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The Tower of London.

London has a history that goes back 2,000 years. During this time, it has experienced plague, devastating fire, civil war, overwhelming aerial bombardment, and terrorist attacks, yet, it has still grown from nothing to become one of the mercantile capitals of the western world.

See City of London for details on the historic core of London.

1 Legendary foundations and prehistoric London

The Mediæval mythology of Geoffrey of Monmouth tells that London was founded by Brutus the TrojanA citizen of the city of Troy (Ilium) as described by Homer. A specialized computer virus that enters via stealth or through another program and deposits and/or executes an often destructive bit of computer code, see Trojan horse (computing). A Trojan ast in the Bronze AgeThe Bronze Age is a period in a civilization's development when the most advanced metalworking has developed the techniques of smelting copper from natural outcroppings and alloys it to cast bronze. The Bronze Age is part of the Three-age system for prehi, and was known as Troia Nova, or New TroyThis article is about the city of Troy / Ilion as described in the works of Homer, and the location of an ancient city associated with it. For other uses see Troy (disambiguation) and Ilion (disambiguation). Troy ( Greek Τροα Troia (, which was corrupted to Trinovantum. (The TrinovantesThe Trinovantes or Trinobantes were one of the Celtic tribes that dwelt in pre- Roman Britain. Their territory stood on the north side of the Thames estuary in current Essex and Suffolk, and included lands now located in the city of London. Their name may were the tribe who inhabited the area prior to the Romans). King LudLud was a legendary king of the Britons as accounted by Geoffrey of Monmouth. He was the eldest son of King Heli and the brother of Cassivelaunus. He became king upon his father's death around 73 BCE. During his reign, he became famous for building and re renamed the town CaerLudein, from which London derived. Geoffrey provides prehistoric London with a rich array of legendary kings and interesting stories.

right Westminster Abbeyexoskeleton formed by flying buttresses. The Collegiate Church of St Peter, Westminster Westminster Abbey , a mainly Gothic church, on the scale of a cathedral, is the traditional place of coronation and burial site for English monarchs. It is located in.

However, despite intensive excavations, archaeologists have found no evidence of a prehistoric or major settlement in the area. There have been scattered prehistoric finds, evidence of farming, burial and traces of habitation, but nothing more substantial. It is now considered unlikely that a pre-Roman city existed, but much of the Roman city remain unexcavated it is still possible that some settlement may be still be discovered.

So, during the prehistoric times, London was most likely a rural area with scattered settlement. Rich finds such as the Battersea ShieldThe Battersea Shield is a sheet bronze shield dating to circa 300 BC. It was dredged from the River Thames in the UK, and probably was deposited as a ritual gift to the spirits of the River, as were many other pieces of bronze, iron work and human skulls, found in the Thames near Chelsea, suggest the area was important; there may have been important settlements at Egham and Brentford, and there was a hillfort at Uppall , but no City in the area of the Roman London (the present day City of London.



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