
Greenwich
Greenwich Park was given the Versailles
treatment
Greenwich (Royal) Park is the oldest of London's
royal parks. It was stocked with deer in 1515, and
their descendants still roam in the area known as The
Wilderness today. In 1662, Charles II had the park landscaped
in a style inspired by French gardener André le Notre,
who also planned the gardens of the Palace of
Versailles.
What the Dickens? Greenwich was a favoured haunt
of this man of letters
Charles Dickens spent a lot of time dining, drinking and
writing about Greenwich. He was a frequent customer of
Greenwich's Trafalgar Tavern, famous for its
whitebait.
Naval gazing in Greenwich
After becoming the first person to sail single-handed
around the world in 1967, Sir Francis
Chichester was knighted publicly by the Queen in
Greenwich. The ceremony took place on the same spot and used
the same sword with which Queen Elizabeth I had knighted Sir
Francis Drake on his return from the Americas in the Golden
Hind.
England's Renaissance started in
Greenwich
Anne of Denmark, the wife of the Stuart king James I,
commissioned the Queen's House, which lays
claim to being the first true Renaissance building in
England.
Why Greenwich means time for ships
Every day, a ball on the roof of the Royal
Observatory rises halfway up its pole at 12.55pm,
reaches the top at 12.58pm, and drops at exactly 1.00pm. The
system was installed in 1833 to provide a way for ships to
check their time.
Greenwich is a World Heritage Site
Maritime Greenwich was designated a World Heritage Site in
1997 by Unesco (the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organisation).
Greenwich's Millennium Dome has the Eiffel Tower
covered
The roof of Greenwich's O2 Arena, formerly the Millennium
Dome, consists of one million sq ft of fabric, and could
accommodate the Eiffel Tower lying on its side. To fill up an
upside-down Dome would take 3.8 billion pints of
beer.
An archbishop came to a sticky end in
Greenwich
St Alfege Church in Greenwich stands on the spot where St
Alfege, then Archbishop of Canterbury, was martyred by the
Danes in 1012. The present church was designed by
Nicholas Hawksmoor and built in 1714 to
replace the original, which collapsed in a storm in
1710.
You can walk under the Thames at
Greenwich
Designed by Sir Alexander Binnie, the Greenwich
Foot Tunnel is 1,217 ft long, runs about 50 ft under
the River Thames, and is lined by 200,000 glazed white tiles.
It was built to enable south London residents to walk to work
in the docks on the Isle of Dogs.
Greenwich Mean Time began in 1884
Greenwich Mean Time and the Greenwich Meridian were
adopted as world standards in 1884, at the
International Meridian Conference in
Washington DC. Some 41 delegates from 25 nations took part.
The resolution fixing the Meridian at Greenwich was passed
22-1, with San Domingo voting against, and France and Brazil
abstaining.

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