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  • A young boy wearing his school uniform looks traumatised standing next to a burned-out shell of a saloon car that was set alight by vandals beneath the infamous Divis flats of the Catholic Lower Falls Road, West Belfast. He wears a red jumper which contrasts the blue graffiti paint on the wall behind him and the charred ground at his feet. He is alone, a young boy experiencing childhood through the traumas of a violent world Divis Tower was a flashpoint area during the height of the Troubles. 9 year-old Patrick Rooney a child of a similar age to this lad, was the first child killed in the Troubles, was killed in the tower during the Northern Ireland riots of August 1969,
    RB-0034.jpg
  • With the words 'We will never accept a united Ireland' and another quote 'For God and Ulster' we see a detail of a political painting in a street off the Shankhill Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland. This Loyalist mural may have been drawn by a paramilitary artist, whose handiwork is the crest of the protestant Ulster Defence Association (UDA) and the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) the organisations behind many a sectarian action against neighbouring catholic supporters of the Irish republican Army (IRA). In loyalist areas, the red, white and blue of the British Union Jack is painted on kerbs, houses and railings to signify peoples' allegiance to the crown, having historically followed the 17th century activities of King William of Orange against Catholics..
    belfast_murals004-26-09-1996.jpg
  • Using the Latin motto 'Quis Separabit' meaning 'Who shall separate us?' we see a detail of a political painting in a street off the Shankhill Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland. This Loyalist mural may have been drawn by a paramilitary artist, whose handiwork is the crest of the protestant Ulster Defence Association (UDA), the organisation behind many a sectarian action against neighbouring catholic supporters of the Irish republican Army (IRA). In loyalist areas, the red, white and blue of the British Union Jack is painted on kerbs, houses and railings to signify peoples' allegiance to the crown, having historically followed the 17th century activities of King William of Orange against Catholics..
    belfast_murals003-26-09-1996.jpg
  • On a brick wall is a painted red hand that grips an Armalite automatic weapon which has been painted on to a street wall of a house off the protestant Shankhill Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The red hand is actually better-known as The Red Hand Defenders (RHD),  a Northern Irish paramilitary group formed in 1998 and composed largely of Protestant hardliners from loyalist groups observing a cease-fire. It is composed of members of the Ulster Defence Association (largely those who once belonged to the now disbanded 2nd Battalion, C Company) and Loyalist Volunteer Force, most of whom are still part of the latter organisation.
    belfast_murals002-26-09-1996.jpg
  • With hands in their pockets and walking in step, three friends pass along a street off the Shankhill Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland, have just passed beneath a Loyalist mural drawn by a paramilitary artist, whose handiwork is based on a well-known representation of a kneeling gunman shouldering a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) and aiming past the crest of the protestant Ulster Defence Association (UDA), the organisation behind many a sectarian action against neighbouring catholic supporters of the Irish republican Army (IRA). In loyalist areas, the red, white and blue of the British Union Jack is painted on kerbs, houses and railings to signify peoples' allegiance to the crown, having historically followed the 17th century activities of King William of Orange against Catholics.   .
    belfast_murals001-26-09-1996.jpg
  • A rather rotund man wearing a flat cap, a checked shirt under braces that keep his ample trousers up above his fat tummy, affectionately tickled his pet dog, a Whippet ,who stands still with two paws on his master's large leg. It is a bright day on the beach at Great Yarmouth in Norfolk, England. Bathers are running on the sand in the background and the man and his dog are content to watch the world go by from their promenade bench. Their is a great deal of trust and love these two have for each other - the gentleman having brought his dog on holiday to the seaside with him, rather than leave him with friends or in kennels. The dog is healthy, lithe and obviously has great speed in those muscular legs, vastly different to the man, whose frame is heavy and slow.
    cap_whippet05-25-1992.jpg
  • A rather obese woman stands in the waves at the seaside resort of Great Yarmouth in Norfolk. With hands behind her back and fingers interlocked the lady wears a turquoise bathing costume that just about fits her ample, wide body. Her bottom is large as are her legs that have cellulite on the tops of her thighs. She looks left alone, a solitary person standing with her back to the viewer - or perhaps she is standing guard, keeping watch on children as they play safely in the sea. Water splashes against her lower legs and is frozen still by a fast shutter speed. It is a fine, bright sunny afternoon on this Eastern coast of England, more noted for very changeable weather rather than the heatwave experienced here.
