Viver no presente é muito bom. Mas você já parou para pensar em como era viver no passado? Mangas bufantes, perucas chamativas e palácios opulentos têm o seu charme. Embora a viagem no tempo ainda não seja uma realidade, sempre há a oportunidade de visitar lugares antigos que ainda existem. E vê-los de perto. Talvez até aprender algo sobre eles também. E se você mora em Londres ou está visitando a cidade vindo de lugares distantes, há uma abundância de história para mergulhar. Então, fãs de história, peguem o monóculo e leiam este útil pergaminho digital que preparamos. Você quer passeios históricos para fazer em Londres? Nós temos passeios históricos para fazer em Londres! Estes são alguns dos melhores. Com:
The London Bridge Experience
Vamos começar com algo assustador. Londres tem uma história rica que remonta a milhares de anos. E, é claro, a tragédia e o mal deixaram sua marca na cidade durante esse tempo. De incêndios a pestes, assassinos em série e monarcas enforcados, as fundações de Londres são um pouco sombrias. Que tal mergulhar em tudo isso no London Bridge Experience? Interpretando habitantes de Londres de tempos passados, um elenco de atores vibrantes e informados levará você por alguns dos momentos mais arrepiantes da história de Londres. E, se você tiver coragem, pode descer até as profundezas das tumbas subterrâneas. Lá, você encontrará um elenco horripilante de forças malignas esquecidas. Eles podem até perseguir você, então cuidado! Existe até a Guardian Angel Experience, ideal para crianças, que reduz um pouco os sustos.
Shakespeare Globe Theatre Tour
Falando sobre o que fazer no quesito história em Londres, por que não visitar a casa de um dos escritores mais famosos do mundo? Esta recriação fiel do teatro do século XVI é um espetáculo à parte. E, graças aos guias bem informados, sua visita será repleta de informações sobre Shakespeare. Ouça histórias emocionantes sobre a história do edifício, a cidade naquela época e como a reconstrução aconteceu. Você aprenderá como a acústica do original foi recriada e terá a chance de se sentar e fazer perguntas assim que o tour terminar.
The Tower of London
Cortem-lhes as cabeças! Dramatismo à parte, você sairá com a mente cheia de conhecimento após visitar uma das joias históricas de Londres. A Torre de Londres é um dos pontos turísticos mais icônicos da cidade, e por um bom motivo. De seus primeiros dias como fortaleza até sua fase como prisão, há muita história para desbravar por aqui. Venha pelas decapitações; fique pelas Joias da Coroa, que são mantidas em segurança no interior. Elas certamente vão deslumbrar você!
Westminster Abbey
Bem-vindo à abadia mais famosa da Grã-Bretanha. A Abadia de Westminster tem sido o local de coroação de reis e rainhas há quase mil anos. Na verdade, muitas festividades reais acontecem lá, incluindo casamentos. Entre nesta gloriosa abadia gótica e entenda por que ela é tão famosa. Lá está a Cadeira da Coroação, onde a realeza se senta quando a referida coroação acontece. É um dos móveis mais antigos da Inglaterra, datando de antes da peste negra, em meados do século XIV! Você também encontrará os túmulos de Charles Dickens, Darwin e Elizabeth I, além do Túmulo do Guerreiro Desconhecido — um tributo às inúmeras pessoas que perderam suas vidas durante a Grande Guerra. Sem dúvida uma das atividades mais históricas para se fazer em Londres.
St Paul's Cathedral
O próximo item na nossa lista histórica épica de atividades em Londres é ninguém menos que a St Paul's Cathedral. Conhecida por sua cúpula, ela é um dos marcos mais reconhecíveis de Londres. E a boa notícia é que ela é igualmente impressionante por dentro. Local do casamento de Charles e Diana nos anos 80, a St Paul's é um espetáculo visual. Não deixe de conferir a Whispering Gallery, onde os sussurros curiosamente ecoam de qualquer parede da cúpula até o outro lado. E vá até a cripta para ver os túmulos de luminárias históricas, como Sir Christopher Wren.
