Tina Engstrom

350th Anniversary Events for the Great Fire of London

On 2 September 2016, it will be exactly 350 years since the catastrophic Great Fire of London started in Thomas Farynor’s bakery in Pudding Lane. The fire raged for four days, destroying 13,200 homes and leaving 65,000 people homeless. The speed at which London recovered and the way it did so laid the foundations for the global city we know today.

 Great Fire 350 Anniversary Events. Photo Credit: ©Ursula Petula Barzey.
Great Fire 350 Anniversary Events. Photo Credit: ©Ursula Petula Barzey.

Great Fire 350 is the official commemoration of the 350th anniversary of the 1666 Great Fire of London, an umbrella season of events that tells the fire’s stories, big and small. The exhibition Fire! Fire! is on at the Museum of London until April 2017. The Museum of London is also hosting a programme of fire-themed walks and tours, free afternoon lectures, workshops, family activities, children’s sleepovers and festival days.  St Paul’s Cathedral is also putting on a programme of walks, talks, tours, special sermons and debates until 2017.

One of the more elaborate anniversary events for the Great Fire of London will be London 1666: Watch it Burn on Sunday, 4th September 2016. This will involve setting alight an extraordinary 120-metre-long sculpture of 17th-century London skyline created by American “burn” artist David Best on the River Thames between Blackfriars Bridge and Waterloo Bridge. The event can be watched in person or live online at London 1666: Watch It Burn.

Great Fire 350 - London 1666 - Watch It Burn. Photo Credit: ©Ursula Petula Barzey.
Great Fire 350 – London 1666 – Watch It Burn. Photo Credit: ©Ursula Petula Barzey.

To uncover the stories of the Great Fire of London and to find out about additional exhibitions, lectures, tours, performances, and special events, visit the website for the Great Fire 350.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

William Buckland - The Dinosaur Dean - at Westminster Abbey in London

Working as a Blue Badge Tourist Guide in I often show my guests – especially if they have young children - the bust of the William Buckland in the south aisle of Westminster Abbey. He may hardly be a household name but Buckland is memorialised for his appointment as Dean of the Abbey in 1845 and his work as an early palaeontologist and undergroundologist (geologist). He excelled at two of the new sciences that would enthral Britain in the nineteenth century.

Read more

Totally Thames Festival 2014: 2 - 20 September

Be prepared for a large surprise on the Thames River at Nine Elms this September.   What surprise exactly?  Well Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman is preparing his first UK commission.  This will be semi-immersed in the Thames, and will rise and fall with the tide.   Almost certainly it will be large.  Very large.  It is closely under wraps until 2 September, when it will be transported along the Thames, and is likely to be a talking point in the up and coming Vaxhall area.  Hofman is famous for large scaled up sculptures of everyday objects.  Not surprisingly his 26-metre high inflatable “Rubber Duck” has been the focus of much attention in a variety of cities, including Auckland, Sao Paolo and Osaka.

Read more