Komentáře •

  • @Putaspellonyou
    @Putaspellonyou Před 7 lety +73

    The fire ALSO allowed the reconstruction of the entire water and sewer system of greater London to something approaching sanitary standards. Covered sewers cut down dramatically on disease. It also mandated certain building codes and minimum setbacks.

    • @SocCapAth
      @SocCapAth Před 6 lety +9

      Are you suggesting people don't enjoy cholera?

    • @varun009
      @varun009 Před 6 lety +1

      If anything, certainly the waterways wouldn't have been burnt.

    • @mrav8r
      @mrav8r Před 3 lety +2

      If only Washington DC had learned how to construct sewage and waterways from London’s reconstruction. It took 300 more years before we (we here in WashDC) acquired proper sewage in 1890!

  • @emjackson2289
    @emjackson2289 Před 4 lety +6

    English Common Law made it very difficult to do the reconstruction as was planned, there were no methods of doing compulsory purchase back then and many free-holders simply said "No, you're not having my three by three yard lot"

  • @LancerCatman
    @LancerCatman Před 7 lety +76

    i do love how david mitchell who studies history at cambridge makes a point, and then stephen shuts him down, was hoping for a historical fight

    • @TonyHavenMusic
      @TonyHavenMusic Před 2 lety

      History is just what it is, it is only His Story, they are stories that can have only fragments of factual truths that are handed down over time, I'm glad QI acknowledges this regular and shifts it's info with latest knowledge that many history graduates refuse to do because they feel they might have wasted those years learning so much data that turns out not to be true 😅

    • @nealmp
      @nealmp Před 2 lety +3

      @@TonyHavenMusic that's not the etymology of the world "history".

    • @kuruman1
      @kuruman1 Před rokem

      By Mitchell’s own admission he rather phoned it in at Cambridge.

  • @matthewsawczyn6592
    @matthewsawczyn6592 Před 4 lety +7

    1:06 - Fun fact: The hippocampus region of a London cab driver's brain actually grows extra mass, in order to keep track of all the convoluted streets

    • @decodolly1535
      @decodolly1535 Před rokem

      If that's been researched and proved, it's fascinating. Or is it an urban myth?

    • @bobwoww8384
      @bobwoww8384 Před 5 měsíci

      Hella cool

  • @rin_etoware_2989
    @rin_etoware_2989 Před 6 lety +3

    It also allowed for buildings between the City and nearby Westminster to be built, since obviously there will be people who would need to live somewhere.

  • @jacknovember8027
    @jacknovember8027 Před 4 lety

    Only 6 people died, the fire was in 1666 and ended on the 6th of the 9th month. Gematria.

  • @jacknovember8027
    @jacknovember8027 Před 4 lety +1

    The fire allowed freemason Christopher Wren to make a packet redesigning London.

  • @LoneKharnivore
    @LoneKharnivore Před 6 lety +21

    September 1666: Great Fire
    September 1888: Jack the Ripper
    What happened in September in 1777 and 1999 I wonder?

    • @danielsaunders2878
      @danielsaunders2878 Před 5 lety +12

      99 I was born. Best thing to happen that year for sure. Unless you ask my mother. She would say her life was destroyed that year.

    • @mvl71
      @mvl71 Před 4 lety +3

      @@danielsaunders2878 Or ask your father. His wife was destroyed. Well, the important bits anyway.

    • @danielsaunders2878
      @danielsaunders2878 Před 4 lety +3

      @@mvl71 I would ask him if he wasn't dead. Tbh I'm pretty sure if i could ask him i doubt he'd give much of a fuck about what I did to her as he left before he could even find out.

    • @hiltonian_1260
      @hiltonian_1260 Před 2 lety +2

      1777 was the British defeat at Saratoga that brought the French into the American Revolution. Basically sealed the deal. No idea about 1999.

  • @williamjones7163
    @williamjones7163 Před rokem

    It got rid of all the really crappy places and left standing the just crappy places.

  • @insernamehereflynn
    @insernamehereflynn Před 7 lety +2

    A fiery first

  • @Telstar62a
    @Telstar62a Před 7 lety

    Where's MY parade, man?!?!

  • @jacknovember8027
    @jacknovember8027 Před 4 lety +1

    666 should be a dead giveaway as to the perpetrators.

    • @peterclarke7240
      @peterclarke7240 Před 3 lety +2

      Are you saying...
      Iron Maiden did it?!
      Makes sense, now I think about it... 🤔

  • @johandelema9747
    @johandelema9747 Před 3 lety +5

    Very interesting definition of 'great'. It's like what good did the bombing of rotterdam do for rotterdam...

  • @dionlindsay2
    @dionlindsay2 Před 5 lety +9

    It's beginning to annoy me that St Stephen keeps saying "It's not true. There's no evidence whatsoever", as if the two are synonomous

    • @dielaughing73
      @dielaughing73 Před 4 lety +3

      @Pipe Tunes You know you don't have to watch

    • @zym6687
      @zym6687 Před 3 lety

      "Nobody knows why it(the plague) ended, but it wasn't the fire" If nobody knows, then the fire is as valid a reason as any, presuming ONE particular event could do so SOLELY and not an interminable number of intermediate causes which are responsible for literally everything and anything that happens....ever.

    • @zoranocokoljic8927
      @zoranocokoljic8927 Před 3 lety +5

      @@zym6687 If the fire happened after the plague ended, then it can not it any way be the valid reason. Cause must come before consequence (unless we're talking Quantum physics and General relativity). So, while nobody knows why the plague ceased, they know it was not because of something that happened after it. Otherwise, you can't exclude Rolling Stones at Wembley as a reason.

    • @drSvensen
      @drSvensen Před 2 lety +4

      @@zym6687 Nobody knows who's behind the work of Shakespeare, but it isn't Gretha Thunberg.

    • @Taricus
      @Taricus Před rokem

      @@zoranocokoljic8927 Quantum physics and general relativity don't break the order of cause and effect. General relativity can make it seem weird, but it doesn't change the order. The paradoxes aren't actually paradoxes; they just seem like it to an observer not moving at the speed of light or in an intense field of gravity. They go over that stuff in probably about Chapter 1 or 2 of a modern physics book (about the 2nd year of university for a physics major).