    obese_bather.jpg
  • Headstones stand in long grass of the cemetery at the Church of St. Lawrence, on 10th July 2020, in Great Waldingfield, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-23-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Headstones stand in long grass of the cemetery at the Church of St. Lawrence, on 10th July 2020, in Great Waldingfield, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-22-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Headstones stand in long grass of the cemetery at the Church of St. Lawrence, on 10th July 2020, in Great Waldingfield, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-21-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Four young women sunbathe in their bikinis in coastal dunes, on 25th May 1992, in Great Yarmouth, Suffolk, England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    sunbathing_girls-25-05-1992.jpg
  • A portrait of a lady fishmonger and her shellfish in the Norfolk seaside town of Great Yarmouth. Holding up a tray of fish and shellfish, the lady proudly stands outside her kiosk in the centre of this eastern England seaside resort. A pot of shrimps, some crabs, salmon steaks and traditional kippers are shown to us. In the background are cod fillets, prawns and other smoked fish.
    fishmonger_portair-27-05-1992.jpg
  • An elderly couple sit in peace on a quiet beach in the seaside resort of Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. In a classic English beach holiday scene, the husband and wife relax, reclining in a pair of deckchairs at a kiosk that dispenses these quaintly British beach chairs. A sign telling other holidaymakers to collect and pay for their time in them appears on the freshly-painted clap-board wall. As the lazy completes word puzzles in her magazine, the gentleman reads his regular copy of the Daily Mirror tabloid newspaper. He is tanned, perhaps spent his summer tending his garden back home but here on holiday, they both have the chance to spend some time together away from home, in a resort known for its beaches and coastal adventures.
    seaside_pensioners02-27-05-1992.jpg
  • A reader looks through books in the Linen Hall Library in Belfast City Centre, Northern Ireland.
    linen_library01-26-09-1996.jpg
  • A Union Jack flag hangs above white emulsion paint which has been smeared over a shop window in Lavender Hill, Battersea, a victim of the UK recession. Around a recession-bled Britain, high-street businesses have been going bust in their thousands. Britain has now endured eight recessions since the Second World War. No two recessions are alike, and that applies to the current slowdown also. It has been caused by a shock to the availability of credit, a massive build up of debt. The number of people out of work currently stands at almost two million. Given the rate at which the economy is deteriorating this could easily be above three million. From a continuing piece of work about windows and urban messages, the picture is from the project of closed business windows: 'Bust - the Art of Recession'.
    britain_recession_window1-05-August-...jpg
  • Visitors to the (Roman Emperor) Nero exhibition, "The Man Behnd The Myth", read descriptions and learn about the Julio-Claudian dynasty of ancient Rome at the British Museum, on 26th September 2021, in London, England. "Nero is known as one of Rome's most infamous rulers, notorious for his cruelty, debauchery and madness. The last male descendant of the emperor Augustus, Nero succeeded to the throne in AD 54 aged just 16 and died a violent death at 30. His turbulent rule saw momentous events including the Great Fire of Rome, Boudicca's rebellion in Britain, the execution of his own mother and first wife, grand projects and extravagant excesses. Drawing on the latest research, this major exhibition questions the traditional narrative of the ruthless tyrant and eccentric performer, revealing a different Nero, a populist leader at a time of great change in Roman society."
    nero_exhibition-02-26-09-2021.jpg
  • Visitors to the (Roman Emperor) Nero exhibition, "The Man Behnd The Myth", read descriptions and learn about the Julio-Claudian dynasty of ancient Rome at the British Museum, on 26th September 2021, in London, England. "Nero is known as one of Rome's most infamous rulers, notorious for his cruelty, debauchery and madness. The last male descendant of the emperor Augustus, Nero succeeded to the throne in AD 54 aged just 16 and died a violent death at 30. His turbulent rule saw momentous events including the Great Fire of Rome, Boudicca's rebellion in Britain, the execution of his own mother and first wife, grand projects and extravagant excesses. Drawing on the latest research, this major exhibition questions the traditional narrative of the ruthless tyrant and eccentric performer, revealing a different Nero, a populist leader at a time of great change in Roman society."
