore-addicts who queue up
for the London Dungeon.
In the districts Hyde Park, Kensington and Chelsea you’ll find the
largest park in Central London, a segment of greenery which separates
wealthy West London from the city centre. The museums of South
Kensington – the Victoria & Albert Museum, Science Museum and Natural
History Museum – are a must, and if you have shopping on your London
agenda you may well want to investigate the hive of plush stores in the
vicinity of Harrods, superstore to the upper echelons.
Some of the most appealing parts of North London are clustered around
Regent’s Canal, which skirts Regent’s Park and serves as the focus
for the capitals’ trendiest weekend market, around Camden Lock.
Further out, in the chic literary suburbs of Hampstead and Highgate,
there are unbeatable views across the city from half-wild Hampstead
Heath, the favorite parkland of thousands of Londoners. The glory of
Southeast London is Greenwich, with its nautical associations, royal
park and observatory. Finally, there are plenty of rewarding day trips
along the Thames from Chiswick to Windsor, a region in which the royalty
and aristocracy have traditionally built their homes, the most famous
being Hampton Court Palace and Windsor Palace.
London. Historical buildings
Political, religious and regal power has emanated from Westminster and
Whitehall for almost a millennium. It was Edward the Confessor who
established Westminster as London’ s royal and ecclesiastical power
base, some three miles west of the real, commercial City of London. In
the nineteenth century, Whitehall became the “heart of the Empireâ€Â,
its ministries ruling over a quarter of the world’s populations.
The monuments and buildings from this region include some of London’s
most famous landmarks – Nelson’s Column, Big Ben and the House of
Parliament, Westminster Abbey and Buckingham Palace, plus the city’s
two finest permanent art collections, The National Gallery and the Tate
Gallery. This is a well-trodden tourist circuit for the most part -
hence the council’s decision to reinstate the old red phone boxes –
with few shops or cafes and little street life to distract you, but
it’s also one of the easiest parts of London to walk round, with all
the major sights within a mere half-mile of each other, linked by two of
London’s most triumphant avenues, Whitehall and The Mall.
Despite being little more than a glorified, sunken traffic island,
infested with scruffy urban pigeons, Trafalgar Square is still one of
the London’s grandest architectural set-pieces. London’s Trafalgar
Square, the city’s official center, features some of England’s most
treasured historic monuments. The square was laid out between 1829 and
1841 on the site of the old royal stables and is lined on its northern
side by the National Gallery. The gallery, begun in 1824, boasts one of
the finest art collections in the world, with work from every major
western artist from the 15th through the 19th centuries. The square’s
dominating landmark is a pedestal supporting a statue of Lord Nelson,
the British naval hero who defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Trafalgar
in Spain, in 1805. Trafalgar Square is the location for festivities at
Christmas Eve, New Year, and other major public occasions.
Nelson’s Column, raised in 1843 and now one of the London’s
best-loved monuments, commemorates the one-armed, one-eyed admiral who
defeated Napoleon, but paid for it with his life. The statue which
surmounts the granite column is triple life-size but still manages to
appear minuscule, and is coated in anti-pigeon gel to try to stem the
build-up of guano. The acanthus leaves of the capital are cast from
British cannon, while bas-reliefs around the base are from captured
French armaments. Edwin Landseer’s four gargantuan bronze lions guard
the column and provide a climbing frame for kids to clamber over. If you
can, get here before the crowds and watch the pigeons take to the air as
Edwin Lutyens’fountains jet into action at 9am.
Keeping Nelson company at ground level, on either sides of the column,
are bronze statues of Napier and Havelock, Victorian major-generals who
helped keep India British; against the north wall are busts of Beatty,
Jellicoe and Cunningham, more recent military leaders. In the northeast
corner of the square, is an equestrian statue of George IV, which he
himself commissioned for the top of Marble Arc, over at the northeast
corner of Hyde Park, but which was later erected here “temporarilyâ€Â;
the corresponding pedestal in the northwest corner was earmarked for
William IV, but remains empty.Taking up the entire north side of
Trafalgar Square, the vast but dull Neoclassical hulk of the National
Gallery houses one of the world’s greatest art collections. Unlike the
Louvre or the Hermitage, the National Gallery is not based on a former
royal collection, but was begun as late as 1824 when the government
reluctantly agreed to purchase 38 paintings belonging to a Russian
émigré banker, John Julius Angerstein.
