The crown jewels, Buckingham Palace, Camden Market…in London, history collides with art, fashion, food, and good British ale. A perfect day is different for everyone: culture aficionados shouldn't miss the Tate Modern and the Royal Opera House. If you love fashion, Oxford Street has shopping galore. For foodies, cream tea at Harrod’s or crispy fish from a proper chippy offers classic London flavor. Music and book buffs will love seeing Abbey Road and the Sherlock Holmes Museum (at 221B Baker Street, of course).
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5.0 based on 7 reviews
This bust tucked away in a quiet corner of Gordon Square is a fitting memorial to one of the unsung heroines of the last war. She was one of the SOE spies parachuted into France to bolster the French resistance and to coordinate sabotage activities against the occupying German forces. Sadly, she was caught and eventually executed at the notorious Dachau concentration camp. Seeing this statue is an emotional reminder of the sacrifices so many brave people made to resist Fascism in the 20th century.
4.5 based on 61 reviews
This centrally located neighborhood boasts many of London's top attractions such as the British Museum, shopping on Oxford Street, the bright lights of Theatreland, Soho, Holborn and Covent Garden.
Bloomsbury is located in the centre of London and is a very stylish area. There are a number of small parks within Bloomsbury which are surrounded by Georgian style houses. There are quite a few hotels in the area and as the area is in Central London there are lots of buses serving the area and you are never not far from a Tube station. There are a number of famous former residents of Bloomsbury including Sir Rowland Hill, Charles Dickens and Kenneth Wiliams. I would recommend taking a walk around the area and discovering the blue plaques on numerous buildings to tell you who lived there in the past.
4.5 based on 83 reviews
Part of the British Museum, this glass-covered atrium over the museum’s central courtyard contains priceless sculptures in the forecourt along with a restaurant, café, education center and center for young adults.
I love the work of the architect Norman Foster and the Great Court at the British Museum is one of his most accessible and instantly admirable works. Whilst the BM - like many of London's great museums - is a work of art in its entirety, the Great Court really does gild the lily. There's an amazing sense of space, light, and a feeling of being outdoors whilst indoors (always handy with London's weather) and the criss-cross patterns chop the courtyard into little diamond shapes whenever the sun comes out. The museum is free to enter and most people will want to stay for at least half a day, but if you're really in a rush or you love buildings more than their contents, just run in and have a quick look, grab a coffee and look UP.
4.5 based on 22 reviews
The Wiener Library is one of the world's leading and most extensive archives on the Holocaust and Nazi era. Formed in 1933, the Library's unique collection of over one million items includes published and unpublished works, press cuttings, photographs and eyewitness testimony. The Library traces its roots back to Germany in the 1920s. Dr Alfred Wiener, a German Jew, having fought in WWI, returned to Germany in 1919 and was horrified at the surge of right-wing antisemitism, which blamed Jews for the defeat. Dr Wiener worked with the Central Association of German Citizens of Jewish Faith to combat antisemitism, writing, lobbying and speaking publicly. From 1925 (the year Hitler published Mein Kampf) he perceived a greater threat from the Nazi Party than any other antisemitic group or party. Under his influence an archive was started just to collect information about the Nazis, which formed the basis of campaigns to undermine their activities. Dr Wiener and his family fled Germany in 1933 and settled in Amsterdam. Dr Wiener's first archive is believed to have been destroyed. Later that year he set up the Jewish Central Information Office at the request of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association. The JCIO essentially continued the work of the earlier archive. Following the November Pogrom of 1938, Wiener prepared to bring his collection to the UK. It arrived the following summer and is believed to have opened on the day the Nazis invaded Poland. Throughout the War the JCIO served the British Government as it fought the Nazi regime. Increasingly the collection was referred to as ‘Dr Wiener's Library' and eventually this led to its renaming. Post-war, the Library assisted the prosecutors at the Nuremberg Trial, amassed early survivor testimony and helped to shape the emerging academic study of the Holocaust. Today, the collection is among the largest and most respected in the world and continues to grow. In 2011 it moved to new premises in Russell Square and began a programme funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund to improve access and open its collections to the widest possible audience.
Friendly staff and an amazingly warm welcome. A peaceful reading room, well resourced with archive materials available by request. Whether for an insight into how resources about the Holocaust and genocides are curated, or personal research, this library is well worth visiting.
4.5 based on 60 reviews
This is very definitely a marmite sculpture; you’ll either love it or hate it. Because the station is so huge and there are no signs to the statue, it’s surprisingly hard to find even though it’s so big at around 9m high. Must people come into the station straight onto the shopping concourse or through the entrance opposite Kings Cross station, while this is a long, long away on the Grand Terrace under the clock. I actually preferred the sculptures on the frieze round the base, which depict many scenes of everyday life and are beautifully cast in bronze. But very worthwhile tracking it down.
4.5 based on 7 reviews
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