    nero_exhibition-01-26-09-2021.jpg
  • Visitors to the (Roman Emperor) Nero exhibition, "The Man Behnd The Myth", read descriptions and learn about the Julio-Claudian dynasty of ancient Rome at the British Museum, on 26th September 2021, in London, England. "Nero is known as one of Rome's most infamous rulers, notorious for his cruelty, debauchery and madness. The last male descendant of the emperor Augustus, Nero succeeded to the throne in AD 54 aged just 16 and died a violent death at 30. His turbulent rule saw momentous events including the Great Fire of Rome, Boudicca's rebellion in Britain, the execution of his own mother and first wife, grand projects and extravagant excesses. Drawing on the latest research, this major exhibition questions the traditional narrative of the ruthless tyrant and eccentric performer, revealing a different Nero, a populist leader at a time of great change in Roman society."
    nero_exhibition-03-26-09-2021.jpg
  • A male Greater Spotted Woodpecker stands on the top of a chimney pot where, affectionately heard by residents around this south London suburban neighbourhood, it announces its presence to others every day by drumming on the metal chimney covering, on 25th April 2022, in south London, England. The Great Spotted Woodpecker is a member of the woodpecker family Picidae. Instead of singing to declare their territory, woodpeckers drum to advertise their presence to others. They usually require wood with particular resonant qualities for this purpose but this bird has been ptapping on local aerials and metal surfaces to the amusement of nearby south Londoners.
    woodpecker-03-25-04-2022.jpg
  • A male Greater Spotted Woodpecker stands on the top of a chimney pot where, affectionately heard by residents around this south London suburban neighbourhood, it announces its presence to others every day by drumming on the metal chimney covering, on 25th April 2022, in south London, England. The Great Spotted Woodpecker is a member of the woodpecker family Picidae. Instead of singing to declare their territory, woodpeckers drum to advertise their presence to others. They usually require wood with particular resonant qualities for this purpose but this bird has been ptapping on local aerials and metal surfaces to the amusement of nearby south Londoners.
    woodpecker-01-25-04-2022.jpg
  • An exterior of Clockwork Studios on Southwell Rd, in Brixton, south London, on 11th February 2021, in London, England. Clockwork Studios currently houses over 20 diverse independent art businesses but once accomodated comedians and clock makers. At the turn of the 20th century the “Fun Factory”, as it was then known, was home to Fred Karno’s Vaudeville theatre group. Silent movie stars Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel, two of Karno’s most notable performers would have spent many hours there rehearsing. The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America recently fixed a commemorative blue plaque next to the main door to remember the comedy impresario Fred Karno. Also, while still young, future British Prime Minister, John Major lived a few streets away. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    clockwork_studios04-11-02-2021.jpg
  • An exterior of Clockwork Studios on Southwell Rd, in Brixton, south London, on 11th February 2021, in London, England. Clockwork Studios currently houses over 20 diverse independent art businesses but once accomodated comedians and clock makers. At the turn of the 20th century the “Fun Factory”, as it was then known, was home to Fred Karno’s Vaudeville theatre group. Silent movie stars Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel, two of Karno’s most notable performers would have spent many hours there rehearsing. The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America recently fixed a commemorative blue plaque next to the main door to remember the comedy impresario Fred Karno. Also, while still young, future British Prime Minister, John Major lived a few streets away. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    clockwork_studios02-11-02-2021.jpg
  • An exterior of Clockwork Studios on Southwell Rd, in Brixton, south London, on 11th February 2021, in London, England. Clockwork Studios currently houses over 20 diverse independent art businesses but once accomodated comedians and clock makers. At the turn of the 20th century the “Fun Factory”, as it was then known, was home to Fred Karno’s Vaudeville theatre group. Silent movie stars Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel, two of Karno’s most notable performers would have spent many hours there rehearsing. The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America recently fixed a commemorative blue plaque next to the main door to remember the comedy impresario Fred Karno. Also, while still young, future British Prime Minister, John Major lived a few streets away.