Nelson’s Column, since 1843
The gallery hundred and seventy years of canny acquisition has produced
a collection of more than 2200 paintings, but the collection’s virtue
is not so much its size, but the range, depth and sheer quality of its
contents. The National Gallery’s original collections was put on
public display at Angertein’s old residence at 100 Pall Mall, until
this purpose-built building on Trafalgar Square was completed in 1838.
Around the east side of the National Gallery lurks the National Portrait
Gallery, which was founded in 1856 to house uplifting depictions of the
good and the great. Through it has some fine works among its collection
of 10,000 portraits, many of the studies are of less interest than their
subjects, and the overall impression is of an overstuffed shrine to
famous British rather than a museum offering any insight into the
history of portraiture. However, it is fascinating to trace who has been
deemed worthy of admiration at any moment: warmongers and imperialists
in the early decades of this century, writers and poets in the 1930s and
40s, and, latterly, retired footballers and pop stars. The special
exhibitions, too, are well worth seeing – and the photography shows,
in particular, are often excellent.
St James’s Park, on the south side of The Mall, is the oldest of the
royal parks, having been drained for hunting purpose by Henry VII and
opened to the public by Charles II, who used to stroll through the
grounds with his mistresses, and even take a dip in the canal. By the
eighteenth century, when some 6500 people had access to night keys for
the gates, the park had become something of a byword for prostitution.
The park was finally landscaped by Nash into its present elegant
appearance in 1828, in a style that established the trend for Victorian
city parks.
Today the pretty tree-lined lake is a favourite picnic spot for the
civil servants of Whitehall and an inner-city reserve for wildfowl.
James I’s two crocodiles have left no descendants, but the pelicans
can still be seen by the lake, and there ducks and Canada geese aplenty.
From the bridge across the lake there’s a fine view over Westminster
and the jumble of domes and pinnacles along Whitehall. Even the dull
façade of Buckingham Palace looks majestic from here.
The graceless colossus of Buckingham Palace, popularly known as “Buck
Houseâ€Â, has served as the monarch’s permanent London residence only
since the accession of Victoria. It began its days in 1702 as the Duke
of Buckingham’s city residence, built on the site of a notorious
brothel, and was sold by the duke’s son to George III in 1762. The
building was overhauled for the Prince Regent in the late 1820s by Nash,
and again by Aston Webb in time for George V’s coronation in 1913,
producing a palace that’s about as bland as it’s possible to be.
For ten months of the year there’s little to do here, with the Queen
in residence and the palace closed to visitors – not that this deters
the crowds who mill around the railings all day, and gather in some
force to watch the “changing of the guardâ€Â, in which a detachment of
the Queen’s Foot Guards marches to appropriate martial music from St
James’s Palace (unless it rains).
Changing the guards on Buckingham Palace
Whitehall, the broad avenue connecting Trafalgar Square to Parliament
Square, is synonymous with the faceless, pi-striped bureaucracy charged
with the day-to-day running of the country. Since the sixteenth century,
nearly all the key governmental ministries and offices have migrated
here, rehousing themselves on an ever-increasing scale, a process which
reached its apogee with the grimly bland Ministry of Defence building,
the largest office block in London when it was completed in 1957. The
original Whitehall Palace was the London seat of the Archbishop of York,
confiscated and greatly extend by Henry VIII after a fire at Westminster
forced him to find alternative accommodation. Little survived the fire
of 1698, caused by a Dutch laundrywoman, after which, partly due to the
dank conditions in this part of town, the royal residence shifted to St
James’s.
The palace of Westminster, better known as the Houses of Parliament, is
London’s best-known monument. The “mother of all parliaments†and
the “world’s largest building†– or it was claimed at that time-
it is also the city’s finest Victorian building, the symbol of a
nation once confident of its place at the centre of the world. Best
viewed from the south side of the river, where the likes of Monet and
Turner set up their easels, the building is distinguished above all by
the ornate, gilded clock tower popularly known as Big Ben, which is at
its most impressive at night when the clock-face is lit up.
The original Westminster Palace was built by Edward the Confessor in the
first half of the eleventh century, so that he could watch over the
building of his abbey. It then served as the seat of all the English
monarchs until a fire forced Henry VIII to decamp to Whitehall. The
Lords have always convened at the palace, but it was only following
Henry’s death that the House of Commons moved from the abbey’s
Chapter House into the palace’s St Stephen’s Chapel, thus beginning
the building’s associations with the parliament.
Houses of Parliament (picture taken from the Thames river):
Westminster Hall - virtually the only relic of the medieval palace is
the bare expanse of Westminster Hall, on the north side of the complex.
