This excellent sight offers a fascinating walk through the underground headquarters of the British government’s WWII fight against the Nazis in the darkest days of
Category: International Travel
This is the spectacle every London visitor has to see at least once: stone-faced, bearskin-hatted guards changing posts with much fanfare, accompanied by a brass
Temper Soho pleases well-heeled carnivores. From the nondescript office-block entrance, you’ll descend to a cozy, stylish cellar filled with rich smoke from meat grilling on
Wren’s most famous church is the great St. Paul’s, its elaborate interior capped by a 365-foot dome. Since World War II, St. Paul’s has been
Here, in just two rooms, are the literary treasures of Western civilization, from early Bibles to Shakespear’e Hamlet to Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
Lying some 90 miles west of London in the Wiltshire countryside, Stonehenge is perhaps the world’s most awe-inspiring ancient stone circle. Older than the Great
Simply put, this is the greatest chronicle of civilization… anywhere. A visit here is like taking a long hike through Encyclopedia Britannica National Park. The
Andrew Edmunds Restaurant is a tiny candlelit space where you’ll want to hide your guidebook and not act like a tourist. This little place –
The Tower has served as a castle in wartime, a king’s residence in peacetime, and, most notoriously, as the prison and execution site of rebels.
The greatest church in the English-speaking world, Westminster Abbey is where England’s kings and queens have been crowned and buried since 1066. Like a stony