    clockwork_studios01-11-02-2021.jpg
  • An exterior of Clockwork Studios on Southwell Rd, in Brixton, south London, on 11th February 2021, in London, England. Clockwork Studios currently houses over 20 diverse independent art businesses but once accomodated comedians and clock makers. At the turn of the 20th century the “Fun Factory”, as it was then known, was home to Fred Karno’s Vaudeville theatre group. Silent movie stars Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel, two of Karno’s most notable performers would have spent many hours there rehearsing. The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America recently fixed a commemorative blue plaque next to the main door to remember the comedy impresario Fred Karno. Also, while still young, future British Prime Minister, John Major lived a few streets away.
    clockwork_studios06-11-02-2021.jpg
  • An exterior of Clockwork Studios on Southwell Rd, in Brixton, south London, on 11th February 2021, in London, England. Clockwork Studios currently houses over 20 diverse independent art businesses but once accomodated comedians and clock makers. At the turn of the 20th century the “Fun Factory”, as it was then known, was home to Fred Karno’s Vaudeville theatre group. Silent movie stars Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel, two of Karno’s most notable performers would have spent many hours there rehearsing. The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America recently fixed a commemorative blue plaque next to the main door to remember the comedy impresario Fred Karno. Also, while still young, future British Prime Minister, John Major lived a few streets away.
    clockwork_studios05-11-02-2021.jpg
  • Detail of a GB Great Britain car badge on the back of a French Citroen vintage car, on 29th June 2017, in Greenwich, London, England.
    car_badge-01-29-06-2017.jpg
  • Detail of a GB Great Britain car badge on the back of a French Citroen vintage car, on 29th June 2017, in Greenwich, London, England.
    car_badge-02-29-06-2017.jpg
  • An exterior of Clockwork Studios on Southwell Rd, in Brixton, south London, on 11th February 2021, in London, England. Clockwork Studios currently houses over 20 diverse independent art businesses but once accomodated comedians and clock makers. At the turn of the 20th century the “Fun Factory”, as it was then known, was home to Fred Karno’s Vaudeville theatre group. Silent movie stars Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel, two of Karno’s most notable performers would have spent many hours there rehearsing. The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America recently fixed a commemorative blue plaque next to the main door to remember the comedy impresario Fred Karno. Also, while still young, future British Prime Minister, John Major lived a few streets away.
    clockwork_studios03-11-02-2021.jpg
  • Looking up towards majestically tall 100 year-old mature Ash trees and blue skies, the sun glints off a window pane in an Edwardian age semi-detached house on Ruskin Park, Denmark Hill, SE24 (its post code) South London England. It is a beauitiful winter afternoon in this inner-city suburban district of Britain's capital, approximately 5 miles south from the River Thames. A couple are walking their dogs past an elegant line of period homes that were completed in 1908, the age of innovative building in the new 20th Century. The properties overlook the borough park named after John Ruskin, the renowned artist and commentator who lived in nearby Herne Hill. It looks an affluent area, a prosperous location to invest in a mortgage in uncertain times with market prices falling during the credit crunch and recession.
    ernst+young_counsillors64-09-02-2008...jpg
  • A walker passes a signpost and climbs uphill on a mountain footpath that takes walkers to the summit of Great Orme, on 4th October 2021, in Llandudno, Gwynedd, Wales.
    wales_llandudno-06-04-10-2021.jpg
  • A walker passes a signpost and climbs uphill on a mountain footpath that takes walkers to the summit of Great Orme, on 4th October 2021, in Llandudno, Gwynedd, Wales.
    wales_llandudno-05-04-10-2021.jpg
  • Two young British Asian men stand in front of a Bollywood action hero poster, while waiting for a bus in Southhall, West London, England. The lads are in their early twenties and are dressed against the cold European winter. The muscular Indian man in the movie poster is in his prime, posing as a tough guy and making a serious face towards the viewer, his rippling biceps wet with sweat. We see two ordinary young men living the harsh reality of life in a big English city, with all the pressures, paradoxes and cultural differences of India or Bangladesh, and that of multicultural Britain. It may be sunny but the biting winter day is raw with cold.