First built by William Rufus in 1099, it was saved from the 1834 fire by
the timely intervention of the Prime Minister, Lord Melbourne, who had
the fire engines brought into the hall itself, and personally took
charge of the fire fighting. The sheer scale of the hall – 240 ft by
60 ft – and its huge oak hammerbeam roof, added by Richard II in the
late fourteenth century, make it one of the most magnificent secular
halls in Europe.
St Stephen’s Hall and the Central Lobby - from Stephen’s Porch the
route to the parliamentary chambers passes into St Stephen’s Hall,
designed by Barry as a replica of the chapel built by Edward I, where
the Commons met for nearly 300 years until 1834. The ersatz vaulted
ceilings, faded murals statuary and huge wooden doors create a rather
sterile atmosphere doing nothing to conjure up the dramatic events that
have unfolded here. Shortly after wards the Civil War began, and no
monarch has entered the Commons since St Stephen’s also witnessed the
only assassination of a Prime Minister, when in 1812 Spencer Perceval
was shot by a merchant whose business had been ruined by the Napoleonic
wars. After a further wait the door keeper shepherds you through the
bustlink, octagonal Central Lobby, where constituents “lobby†their
MPs. In the tilling of the lobby Pugin inscribed in Latin the motto :
“Except the Lord keep the house, they labour in vain that build itâ€Â.
Big Ben - is a 13.5-ton bell, tolls the hours in the clock tower of the
Houses of Parliament. The original palace on the site of the Houses of
Parliament was largely destroyed by fire in 1834. The current building
was completed in 1852.
The House of Commons – if you’re heading for the House of Commons,
you’ll be ushered into a small room where all visitors sign a form
vowing not to cause a disturbance; long institutional staircases and
corridors then lead to the Strangers’s Gallery, rising steeply above
the chambers. Since an incendiary bomb in May 1941 destroyed Barry’s
original chamber, what you see now is rather lifeless reconstruction by
Giles Gilbert Scott, completed in 1950. Members of the cabinet occupy
the two “front benches’; the rest are “backbenchersâ€Â.
The House of Lords – On the other side of the Central Lobby a corridor
leads to the House of Lords (or Upper House), a far dozier
establishment, peopled by unselected Lords and Ladies, both hereditary
and appointed by successive Mps, and a smattering of bishops. Their home
boasts a much grander décor than the Commons, full of regal gold and
scarlet, and dominated by a canopied gold throne where the Queen sits
for the state opening of parliament in November.
The royal apartments – if the House of Lords takes your fancy, you can
see pomp and glitter by joining up with a guided tour. You’ll be asked
to meet at the Norma Porch entrance below Victorian Tower, where the
Queen arrives in her coach for the state opening. Then, after the usual
security checks, you’ll be taken up the Royal Staircase to the Norman
Porch itself, every nook of which is stuffed with busts of eminent
statesmen.
Jewel Tower and the Victoria Tower Garden – the Jewel Tower, across
the road from parliament, is a remnant of the medieval palace. The tower
formed the southwestern corner of the exterior fortifications (there’s
a bit of moat left, too), and was constructed by Edward III as a giant
strong-box for the crown jewels. On the other side of the road are the
rather more attractive and leafy Victoria Tower Gardens, which look out
onto the Thames.
Westminster Abbey is the oldest and most famous of the great churches of
London. There has been a place of worship on its site since the seventh
century when, according to legend, Saint Peter consecrated a church that
had been founded in his name. The present structure is the result of
rebuilding begun by Henry III in 1245, which continued intermittently
until 1745. Many British monarchs have been crowned in the Abbey since
the coronation of Harold II in 1066, and the church holds the tombs of
many kings and queens, including Edward the Confessor; Elizabeth I;
Mary, Queen of Scots; and Henry VII. The Abbey also honors poets,
politicians, and war heroes, including the "Unknown Soldier" who fought
in World War I.
Founded in 1897 with money from Sir Henry Tate, inventor of the sugar
cube, the Tate Gallery does its best to perform a difficult dual
function as both the nation’s chief collections of British art and its
primary gallery for international modern art.
The Tate hosts some of London’s best art exhibitions and every autumn
sponsors the Turner Prize, the country’s most prestigious modern art
prize. In particular, the role of the Saatchis, the advertising magnates
who sit on the Tate’s committee of patrons, has been called into
question. Prime movers in the art world, they are in a position to
manipulate the art market through the Tate and their own gallery of
modern art, thus wielding undue influence over the promotion of certain
artists for their own financial benefict.