Hampton Court Palace
O palácio que pode tudo. O Hampton Court Palace é uma ode à opulência Tudor, tendo sido o lugar favorito de Henrique VIII nos anos 1500. Aqui, ele costumava dançar a noite toda ao som de seus músicos favoritos, que tocavam os sucessos da época. Provavelmente. Independentemente disso, o próprio palácio foi incrivelmente bem preservado. Faça um tour pelos salões para ver pinturas luxuosas, tapeçarias e ouro suficiente para fazer Rumplestiltskin corar. Depois de conhecer o interior, aventure-se pelos fabulosos jardins do palácio. Perca-se no labirinto ou aviste cervos e aves selvagens no Home Park. Centenas de anos atrás, reis e rainhas caminharam por onde você está agora. Não há nada mais histórico do que isso!
Cutty Sark
Um nível acima do resto. Suba a bordo do último veleiro tea clipper sobrevivente e seja transportado para uma época mais simples. Construído durante a era da Rainha Vitória para transportar chá da China para o Reino Unido, ele era conhecido como o navio mais rápido dos mares. A velha Rainha Vitória claramente amava seu chá. Este navio que percorreu o mundo agora está totalmente estacionário, ancorado em Greenwich. Então vá até lá para conhecê-lo. Por meio de exibições, artefatos e acomodações restauradas, você aprenderá tudo sobre a vida no navio. Você pode até tocá-lo, se tiver vontade. Só lave as mãos primeiro. O navio sabe por onde elas andaram.
Royal Albert Hall Tour
E finalmente, o local mais prestigiado de Londres. O Royal Albert Hall é onde acontecem os Proms anuais, um tributo à música e à performance celebrado mundialmente. O tributo da Rainha Vitória ao seu falecido marido definitivamente vale a visita! Vá ver o camarote real e as suítes privativas usadas pela Rainha quando ela o visita. Confira o enorme órgão. Faça o tour e conheça todas as histórias fascinantes que aconteceram sob sua cúpula gigante. E essa é a nossa lista de algumas das melhores coisas históricas para fazer em Londres! Com uma riqueza histórica ao seu alcance, a cidade é o lugar perfeito para obter cultura e informação na mesma medida.
Westminster Abbey
Westminster Abbey
Welcome to Britain's most famous abbey. Westminster Abbey has been the coronation location for kings and queens for nearly a thousand years. In fact, many of the UK’s most lavish royal ceremonies take place there, including weddings and, inevitably, funerals. Step inside the glorious gothic abbey to see what all the fuss is about. There's the Coronation Chair, where freshly crowned royals take their seat once said coronation has taken place. Dating from way back in the early 14th Century, when Edward I had it made to hold the Stone of Scone, it's one of the oldest intact pieces of furniture in England, and has cradled the regal derrieres of some 30 or so monarchs down the centuries.
You'll also find the tombs of celebrated Charleses Dickens and Darwin here, plus Elizabeth I, Mary Queen of Scots and the Grave of the Unknown Warrior, a memorial to the countless people who lost their lives during the Great War. Check out the soaring nave, startling stained glass windows and peaceful Poets’ Corner – it’s easily one of the most awe-inspiring historical experiences in London.
St Paul's Cathedral
St Paul's Cathedral
Next on our epic historical list of things to do in London is none other than St Paul's Cathedral, designed by London’s 17th-century architect-in-chief Sir Christopher Wren. You’ll know its soaring dome, of course – it's one of London's most recognizable landmarks. And, due to its height and elevated position in the City, it can be picked out in the London skyline from a multitude of different viewpoints, including Richmond Park a full 10 miles away.
Anyway, the good news is that St Paul’s is just as striking on the inside as it is on the outside. Be sure to check out the Whispering Gallery, where you whisper your darkest secrets on one side of the dome, only for listeners on the other to hear exactly what you just said. And head down to the crypt to walk among the tombs of such dead-famous historical luminaries as Admiral Lord Nelson, the Duke of Wellington, J.M.W. Turner and, of course, Sir Christopher Wren himself.
