I stumbled across this video today and was intrigued, not just by the video itself, nor by the fact it is quite short, about a dozen minutes or so, but also by the way London has changed architecturally since I lived there.
Jago, for it is he, takes us around the remains of the ancient wall that once surrounded the small port of Londinium. The dates vary, certainly most of the wall was erected by the Romans, at places the red Roman tiles can be clearly seen, and while amended, reconstructed, and bombed occasionally much of it remains visible. Jago tells a good tale, he is clearly good at this, knows his history, is easy to listen to and the only spoiler is the advert that comes too soon and remains too long.
I do like short but informative videos, and when I have actually seen and photographed some items shown in the film, and touched and walked beside them I am truly quite happy. This may not reflect an active lifestyle of course.
However, it was the intrusion of modern buildings that really irked. When we see old churches dating back a thousand or so years overlooked by a concrete and glass construction that bears all the clear hallmarks of an architect with a drug problem then I despair. At one point some semi-circular building leans out across the busy street looking like something momentous found half buried on a Normandy beach. What was the point of that? All around gleaming monstrosities glare down their snooty nose at ancient buildings, or their remains, that speak of humanity and culture (well apart from the Circus, the scaffold, the slaves I mean) and the inhumanity of London life is revealed in glass.
OK, I know it
was not all humanity, kindness and agape love in the past but really
these modern buildings reaching up to heaven are either people seeking
to 'make a name for ourselves,' or laundering rubles or some other
currency that ought to have remained back in its own country. I suspect
our Nige does not object to such immigrants as this.
This beam is a remnant of a Roman wharf dating from the good old days. Whether this one remembers Boudicca arriving and burning the place to the ground, slaughtering everyone she found and moving on or not I cannot say with any guarantee, however, it has been there for a while happily outside this church at London Bridge.
I suppose this Iceni woman is responsible for the wall more than anyone. She also created jobs at St Albans and Colchester where some of the wall remains in place. Yet in spite of these jobs the history books, at least those written by Romans, did not speak well of her.
I recommend this video, and a search through his other ones, especially if you have a contact of sorts with London. A great metropolis, full of humans with all the god and bad attitudes found in any other vast city, though life is much healthier now so many are working from home. For walking tours it is great, if you don't mind people crushing you, and history is everywhere, but I would not move back without a lot of money and quiet and cheap home in the centre!