Westminster Abbey
To the west of Vincent Square, just off Victoria Street, you’ll find
one of London’s most surprising churches, the stripey neo-Byzantine
concoction of the Roman Catholic Westminster Cathedral. Begun in 1895,
it is one of the last and wildest monuments to the Victorian era:
constructed from more than 12 million terracotta-coloured bricks,
decorated with hoops of Portland stone, it culminate in a magnificent
tapered campanile which rises to 274 feet.
Anonymous and congested it may be, but Piccadilly Circus is, for many
Londoners, the nearest their city comes to having a centre. A
much-altered product of Nash’s grand 1812 Regent Street plan, and now
a major traffic bottleneck, it is by no means a picturesque place,
despite a major clean-up in recent years. It’s probably best seen at
night when the spread of illuminated signs gives it a touch of Las Vegas
dazzle, and when the human traffic flow is at its most frenetic
Although it has declined in popularity today, the tradition of afternoon
tea has been a part of English life since the 18th century. The most
formal afternoon tea is served at grand hotels, such as the Ritz on
London s Piccadilly Circus. Here, thin sandwiches of cucumber,
watercress, or smoked salmon are served with a range of teas from China
and India, followed by sweet pastries, or scones served with jam and
cream. Traditional afternoon tea is also served in quaint country
teashops, which are found throughout England
Afternoon Tea at the Ritz
As wealthy Londoners began to move out of the City in the eighteenth
century in favour of the newly developed West End, so Oxford Street –
the old Roamn road to Oxford – gradually replaced Cheapside
Oxford - The towers and spires of Oxford lure students and travelers
from around the world to south central England. Situated near the
confluence of the Rivers Thames and Cherwell, this site was settled by
Saxon traders in the 10th century. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which logs
the country’s history from the beginning of the Christian era, first
mentions Oxford in 912.
This historic English city seats the 12th-century University of Oxford,
the country’s first university and one of the world’s most esteemed
places of learning. Rhodes scholars, outstanding foreign students
selected from the Commonwealth of Nations, the United States, South
Africa, and Germany, study at the University of Oxford for two years.
Today this university enrolls more than 13,000 students and has more
than 35 individual colleges.
The heart of Oxford, known as Carfax, derives its name from the Latin
quadrifurcua, which means “four-forkedâ€Â. This refers to the four
points of the compassâ€â€the direction of the city’s main streets.
Walls surrounding ancient Carfax helped the city withstand attacks by
the Danes during the 10th and 11th centuries. By the mid-13th century
Oxford had become a major educational center, and the university
attracted leading scholars and students from throughout Europe.
Oxford University
To the north of Oxford Street lies Marylebone, once the outlying village
of St Mary-by-the-Bourne. Sights in this part of town include the
massively touristed Madame Tussaud’s and the Planetarium , on
Marylebone Street Road, the low-key galleries of the Wallace Collection,
and Sherlock Holmes’old stamping grounds around Baker Street. There is
a pleasure, though, in just wandering the Marylebone streets, especially
the vilage-like quarter around Marylebone High Street.(See in the
picture)
Cambridge, located on the River Cam north of London, is important as a
center of learning and is the seat of the University of Cambridge, one
of the great educational institutions of Europe. It is also a market
center for the surrounding agricultural region and manufactures
electronic equipment and precision instruments.
Cambridge has many outstanding edifices, including the Church of Saint
Benet, a 10th-century Saxon structure; the restored Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, one of the four round Norman churches in England; and the
15th-century King’s College Chapel, one of the finest examples of
Gothic architecture in Europe. The many museums and galleries here
include the Fitzwilliam Museum, featuring both archaeological and art
collections.
Cambridge University
The 15th-century King’s College Chapel is one of the grandest
buildings in the university town of Cambridge, and possibly all of
England. The building, conceived by Henry VI, is spectacular for its
high vaulted roof, lofty spires, great buttresses, and magnificent
stained-glass windows. King’s College is one of the oldest in the
university, dating back to the 1440s. It forms part of the town’s main
line of colleges, including Queen’s, Trinity, and Magdalene, through
whose landscaped lawns and gardens the picturesque River Cam winds its
way.
Situated in the heart of London, the royal borough of Kensington and
Chelsea is chiefly a residential district and has several fashionable
shopping areas, such as Kensington High Street and the King s Road.In
the late 17th century, Nottingham House, in Kensington, became a royal
residence. It was later remodeled by the architect Sir Christopher Wren
and became known as Kensington Palace. The palace is still the residence
of the royal family, but it is open to the public.
