Highlights of London
London is many things: the capital and largest city of England and the United Kingdom, the most-visited city in the world, home to almost 9 million people of 270 nationalities who speak over 300 different languages and the first city to host three Summer Olympic games. London is all this and so much more. It is difficult to encapsulate the dynamism, history and vibrancy of one of the world’s most important global cities. A trip to London can encompass everything from exploring Gothic architecture and majestic palaces to eating street food and people-watching by the River Thames or visiting suburban pubs.
Its history stretches back to the Romans, who founded the ancient settlement of Londinium in 43 AD. The Romans’ London Wall was a defensive wall built around the city and which defined its boundaries until the late Middle Ages. Though the wall was dismantled around the 1700s, sections of it are still visible, snaking through private and public establishments in the city of London. Left largely abandoned after the fall of the Roman Empire, the city later grew and became increasingly prosperous until London itself became the seat of a vast empire that reached its peak during Queen Victoria’s reign. The growth of industry ushered in the Industrial Revolution, which led to Britain accounting for nearly a quarter of global industrial production in the 19th century, with British workers becoming the richest men and women in Europe. But the mass migration of people from the countryside to the city also resulted in overcrowded housing, pollution, and unsanitary, disease-ridden living conditions. By the mid-18th century, London was a city of 750,000 people, filled with factories that burned coal and blanketed its buildings with soot. Working and living conditions improved with new government regulations, and the city, surviving widespread damage brought by two world wars, remains an important cultural and commercial centre in the world.
What to See and Do in London
There is no shortage of things to do or see in London. It is a city full of inimitable landmarks, dazzling museums, impressive restaurants and beautiful parks. Like New York City, it is a city that never sleeps and there is constantly an event on, a restaurant open, an exhibition happening or something else equally exciting going on.
London is home to four UNESCO World Heritage Sites: the Tower of London, Kew Gardens, the site making up Palace of Westminster, Westminster Abbey, and St Margaret’s Church, and the historic settlement in Greenwich. This is where the Royal Observatory defines the Prime Meridian and Greenwich Mean Time. The Tower of London is one of the city’s most iconic structure and provides an insight into London and England’s rich history. From prison to palace, the Tower is full of stories as well as being home to the glittering Crown Jewels.
Kew Gardens is officially known as the Royal Botanic Gardens and was first laid out in 1759. During her reign, Queen Victoria added the adjoining woodland and Queen’s Cottage. Today the gardens house the largest and most diverse botanical and mycological collections in the world and are an amazing place to visit.
Westminster Palace, rebuilt from the year 1840 on the site of important medieval remains, is a breathtaking and emphatic example of neo-Gothic architecture. The site, which also comprises the small medieval Church of Saint Margaret and Westminster Abbey, where all the sovereigns since the 11th century have been crowned, is of great historic significance and has come to symbolise monarchy, religion and power in England. Today, the Palace of Westminster is the meeting place of Parliament and is open Monday to Saturday for visitors to attend debates, committee hearings and events, or to take a tour around one of the world’s most iconic buildings.