    london_asians07-30-08-2007.jpg
  • Overlooking the sea is the hilltop churchyard of Saint Tudno's Church on the Great Orme mountain, on 4th October 2021, in Llandudno, Gwynedd, Wales.
    wales_llandudno-08-04-10-2021.jpg
  • Mountain goats graze the mountain-side grass of the Great Orme that overlooks Llandudno and its seaside pier, on 4th October 2021, in Llandudno, Gwynedd, Wales.
    wales_llandudno-03-04-10-2021.jpg
  • Overlooking the sea is the hilltop churchyard of Saint Tudno's Church on the Great Orme mountain, its benches facing an outdoor altar for services during the Covid pandemic lockdown, on 4th October 2021, in Llandudno, Gwynedd, Wales.
    wales_llandudno-07-04-10-2021.jpg
  • Mountain goats graze the mountain-side grass of the Great Orme that overlooks Llandudno and its seaside pier, on 4th October 2021, in Llandudno, Gwynedd, Wales.
    wales_llandudno-02-04-10-2021.jpg
  • A woodland landscape where a protest is ongoing in Sydenham Hill Woods against the proposed felling of two 100+ year-old oak trees, threatened by Southwark Council because of their proximity to 'Pissarro's' footbridge whose renovation has been deemed necessary by the local authority, on 18th November 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood and Impressionist artist Camille Pissarro (1830–1903) famously painted a railway landscape from the bridge in the 1870s. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched across south London. The habitat is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    tree_protest11-24-11-2020-2.jpg
  • Autumn leaves by a pond in a woodland landscape in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 25th October 2020, in London, England. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched from Deptford to Selhurst. The wood is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    sydenham_wood04-25-10-2020.jpg
  • in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 25th October 2020, in London, England. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched from Deptford to Selhurst. The wood is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    sydenham_wood09-25-10-2020-2.jpg
  • The root system of a tree in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 25th October 2020, in London, England. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched from Deptford to Selhurst. The wood is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    sydenham_wood09-25-10-2020.jpg
  • A rusting bike frame lies i Autumn leaves in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 25th October 2020, in London, England. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched from Deptford to Selhurst. The wood is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    sydenham_wood07-25-10-2020.jpg
  • A lone walker passes by a partially-collapsed broken sign announcing the summit of Rannoch Moor, Scotland UK, 1,350 feet above sea level. He is hunched against a driving wind at this altitude and the country he is walking over is bleak and boggy, a wetland high up in the Scottish Highlands. Thick tufts of grass and moss lie about in this tough terrain, held in great affection for long-distance hikers. Rannoch Moor is a large expanse of around 50 square miles (130 km²) of boggy moorland to the west of Loch Rannoch, in Perth and Kinross and Lochaber, Highland, partly northern Argyll and Bute, Scotland. Rannoch Moor is designated a National Heritage site.
    RB_128-12-10-1996.jpg
  • With fresh flowers on her bedside table and get-well cards from well-wishers, an elderly lady patient lies on her hospital bed during her recovery at the Royal London Homoeopathic Hospital, the leading centre for complementary medicine at 60 Great Ormond Street, central London. The Royal London Homoeopathic Hospital provides complementary medicine treatment to outpatient and inpatients from virtually anywhere in the UK: From allergy & nutritional medicine; a children's clinic; complementary cancer care; podiatry & chiropody; musculoskeletal medicine; pharmacy services; rheumatology; skin services; stress & mood disorders and here, a women's clinic. There are other female patients also lying in bed, chatting or knitting.
    lady_hospital06-05-1998.jpg
  • Beneath a mural depicting the depair of the Great Fire of London, two tourists stop to photograph a landmark. 13,200 houses, 87 parish churches, St. Paul's Cathedral, and most of the buildings of the City authorities were lost in the high fanned winds. It is estimated that it destroyed the homes of 70,000 of the City's 80,000 inhabitants. The City of London has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000. The City of London is a geographically-small City within Greater London, England. The City as it is known, is the historic core of London from which, along with Westminster, the modern conurbation grew. The City's boundaries have remained constant since the Middle Ages but  it is now only a tiny part of Greater London. The City of London is a major financial centre, often referred to as just the City or as the Square Mile, as it is approximately one square mile (2.6 km) in area. London Bridge's history stretches back to the first crossing over Roman Londinium, close to this site and subsequent wooden and stone bridges have helped modern London become a financial success.
