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Explore Fleet Street
The district Fleet Street of in Greater London (England) is located in United Kingdom a little north-east of London, the country's capital.
If you need a place to sleep, we compiled a list of available hotels close to the map centre further down the page.
Depending on your travel schedule, you might want to pay a visit to some of the following locations: City of Westminster, London, City of London, Islington and Camden Town. To further explore this place, just scroll down and browse the available info.
Local weather forecast
Todays Local Weather Conditions & Forecast: 7°C / 45 °F
Morning Temperature | 5°C / 41 °F |
Evening Temperature | 7°C / 44 °F |
Night Temperature | 5°C / 41 °F |
Chance of rainfall | 0% |
Air Humidity | 76% |
Air Pressure | 1023 hPa |
Wind Speed | Gentle Breeze with 6 km/h (4 mph) from South |
Cloud Conditions | Broken clouds, covering 84% of sky |
General Conditions | Broken clouds |
Wednesday, 4th of December 2024
7°C (45 °F)
9°C (48 °F)
Light rain, moderate breeze, broken clouds.
Thursday, 5th of December 2024
12°C (54 °F)
11°C (53 °F)
Moderate rain, fresh breeze, overcast clouds.
Friday, 6th of December 2024
8°C (46 °F)
13°C (56 °F)
Light rain, fresh breeze, overcast clouds.
Hotels and Places to Stay
ROSEWOOD LONDON
ME London
Crowne Plaza LONDON - THE CITY
Atelier Apartments By BridgeStreet Worldwide
Mondrian London
One Aldwych
The Waldorf Hilton London
St. Paul s Club Quarters
Citadines Apart'hotel Holborn Covent Garden London
Storm Níké Apartments
Videos from this area
These are videos related to the place based on their proximity to this place.
Climbing Mt. Everest for Breast Cancer Awareness
Jaysen Arumugum (UK) takes us on an incredible journey to the top of Mt. Everest to raise breast cancer awareness.
England raid Portugal for monastery's books (1596) - City of London Festival talk at Gresham College
Having sacked Cadiz in 1596, Robert Devereux decided to stop off with his English forces in Portugal, so that they could take back to England the precious books from the Bishop of Faro's library....
City of London and St Paul's Cathedral at night from Waterloo Bridge
City of London, St Paul's Cathedral, The Shard, The 'Cheesegrater' (122 Leadenhall Street), the 'Walkie-Talkie' (20 Fenchurch Street) and boats on River Thames at night from Waterloo Bridge....
London Olympic Games City at Dusk Olympics 2012 places to see
Filmed from Oxo Tower, South Bank London one great February day. Used Panasonic HDCsd900 Camcorder. Used Sony Vegas Pro 11 for editing.
Southwark Serviced Apartments by City Marque
Right on the vibrant South Bank, Southwark Serviced Apartments by City Marque are conveniently just a 10-minute walk from the Waterloo Station. These Southwark apartments are situated in high-end.
Bow to Kings Cross, via Covent Garden, by bicycle.
Leaving the River Lea, up through Bow, Stepney, Mile End, then the City, St Pauls Cathedral. Onwards to Fleet Street, Aldwych, Covent Garden, including Neals Yard, then up the Charing Cross...
Holborn Offices - Office Space in Holborn
Serviced Offices in Holborn http://www.searchofficespace.com/uk/office-space/holborn-serviced-offices.html Facilities at this serviced office space include; access to executive conference...
Saint Pancras #LondOn-Off
J'ai revisité la gare de Saint Pancras, à Londres. Toutes mes autres visites à Londres sur cette carte : https://mapsengine.google.com/map/edit?mid=zoqvB9do_07g.kllEmdQeah1Q.
Apprenticeship in Early Modern London: City apprentices in the 16th and 17th centuries
The prospect of an apprenticeship attracted thousands of youths to the guild masters of early modern London. Where did apprentices come from, what became of them in the city, and how did this...
Videos provided by Youtube are under the copyright of their owners.
Attractions and noteworthy things
Distances are based on the centre of the city/town and sightseeing location. This list contains brief abstracts about monuments, holiday activities, national parcs, museums, organisations and more from the area as well as interesting facts about the region itself. Where available, you'll find the corresponding homepage. Otherwise the related wikipedia article.