Shakespeare Globe Theatre Tour
Shakespeare Globe Theatre Tour
Lovers of literature, London presents a frankly unmissable opportunity to immerse yourself in the world of one of history's most famous scribes. No, not Dan Brown, silly! We’re of course talking about William ‘Will’ Shakespeare, whose Elizabethan Globe Theatre has been painstakingly reconstructed near its original site on the banks of the Thames. And quite the sight it is too, with its Tudor-style exterior and thatched roof – the only one permitted in central London since the Great Fire of 1666, fact fans.
You can hear more such fascinating tidbits on a tour of the theater, in which Will-informed guides will fill your literature-loving head chock full of Shakespearean information. You’ll hear exciting stories about the building's history, the city in Elizabethan times, and how the 1990s reconstruction came about, as well as getting a real feel for what it would have been like to watch a Shakespeare play here back in ye olden days. Pro-tip: book a ticket for open-air shows in the summer season for the real deal.
The Tower of London
The Tower of London
Off with their heads! Dramatics aside, you'd be off your head to miss the Tower of London, one of the city’s glittering historical jewels. From its early days as a fortress, to its centuries as a prison and menagerie, there's plenty of history to unpack here. We’re talking everything from dastardly plots involving disappearing princes and a ‘Bloody Tower’ to a resident polar bear and the weeping, wandering headless ghost of one Anne Boleyn, executed right here on Tower Green back in 1536.
Come for the battlements and beheadings; stay for the Crown Jewels – a truly bedazzling collection of royal crowns, scepters and other priceless regalia, all kept under serious lock and key inside. And don’t miss the chance to have a chat with the Yeoman Warders and say hey to the resident ravens (and their personal Ravenmaster) – it’s said that if the ravens ever depart the Tower the kingdom will fall, a legend that dates back several hundred years.
Kensington Palace
Kensington Palace
Although nowhere near as deadly as the Tower of London, Kensington Palace isn’t entirely devoid of historical scandal and intrigue. Tucked away in the southwest corner of leafy Kensington Gardens, this Jacobean mansion has witnessed dramas around Queen Anne’s love life, the bitter feud between Georges I and II, Queen Victoria’s rather strict upbringing and, perhaps most famously, the life of ‘people’s princess’ Diana, who resided here at her beloved ‘KP’ from her ill-fated marriage to Charles until her untimely death in 1997. You’ll find a statue of Diana’s likeness in the palace’s stunning Sunken Garden.
Step inside the palace to get the full lowdown on the many royal dramas that have played out here, as well as a chance to ogle such historical bling as Queen Victoria’s tiaras, Queen Mary’s sumptuous State Apartments (complete with sweeping staircase and lavish dining rooms), and a ludicrously opulent musical clock known as the Temple of the Four Great Monarchies of the World; you’ll find this 18th-century marvel ticking away (though sadly no longer playing music) in the Cupola Room of the King’s State Apartments.
Royal Observatory Greenwich
Royal Observatory Greenwich
Go on, admit it: you’ve always wanted to spend an afternoon hopscotching between hemispheres. Just us then? Oh, ok. Anyway, the reason we mention this is that the Royal Observatory Greenwich is home of the Prime Meridian line, which allows you to straddle the eastern and western hemispheres like some modern day colossus – just follow the crowds of selfie stick-toting tourists to the steel strip that marks the spot out in the courtyard.
But that’s not all there is to do here. Far from it, in fact. A veritable trove of space-time treasures awaits the intrepid Royal Observatory explorer, from the soaring stargazers’ sanctum that is the Octagon Room in Flamsteed House to an eye-popping gallery of maritime navigation devices, a super-massive telescope so large you’d need a crane to lift it and – the (almost) literal cherry on top – a big red Time Ball that drops down Flamsteed House’s mast at precisely 1PM every day. Naval history, navigational history, quirky history, the history of time… you’ll find it all at the Royal Observatory, and then some.