    london_tourists01-16-06-1993.jpg
  • City worker passes-by on St George's Day as flags fly during the lunchtime of 23rd April, England's national day. Christian worship has probably been offered at the church of St. Botolph's without Bishopsgate since Roman times. The original Saxon church, the foundations of which were discovered when the present church was erected, is first mentioned as 'Sancti Botolfi Extra Bishopesgate' in 1212.St. Botolph without Bishopsgate may have survived the Great Fire of London unscathed, and only lost one window in the Second World War, but on 24 April 1993 was one of the many buildings to be damaged by an IRA bomb. The memorial cross (1916) at the garden’s entrance is believed to be the first memorial of the Great War to be set up in England.
    st_georges_day05-23-04-2009.jpg
  • St George's Day flags fly during the lunchtime of 23rd April, England's national day. Christian worship has probably been offered at the church of St. Botolph's without Bishopsgate since Roman times. The original Saxon church, the foundations of which were discovered when the present church was erected, is first mentioned as 'Sancti Botolfi Extra Bishopesgate' in 1212.St. Botolph without Bishopsgate may have survived the Great Fire of London unscathed, and only lost one window in the Second World War, but on 24 April 1993 was one of the many buildings to be damaged by an IRA bomb. The memorial cross (1916) at the garden’s entrance is believed to be the first memorial of the Great War to be set up in England.
    st_georges_day02-23-04-2009.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-09-17-02-2022.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-08-17-02-2022.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-04-17-02-2022.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-03-17-02-2022.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-02-17-02-2022.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-01-17-02-2022.jpg
  • The notification of a tree removal notice and injunction against obstruction is attached to the trunk of an oak tree in Sydenham Hill Woods, the scene of a protest against the proposed felling of two 100+ year-old oak trees, threatened by Southwark Council because of their proximity to 'Pissarro's' footbridge whose renovation has been deemed necessary by the local authority, on 24th November 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood and Impressionist artist Camille Pissarro (1830–1903) famously painted a railway landscape from the bridge in the 1870s. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched across south London. The habitat is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    tree_protest02-24-11-2020-2.jpg
  • Autumn leaves by a pond in a woodland landscape in Sydenham Hill Woods, on 25th October 2020, in London, England. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched from Deptford to Selhurst. The wood is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    sydenham_wood03-25-10-2020.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-07-17-02-2022.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-06-17-02-2022.jpg
  • A view of Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column seen through the railings at the Great West Door of St Martin-in-the-Fields church, on 17th February 2022, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-05-17-02-2022.jpg
  • Londoners walk through reflected sunlight, in front of the classical architecture of Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 12th January 2022, in London, England. Royal Exchange was design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    city_people-06-12-01-2022.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange39-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange32-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange23-27-02-2021.jpg
  • A sunlit detail of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange18-27-02-2021.jpg
  • A sunlit detail of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange14-27-02-2021.jpg
  • A sunlit detail of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange12-27-02-2021.jpg
  • A No Entry sign has been placed on the railings outside the Royal Courts of Justice (The High Court) outside the Royal Courts of Justice, during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 2nd February 2021, in London, England. Judicial and legal proceedings have been put under great pressure during continued lockdowns with hearings and court cases severely delayed.
    coronavirus_courts02-02-02-2021.jpg
  • A No Entry sign has been placed on the railings outside the Royal Courts of Justice (The High Court) outside the Royal Courts of Justice, during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 3rd February 2021, in London, England. Judicial and legal proceedings have been put under great pressure during continued lockdowns with hearings and court cases severely delayed.