Middle Temple
The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple, commonly known as Middle Temple, is one of the four Inns of Court exclusively entitled to call their members to the English Bar as barristers; the others being the Inner Temple, Gray's Inn and Lincoln's Inn. It is located in the wider Temple area of London, near the Royal Courts of Justice, and within the City of London.
Inner Temple
The Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, commonly known as Inner Temple, is one of the four Inns of Court in London. To be called to the Bar and practise as a barrister in England and Wales, an individual must belong to one of these Inns. It is located in the wider Temple area of the capital, near the Royal Courts of Justice, and within the City of London. The Inn is a professional body for many barristers which provides legal training, selection and regulation.
Fleet Street
Fleet Street is a street in the City of London named after the River Fleet, London's largest underground river. It was the home of British national newspapers until the 1980s. Even though the last major British news office, Reuters, left in 2005, the term Fleet Street continues to be used as a metonym for the British national press.
Temple Church
The Temple Church is a late-12th-century church in London located between Fleet Street and the River Thames, built for and by the Knights Templar as their English headquarters. In modern times, two Inns of Court both use the church. It is famous for its effigy tombs and for being a round church. It was heavily damaged during the Second World War but has been largely restored. The area around the Temple Church is known as the Temple and nearby is Temple Bar and Temple tube station.
Temple Bar, London
Temple Bar is the point in London where Fleet Street, City of London, becomes the Strand, Westminster, and where the City of London traditionally erected a barrier to regulate trade into the city. Today, the Royal Courts of Justice are located next to it.
St Dunstan-in-the-West
The Guild Church of St Dunstan-in-the-West is in Fleet Street in London, England. An octagonal-shaped building, it is dedicated to a former Bishop of London and Archbishop of Canterbury.
Domus Conversorum
The Domus Conversorum (House of the Converts) was a building and institution in London for Jews who had converted to Christianity. It provided a communal home and low wages. It was needed because all Jews who converted to Christianity forfeited all their possessions. http://books. google.
Multimap.com
Multimap. com was a United Kingdom based provider of mapping and location-based services. It was acquired by Microsoft in 2007 and merged into Bing Maps in 2010.
Dr. Johnson's House
Dr. Johnson's House in London is a former home of the 18th century English writer Samuel Johnson. Built in 1700 by wool merchant Richard Gough (d. 1728) it is a rare example of a house of its era which survives in the City of London (this refers only to the 'Square Mile' of the City area, as there are many other houses of this period elsewhere in Greater London) and is the only one of Johnson's 18 residences in the City to survive. Five bays wide and five stories high, it is located at No.
Ede & Ravenscroft
Ede & Ravenscroft are the oldest tailors in London, established in 1689. They have three London premises, on Gracechurch Street, Chancery Lane and Burlington Gardens, very close to the famous Savile Row. They make, sell and hire out legal gowns and wigs, clerical dress, civic and municipal robes, academic dress and other ceremonial and formal dress, and have shops in Oxford, Cambridge and Edinburgh.
Dorset Garden Theatre
The Dorset Garden Theatre in London, built in 1671, was in its early years also known as the Duke of York's Theatre, or the Duke's Theatre. In 1685, King Charles II died and his brother, the Duke of York, was crowned as James II. When the Duke became King, the theatre became the Queen's Theatre in 1685, referring to James' second wife, Mary of Modena. The name remained when William and Mary came to the throne in 1689.
2 King's Bench Walk
2 King's Bench Walk is a Grade I listed building that houses barristers' chambers in the Inner Temple, Central London. It was designed by Sir Christopher Wren in about 1680, after the Great Fire of 1666. The building was fortunate to have survived World War II, and remains as an important example of a well-proportioned seventeenth century townhouse. The corner position provides for a number of spacious dual-aspect rooms with views towards the River Thames.
Child & Co
Child & Co. is a formerly independent private bank that is now a separate wholly owned subsidiary and branch or brand of the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) Group. is based at 1 Fleet Street in the City of London. It is authorised by the Financial Services Authority as a brand of the Royal Bank of Scotland for regulatory compliance purposes. Child & Co.
