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Ex. II Read and translate the text. Every year, more than nine million people come from countries all over the world to visit London






Every year, more than nine million people come from countries all over the world to visit London. They go to the the­atres and museums; they look at interest­ing old buildings, many of them hundreds of years old; they sit or walk in die beauti­ful parks, or have a drink in a pub.

They go to Oxford Street to look at the shops, or to Harrods. Two million visi­tors go to the Tower of London. A million more go to see St Paul’s Cathedral.

Yes, London is a big and beautiful city with lots to see and do.

But how did it all begin...?

The name London comes from the Romans. There were people living here before they came, but we do not know very much about them.

The Romans came to England in AD 43. They built houses and other build­ings and made a town next to the River Thames. They called the town Londinium. They built a bridge over the river, and ships came up to Londinium from the sea. The town got bigger and bigger. Important new buildings went up, and you can see some of the Roman city wall today, near the Museum of London.

It was a rich town with about 50, 000 people living in it. But soon after AD 400, the Romans left Londinium to go back to Rome, and nobody lived in the town for many hundreds of years. The build­ings began to fall down.

Danish soldiers destroyed more build­ings nearly five hundred years later. King Alfred was king of England then. He got the Danes to leave London and his men built the town again.

In 1066, William the Conqueror came to Eng­land from France to be king. Soon af­ter, he began to build the Tow­er of London.

When Hen­ry the Eighth was king in 1509, 50, 000 people lived in London again. By the year 1600, there were 200, 000, but a lot of them lived in old and dirty buildings. In 1665, 100, 000 people died from an illness called the plague. This was called the year of ’The Great Plague’.

A year later, in 1666, there was a big fire — The Fire of London. It began in a house in Pudding Lane, near London Bridge. More than a quarter of a million Londoners lost their homes in the fire. It destroyed St Paul’s Cathedral and eighty-eight other church­es. But the fire also destroyed most of the worst old build­ings, and the new houses that went up after this were better for people to live in.

A new St Paul’s Cathedral was built between 1675 and 1711.

By 1881, more than three million people lived in London. Today, more than six mil­lion people live here. There were eight million in the 1960s, but in the 1970s and 1980s, people moved out of the centure of London.


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