    coronavirus_courts07-03-02-2021.jpg
  • Activists' banners in Sydenham Hill Woods against the proposed felling of two 100+ year-old oak trees, threatened by Southwark Council because of their proximity to 'Pissarro's' footbridge whose renovation has been deemed necessary by the local authority, on 24th November 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood and Impressionist artist Camille Pissarro (1830–1903) famously painted a railway landscape from the bridge in the 1870s. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched across south London. The habitat is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    tree_protest05-24-11-2020.jpg
  • A woodland landscape where a protest is ongoing in Sydenham Hill Woods against the proposed felling of two 100+ year-old oak trees, threatened by Southwark Council because of their proximity to 'Pissarro's' footbridge whose renovation has been deemed necessary by the local authority, on 18th November 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood and Impressionist artist  Camille Pissarro (1830–1903) famously painted a railway landscape from the bridge in the 1870s. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched across south London. The habitat is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    tree_protest04-18-11-2020.jpg
  • Activists' banners in Sydenham Hill Woods against the proposed felling of two 100+ year-old oak trees, threatened by Southwark Council because of their proximity to 'Pissarro's' footbridge whose renovation has been deemed necessary by the local authority, on 11th November 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood and Impressionist artist  Camille Pissarro (1830–1903) famously painted a railway landscape from the bridge in the 1870s. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched across south London. The habitat is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    sydenham_woods11-11-11-2020.jpg
  • Activists protest in Sydenham Hill Woods against the proposed felling of two 100+ year-old oak trees, threatened by Southwark Council because of their proximity to 'Pissarro's' footbridge whose renovation has been deemed necessary by the local authority, on 17th November 2020, in London, England. The Nunhead to Crystal Palace (High Level) railway once passed through the Wood and Impressionist artist  Camille Pissarro (1830–1903) famously painted a railway landscape from the bridge in the 1870s. Sydenham Hill Wood forms part of the largest remaining tract of the old Great North Wood, a vast area of worked coppices and wooded commons that once stretched across south London. The habitat is home to more than 200 species of trees and plants as well as rare fungi, insects, birds and woodland mammals.
    oaks_protest02-17-11-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash21-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash22-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash24-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash16-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash10-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash09-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The aftermath of a crashed Audi car that has crashed through railings of Ruskin Park, a public space in Herne Hill on 21st August 2020, in London, United Kingdom. The car was seen speeding through Ferndene Road, a residential street in Lambeth, bouncing off a speed hump at great speed, colliding with a parked car and crashing through railings. The two occupants left the scene on foot and no-one was injured. Two males were later detained.
    ruskin_crash06-21-08-2020.jpg
  • The memorial to the notable landscape architect Humphry repton and his wife Mary,  who were laid to rest outside the Church of St. Michael, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England. Repton was the last great English landscape designer of the eighteenth century, often regarded as the successor to Capability Brown.
    aylsham_church06-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Thames Water Utilities sewer cleaning team inspects the Fleet River's Victorian-built storm sewer of Blackfriars, beneath the streets of the City of London. Discarded fats from restaurants congeal in sewer networks leading to blocked pipework. Sewer men are shovel the deposits and bring them in vats to the surface. In the early 19th century the River Thames was practically an open sewer, with disastrous consequences for public health in London, including numerous cholera epidemics with the The Great Stink of 1858 a turning point. Intercepting sewers constructed between 1859 and 1865 were fed by 450 miles (720 km) of main sewers that in turn conveyed the contents of some 13,000 miles (21,000 km) of smaller local sewers using 318m bricks, 880,000 cubic yards of concrete and mortar and excavation of over 3.5m tonnes of earth.
    sewermen01-19-06-1994.jpg
  • Thames Water Utilities sewer cleaning team inspects the Fleet River's Victorian-built storm sewer of Blackfriars, beneath the streets of the City of London. Discarded fats from restaurants congeal in sewer networks leading to blocked pipework. Sewer men are shovel the deposits and bring them in vats to the surface. In the early 19th century the River Thames was practically an open sewer, with disastrous consequences for public health in London, including numerous cholera epidemics with the The Great Stink of 1858 a turning point. Intercepting sewers constructed between 1859 and 1865 were fed by 450 miles (720 km) of main sewers that in turn conveyed the contents of some 13,000 miles (21,000 km) of smaller local sewers using 318m bricks, 880,000 cubic yards of concrete and mortar and excavation of over 3.5m tonnes of earth.