Essex House (London)
Essex House was a house in London, built around 1575 for Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester and originally called Leicester House. The property occupied the site where the Outer Temple, part of the London headquarters of the Knights Templar, had previously stood, and was immediately adjacent to the Middle Temple, then one of the four principal Inns of Court. The house fronted The Strand and was adjacent to the Middle Temple of the London headquarters of the Knights Templar.
Serjeant's Inn
Serjeant's Inn was one of the two inns of the Serjeants-at-Law in London. The Fleet Street inn dated from 1443 and the Chancery Lane inn dated from 1416. Both buildings were destroyed in the World War II 1941 bombing raids. By 1500 there were two Serjeants' Inns. They accommodated two societies of Serjeants-at-law. In 1730, the Fleet Street lease was not renewed and the two societies merged.
Prince Henry's Room
Prince Henry's Room has been a museum (since 1975, which closed to the public after a decade or so) and is now empty of all furniture save for a large table. Situated on the first floor at the front of No. 17 Fleet Street, London in England, United Kingdom. The house is one of the few buildings in the City of London which survived the Great Fire of London in 1666.
Inner Temple Library
The Inner Temple Library is a private law library in Central London, England, serving barristers, judges, and students on the Bar Vocational Course. Its parent body is the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, one of the four Inns of Court. Its law collections cover the legal systems of the British Isles and also Commonwealth countries.
Clifford's Inn
Clifford's Inn was previously an Inn of Chancery and is located between Fetter Lane, Clifford's Inn Passage, leading off Fleet Street and Chancery Lane in the City of London. Founded in 1344 and dissolved in 1903, most of its original structure was demolished in 1934. It was both the first Inn of Chancery to be founded and the last to be demolished.
Liberty of the Rolls
The Liberty of the Rolls was a liberty, and civil parish from 1866, in the metropolitan area of London, England. It consisted of the part of the ancient parish of St Dunstan-in-the-West that was in the Ossulstone hundred of Middlesex, the rest was within the City of London. It became a separate civil parish in 1866. Named perhaps after the ancient Rolls House upon Chancery Lane where the rolls of the Court of Chancery of England were kept, or perhaps, like other parishes, the chapel.
Grecian Coffee House
The Grecian Coffee House was first established in about 1665 at Wapping Old Stairs in London, England, by a Greek former mariner called George Constantine. The enterprise proved a success and by 1677 Constantine had been able to move his premises to a more central location in Devereux Court, off Fleet Street. In the 1690s the Grecian was the favoured meeting place of the opposition Whigs, a group that included John Trenchard, Andrew Fletcher and Matthew Tindal.
Maughan Library
The Maughan Library is the main research library of King's College London, forming part of the Strand Campus. A 19th century neo-Gothic building located on Chancery Lane in the City of London, it was formerly the home to the headquarters of the Public Record Office, known as the "strong-box of the Empire", and was acquired by the university in 2001. Following a £35m renovation the Maughan is the largest new university library in the United Kingdom since World War II.
Ye Olde Cock Tavern
Ye Olde Cock Tavern is a public house on London's Fleet Street and is part of the Taylor Walker Pubs group. Originally built before the 17th century, it was rebuilt, including the interior (which is thought to include work by carver Grinling Gibbons), on the other side of the road in the 1880s when a branch of the Bank of England was built where it stood.
Pleydell Street
Pleydell Street is a short street in the City of London between Bouverie Street and Lombard Lane, near Fleet Street. Its name comes from the landlords of this area, the Pleydell-Bouveries, Earls of Radnor.
Bouverie Street
Bouverie Street is a street in the City of London, off Fleet Street, which used to be the home of some of Britain's most widely circulated newspapers. It was the site of the Whitefriars Priory. The offices of the News Chronicle, a British daily newspaper, were based there until it ceased publication on 17 October 1960 after being absorbed into the Daily Mail.
Outer Temple
The Outer Temple is thought to have been one of the ten Inns of Chancery. Previously unknown, its existence was first posited by A. W. B. Simpson and confirmed by John Baker in 2008. Little is known of it, other than that it lacked a hall; Baker suggests that this is the reason that it did not survive long enough to appear in many records.