Hampton Court Palace
Hampton Court Palace
Hampton Court Palace is an elegant love letter to Tudor opulence, having been serial monogamist Henry VIII's favourite hangout back in the 1500s. Here, he'd regularly boogie the night away, throwing shapes as his favourite musicians blasted era-appropriate jams. Probably. What is certain is that he hosted insanely lavish banquets right here. In fact, he had the Great Hall built specifically to facilitate all-day eating. Venison, swan, porpoise. Nothing was off limits, or off the menu. No wonder the greedy old goat suffered so badly from gout.
Regardless of Henry’s excesses, the palace itself has been kept up remarkably well. Tour fairytale halls to view masterpieces by the likes of Gainsborough and van Dyck, plus antique tapestries and enough gold to make Fort Knox blush. Once you're done with the interior (probably after encountering Catherine Howard’s wailing ghost), venture outside to the fabulous palace gardens. Get lost in the maze, eyeball the world’s oldest grapevine and spot deer and wild birds in Home Park. Hundreds of years ago, kings and queens walked in your footsteps. It doesn't get much more historic than that!
Cutty Sark
Cutty Sark
Built during Queen Victoria's era, and tasked with transporting tea from China to the UK, the Cutty Sark was known as the quickest ship on the seas – a cutty above the rest, if you will. Ol' Vic clearly loved her tea.
Now’s your chance to hop aboard the last surviving tea clipper and be transported to a simpler time. Well, sort of. In fact, this globe-spanning vessel is now very much stationary, moored on dry land in Greenwich. But use your imagination and you’ll soon be whipping across the oceans, wind in your hair, salty sea spray in your face, and the faint whiff of lapsang souchong in your nostrils. Displays, artifacts and restored sleeping quarters add color to what life would have been like aboard the ship. You can even walk beneath the hull and touch some of the ship’s original wooden planks and iron frame. Just remember to wash your hands first; the ship knows where they've been.
Royal Albert Hall Tour
Royal Albert Hall Tour
Surely London's most prestigious music venue, the Royal Albert Hall is where the annual Proms take place, a globally-celebrated tribute to music and performance. But that’s not all. Musicians, performers, politicians, orators and personages as varied as Albert Einstein, Muhammed Ali, Winston Churchill, The Beatles, Rachmaninov and Rihanna have graced the stage here. So you’ll be in good company on a guided tour of the place. Go see the royal box and private suites used by the King when he visits for e.g. a Yungblud show! Check out the massive organ! Learn about all the fascinating stories that took place beneath its giant dome!
This lavish concert hall was Queen Victoria’s tribute to her late husband. Head just across the road to the south side of Kensington Gardens to ogle another: the extraordinarily lavish Albert Memorial, topped with a gilded statue of the man himself.
Jack the Ripper Tour
Jack the Ripper Tour
And now it’s time for a foray into the darker corners of London’s history as we travel back to a time when fear stalked the streets of East London. As did a tall man in a cape. No, not Batman! More crime perpetrator than crime fighter, Jack the Ripper was no caped crusader. And yet his legend remains a talking point a full century and a half since his reign of terror in Whitechapel. Why? Well, because his true identity has never been revealed and if there’s one thing people just can’t resist, it's a mystery.
Join this Jack the Ripper tour to indulge in all manner of speculation alongside your knowledgeable guide, who’ll lead you on a thrilling walk through the gas-lit streets and cobbled lanes of Whitechapel. You’ll hear about social conditions of the era, learn about suspects who were in the frame for the murders and, most importantly, hear the real stories of the Ripper’s tragic victims.
And that concludes our rundown of the hottest historical things to do in London!
Hungry for more London-based inspo? Find fun things to do in and around Covent Garden and scratch your cultural itch at some of the best art galleries in town.
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