Museum of London
Erkunden Sie, wie sich das Aussehen Londons von prähistorischen Zeiten bis heute geändert hat und erfahren Sie mehr über die Stadt zu Zeiten der Römer, im Mittelalter oder während der Tudorzeit. Das Museum of London wird zurzeit für 18 Millionen Britische Pfund renoviert. Daher ist es möglich, dass einige der Ausstellungsräume geschlossen sind.
Weitere Informationen auf Englisch
Museum of London Adresse:
| Adresse: |
150 London Wall, London
London
EC2Y 5HN
|
|---|---|
| Telefon: | +44 (0)20 7001 9844 |
| Fax: | 0870 4443851 |
| E-Mail: | info@museumoflondon.org.uk |
| Website: | http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk |
Informationen zum Ort Museum of London
| Adresse: |
150 London Wall, London
London
EC2Y 5HN
|
|---|---|
| Telefon: | +44 (0)20 7001 9844 |
| Fax: | 0870 4443851 |
| E-Mail: | info@museumoflondon.org.uk |
| Website: | http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk |
| Öffentliche Verkehrsmittel: | St. Paul's, London Underground |
| Mit dem Auto: | Cross over the road from Barbican underground, turn right and follow signs to the Museum along the High Walk. |
Fahrtenplaner
Jüngste 5 Bewertungen vonMuseum of London
Only good thing is its free
Probably the worst tourist attraction in London. All the exhibits are on one floor and could easily be part of another museum. Few interesting exhibits, and took no more than 20 mins to see it all. Give it a Miss!
Well worth a visit. Interesting and useful, especially the London Fire section.
I liked this museum very much. Apart from being basically free, it gives you a useful overall idea of the history of this great city, starting from the primitive ages (beautiful reproductions of prehistoric houses!) on through the milestone epochs of London. I especially enjoyed the Great Fire section - which also offers many interactive features - and the Roman Age section. It also looks out onto the London Wall, which is worth seing, being one of the few Roman remains in London. Set in the City, it is very close to St. Paul's Cathedral. Good cafeteria and shop too.
Excellent Small Museum Focussed on London Archeaology
This is a great small museum with a fabulous collection of artifacts mostly dug up from the Thames and the surrounding streets of central London. The best thing about it is lacks all the bells and whistles of a big museum, so it is usually mercifully empty and enjoyable.
The best place to go to understand the development of London.
After visiting the Museum of London you can wander the adjacent covered pedways down to the Barbican Centre, while viewing some of the Corbusian marvels of the City of London.
Trying hard, but not out of the eighties yet
I spent half a day there today with my 10 and 7 year old girls and we enjoyed it and we will go back and see the bits we missed out. We did find the exhibition areas quite variable though (see below).
The London's Burning section (the storey of the fire of London) was well told, with video and interactive items (such as a 17 century fire-fighter's helmet to try on).
However the medieval section, whilst having quite a good set of 'things' (mostly behind glass), failed to tell any sort of story and drained the children's enthusiasm in 15 mins.
There were two organised children's events going on while we were there - vase making (using weird foamy plaster?) and story-telling. Both of these were excellent. There was also a children’s activity pack (free!) for each of the gallery areas. They were nicely done – much more than the usual photocopied sheet you get at these places.
On the house keeping side, the cafe was good, the toilets and picnic area were nice and the members of staff were helpful and knowledgeable.
Old-fashioned but informative look at London's history
The museum is showing its age, but if you don't mind the old fashioned type of displays and no spectacular audio visuals, it's a good snapshot of the city's history from 450,000 to the Great Fire of 1666. The collections of ancient stone tools, armoury, pottery and even bones are impressive, and the Great Fire exhibit is probably the highlight.
It's a bit confusing walking around, there is a vague chronological order to it but you end up backtracking a bit and the Great Fire exhibit ends up in the middle of the Museum instead of the end, so you have to walk through it to the Romans if you want to keep your timeline intact. A lot of the text is aimed at children, so don't expect in-depth commentary.
However, all said, it's a fairly decent way of spending an hour so. It won't take you longer than that. And it's free.
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Alle Kommentare, Ansichten und Aussagen, die hier gesendet werden, sind völlig unabhängig und entsprechen nicht den Ansichten von Visit London. Diese Ansichten stehen auch in keiner Beziehung zu Visit London.
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London's Burning: The Great Fire of London 1666
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