111 Places in London, that you shouldn't miss by John Sykes
Author:John Sykes
Language: deu
Format: epub
Tags: Guide Book
Publisher: Emons Verlag
Published: 2016-12-20T05:00:00+00:00
To the online map
To the beginning of the chapter
View full image
55_The Monument
When 13,000 houses burned down
Back
Next
The legacy of London’s worst disaster is a memorial whose uniqueness at the time of completion in 1677 is demonstrated by its simple name: The Monument. It is 202 feet (61 metres) high and stands exactly 202 feet from the spot in Pudding Lane where a blaze broke out in a bakery on 2 September 1666. When the »Great Fire« finally burned out after five days, half of the city was a field of smouldering ruins. 13,000 houses, 89 churches and St Paul’s Cathedral were destroyed. 100,000 citizens lost their homes.
Sir Christopher Wren, the architect of 50 churches and the new St Paul’s after the fire, also received the commission for The Monument. He designed a limestone column five metres in diameter capped by a flaming urn of gilded copper. Within the column, 311 steps wind up to the viewing platform. The base bears Latin inscriptions and relief carvings: on the east side they record details of The Monument itself, the south face is a verbose glorification of King Charles II, and the west side is devoted to an allegorical depiction of the ruined and the restored City of London, showing the king as a victorious Roman. A close look at the north side reveals that the bottom line of an inscription has been deleted. The Monument was built at a time of anti-Catholic hysteria following false accusations of a conspiracy to assassinate the king. According to the inscription, which was removed in 1830, the Great Fire had been put out, »but Popish frenzy, which wrought such horrors, is not yet quenched«.
Info
Address Monument Street, EC3R 6DB | Public Transport Monument (Circle, District Line) | Hours Mon–Sun 9.30am–5.30pm| Tip The Great Fire started in Pudding Lane and stopped at Pie Corner, the junction of Cock Lane and Giltspur Street, which is marked by a gilded cherub. The walk there from The Monument via King William Street, Poultry, Cheapside and Newgate Street shows the extent of the devastation.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Spell It Out by David Crystal(35859)
Underground: A Human History of the Worlds Beneath Our Feet by Will Hunt(11850)
A Year in the Merde by Stephen Clarke(5083)
Venice by Jan Morris(2445)
Claridge's: The Cookbook by Nail Martyn & Erickson Meredith(2265)
My Paris Kitchen: Recipes and Stories by Lebovitz David(2136)
A TIME OF GIFTS by Patrick Leigh Fermor(2107)
The Plantagenets by Dan Jones(1935)
Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube by Blair Braverman(1891)
Bang Poland: How To Make Love With Polish Girls In Poland by Roosh V(1864)
Top 10 Prague (EYEWITNESS TOP 10 TRAVEL GUIDES) by DK(1856)
The Finnish Way by Katja Pantzar(1814)
The Isle of Mull by Terry Marsh(1808)
From Russia with Lunch by David Smiedt(1800)
A TIME TO KEEP SILENCE by Patrick Leigh Fermor(1776)
Rick Steves London 2018 by Rick Steves & Gene Openshaw(1754)
A Taste of Paris by David Downie(1748)
Merde in Europe by Stephen Clarke(1674)
Insight Guides Experience Tokyo by Insight Guides(1662)
