Were In London Did The Great Fire Start And What Year Was It?
Question by slaphead | Posted in Other - News & Events
Answer: a bakers purchase in Pudding lane. 1666.
http://www.multimap.com/map/browse.cgi?c lient=public&X=533250&Y=180750&a mp;extensiveness=700&height=400&gride=&a mp;gridn=&srec=0&coordsys=gb& ;db=&addr1=&addr2=&addr3=&am
Great Fire Of London For Year 2?
Question by isaulte | Posted in History
I am effective on a school trip to a museum with a bunch of 6-7 year olds when all is said, with the theme of the Great Fire of London.
This has always been a particular interest of mine, but what 5 points would you find most interesting
Answer: Pudding Lane
Samuel Pepys chronicle
The erradication of the bubonic plague
New Saint Paul's Cathedral
Christopher Wren's redesign of London
How Was The Great Fire Of London Extinguished?
Question by Mucky Mud Blood | Posted in Other - Education
Answer: The fray to quench the fire is considered to have been won by two factors: the strong east winds died down, and the Ascend of London garrison used gunpowder to create effective firebreaks to halt further spread eastward.
What Did The King (Charles II) Do During The Great Fire Of London?
Question by DMan | Posted in History
Thanks
Age answers only PLEASE!
what grade would get if i wrote "played with barbie" etc :)
Answer: Charles asked Samuel Pepys to give him an passer-by account of the fire, after which Charles and his brother James, Duke of york, went to keep an eye on the destruction of hosues in thepath of the blaze in order to make firebreaks. Bu the fire was faster
My daughter is erudition about the Great Fire of London. As we live quite close we thought it would be nice for her to visit the scene! (So to require!) Will the monument be interesting for a 6 year old and a 4 year old? What else should we see in connection
Answer: no, i dont notion of they will fing it interesting. wait untill they're older, you learn it all over again in more detail in year 7 or so. they will allow it more then.
www.terrysaunders.co.uk Another shonky dash from Terryland, this one an educational story about what really happened in the Great Fire Of ...
Rebuilding London After The Great Fire
The Great Fire destroyed three-quarters of the medieval urban district within one week, creating a devastation bill estimated at precisely £10 million. The winter rains for all extinguished embers still smouldering and the widespread unspeakable dust conclusively settled, although Samuel Pepys noticed some ruins were still smoking as dilatory as February 1667. About 200,000 Londoners escaped to the unstinting fields of Islington and Highgate. Most found imperishable screen within four days whilst many camped out in Moorfields or other unregulated spaces with their few half-starved possessions. Others stayed with friends and relatives in the suburbs whilst some travelled further afield to other cities, or immigrated to the colonies in America, the Caribbean or St Helena....
The edifice was destroyed by the Great Fire of 1666, but was soon rebuilt in brick, with a carved stone bas-relief of a boar's leading position set above its
The buildings miraculously survived the Great Fire of 1849, which destroyed their neighbours including St. James' Cathedral. They were around when the new
1 Images
Ruler's Bench Walk at Inner Temple.
King' s Bench Walk today is a large open space. Before the Great Fire of 1666 this was a secluded little walkway passing the offices of the Clerk to the Sovereign's Bench Court.
A number of the buildings - some still with the iron...