    sewermen-19-06-1994.jpg
  • St George's Day flags fly during the lunchtime of 23rd April, England's national day. Christian worship has probably been offered at this location at the church of St. Botolph's without Bishopsgate since Roman times. The original Saxon church, the foundations of which were discovered when the present church was erected, is first mentioned as 'Sancti Botolfi Extra Bishopesgate' in 1212.St. Botolph without Bishopsgate may have survived the Great Fire of London unscathed, and only lost one window in the Second World War, but on 24 April 1993 was one of the many buildings to be damaged by an IRA bomb.
    st_georges_day01-23-04-2009.jpg
  • In the week that many more Londoners returned to their office workplaces after the Covid pandemic, workers enjoy after-hours drinks beneath the historic 'Monument' in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 8th September 2021, in London, England. Monument marks the approximate location where where the Great Fire of London is said to have started in 1666.
    city_people-05-08-09-2021.jpg
  • In the week that many more Londoners returned to their office workplaces after the Covid pandemic, workers enjoy after-hours drinks beneath the historic 'Monument' in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 8th September 2021, in London, England. Monument marks the approximate location where where the Great Fire of London is said to have started in 1666.
    city_people-04-08-09-2021.jpg
  • In the week that many more Londoners returned to their office workplaces after the Covid pandemic, workers enjoy after-hours drinks beneath the historic 'Monument' in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 8th September 2021, in London, England. Monument marks the approximate location where where the Great Fire of London is said to have started in 1666.
    city_people-01-08-09-2021.jpg
  • In the week that many more Londoners returned to their office workplaces after the Covid pandemic, workers enjoy after-hours drinks beneath the historic 'Monument' in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 8th September 2021, in London, England. Monument marks the approximate location where where the Great Fire of London is said to have started in 1666.
    city_people-03-08-09-2021.jpg
  • In the week that many more Londoners returned to their office workplaces after the Covid pandemic, workers enjoy after-hours drinks beneath the historic 'Monument' in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 8th September 2021, in London, England. Monument marks the approximate location where where the Great Fire of London is said to have started in 1666.
    city_people-02-08-09-2021.jpg
  • Workmates and friends enjoy after work drinks beneath Monument, the site near where the Great Fire of London started in 1666, on 2nd September 2021, in London, England.
    monument_drinkers-02-02-09-2021.jpg
  • Workmates and friends enjoy after work drinks beneath Monument, the site near where the Great Fire of London started in 1666, on 2nd September 2021, in London, England.
    monument_drinkers-05-02-09-2021.jpg
  • Workmates and friends enjoy after work drinks beneath Monument, the site near where the Great Fire of London started in 1666, on 2nd September 2021, in London, England.
    monument_drinkers-04-02-09-2021.jpg
  • Workmates and friends enjoy after work drinks beneath Monument, the site near where the Great Fire of London started in 1666, on 2nd September 2021, in London, England.
    monument_drinkers-01-02-09-2021.jpg
  • Two young women rest beneath the statue of the Equestrian Statue of the Duke of Wellington which stands in front of Royal Exchange in the City of London, on 1st March 2021, in London, England. Designed by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria , Royal Exchange is the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    bank_of_england04-01-03-2021.jpg
  • Two young women rest beneath the statue of the Equestrian Statue of the Duke of Wellington which stands in front of Royal Exchange in the City of London, on 1st March 2021, in London, England. Designed by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria , Royal Exchange is the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    bank_of_england05-01-03-2021.jpg
  • Two young women rest beneath the statue of the Equestrian Statue of the Duke of Wellington which stands in front of Royal Exchange in the City of London, on 1st March 2021, in London, England. Designed by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria , Royal Exchange is the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    bank_of_england03-01-03-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange38-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange37-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange36-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange31-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange35-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange34-27-02-2021.jpg
  • With modern offices of financial institutions behind, an architectural sunlit view of the friezes and Latin inscriptions on the pediment of the Royal Exchange in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 27th February 2021, in London, England. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    royal_exchange33-27-02-2021.jpg
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