Also in Kensington are the British Museum; the Victoria and Albert
Museum; the Science Museum; the Natural History Museum; the Royal
Colleges of Science, Art, and Music; and the Royal Albert Hall. Founded
in 1753, the British Museum is one of the world s oldest and most
comprehensive museums, with artifacts ranging from Egyptian mummies to
Roman treasures.
The historic fortress known as the Tower of London was built on the
remains of Roman fortifications on the north bank of the River Thames.
The original tower, known as the White Tower or Keep, is flanked by four
turrets and enclosed by two lines of fortifications. It was built about
1078 by Gundulf, bishop of Rochester. The inner fortifications, called
the Ballium Wall, have 12 towers, including Bloody Tower, Record or
Wakefield Tower, Devereux Tower, and Jewel Tower.
The tower was used as a royal residence as well as for a prison until
Elizabethan times. It is now largely a showplace and museum. It holds
the crown jewels of England and is one of the country’s greatest
tourist attractions. A popular feature is the Yeomen of the Guard, known
as Beefeaters, who still wear colorful uniforms of the Tudor period.
Tower of London
The name Hyde Park is derived from the manor of Hyde, which once
belonged to the abbot of Westminster. Prominent features of the park are
The Serpentine, Rotton Row, the Pets’ Cemetery, and Marble Arch, the
meeting place of soapbox orators. In the 18th and 19th centuries it was
a fashionable park where royalty rode and drove, military reviews were
held, and duels were fought.
The Royal Court Theater is a landmark of London’s Kensington and
Chelsea District, a center for the city’s artistic and cultural set.
The Royal Court specializes in modern and avant-garde productions, such
as John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger, which premiered here in 1956.
Beginning at Sloane Square, Kensington and Chelsea’s main street,
King’s Road, stretches along the north bank of the Thames. During the
18th and 19th centuries, the area was jammed with the tiny cottages of
London’s working class. From 1830, the neighborhood became an
extremely fashionable place to live. Kensington and Chelsea’s Sloane
Street and King’s Road feature dozens of expensive shops and
restaurants, while the streets running down to the Thames embankment
contain many elegant Georgian and Queen Anne houses dating to the 18th
and 19th centuries.
From the 16th century onward, royalty and courtiers lived at Kew, which
was conveniently located close to Richmond Palace. Kew Palace, a
Dutch-style house now within Kew Gardens, is the only survivor of
several royal residencesâ€â€George III and Queen Charlotte lived here.
The gardens, originally developed by several 18th-century queens with a
passion for landscape and botany, were passed over to the nation in 1840
as the Royal Botanic Gardens. The stately Hampton Court Palace, built in
the early 16th century, soon became the residence of Henry VIII, and
remained a royal residence for more than two centuries.
The royal residence of the British monarchs since the Middle Ages,
Windsor Castle adorns the north bank of the River Thames about 35
kilometers (about 20 miles) west of London in the ancient town of
Windsor. William the Conqueror originally chose this site for a fortress
in the 11th century, after his triumph at the Battle of Hastings. Over
the next eight centuries, various monarchs transformed and altered the
castle into a 5-hectare (13-acre) royal spread.
The dominant feature of Windsor Castle is its 16th-century stone Round
Tower, which divides the castle into two courts, called the Lower Ward
and the Upper Ward. The Lower Ward, to the west, holds Albert Memorial
Chapel as well as the Perpendicular-style Saint George’s Chapel, a
royal mausoleum and the site of the annual installation of the Knights
of the Garter. The Upper Ward contains the State Apartments, the
royals’ living quarters and guest apartments. The celebrated Throne
Room and the Waterloo Chamber are among the rooms open for tours. In
November 1992 the State Apartments were the site of a raging fire that
left several apartments gutted but spared most of the priceless art
collection housed there.
Home Park, which contains the Mausoleum of Queen Victoria and Prince
Albert, adjoins Windsor Castle on the south, east, and north. The larger
Great Park borders the castle grounds to the south. Across the Thames
lies the town of Eton, home of prestigious Eton College, founded by
Henry VI in 1440.
L U C R A R E
DE ATESTAT LA LIMBA ENGLEZA
SUBIECT: MEDIAEVAL ARCHITECTURE IN LONDON
AUTOR: DINU RAZVAN ALEXANDRU-CLASA a-XII-a B
INDRUMATOR: ANEMARIE CORRALES
Colegiu Tehnic Traian
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