London's Map, Explained

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  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
  • Go to ground.news/danielsteiner to become a smarter news consumer and better understand the world. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month.
    Follow ​⁠‪@livinglondonhistory‬ on YT and IG: / livinglondonhistory
    Buy his book: www.amazon.com/London-Guide-C...
    Jack's newsletter: livinglondonhistory.com/email...
    00:00 Intro
    02:22 Londinium
    04:27 Influence of Geography
    07:37 Ground News
    09:36 Medieval London
    11:20 Tower of London
    12:15 London Bridge
    14:51 Tudor Period
    16:43 The Great Fire
    20:50 Modern Development
    25:12 The Blitz
    27:06 The Silver Lining
    Support me on Patreon: / danielsteiner
    danielsimssteiner.notion.site...

Komentáře • 306

  • @DanielsimsSteiner
    @DanielsimsSteiner  Před 2 dny +9

    Go to ground.news/danielsteiner to become a smarter news consumer and better understand the world. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month.

  • @Archimedes115
    @Archimedes115 Před 2 dny +766

    Map Men are under attack

  • @jareth0205
    @jareth0205 Před 2 dny +147

    River Tayms? Ouch. River Tems!

    • @nat_penrose
      @nat_penrose Před dnem +26

      I'm from the states and kinda taken aback at how much it even grates me, he just keeps saying it!!!

    • @rustinrogers
      @rustinrogers Před dnem +7

      Yeah I was a bit shocked to keep hearing that!

    • @L-mo
      @L-mo Před dnem +9

      /ðeːmz/ or "thaymz. would have been how the Thames was pronounced in Shakespearean times. That is preserved in Rhode Island, for example, where there is a street Thames that is pronounced as /ðeːmz/ or "thaymz." The pronunciation in Britain changed to "temz" (/tɛmz/) over the years but the memo never reached the US. As with so many pronunciation and spelling differences between US and UK English, the US versions are usually the more conservative (ie older) versions. (p.s. I'm a Londoner).

    • @ZhougLover
      @ZhougLover Před dnem +6

      I reckon it's a manipulative troll to get people to comment

    • @EDScool12345
      @EDScool12345 Před dnem +2

      It's all arbitrary.

  • @livinglondonhistory
    @livinglondonhistory Před 23 hodinami +54

    This is amazing- it was a pleasure working with you on this Dan and showing you around London! Hope everyone enjoys the video 🙌

    • @DanielsimsSteiner
      @DanielsimsSteiner  Před 23 hodinami +4

      This video wouldn’t exist without you. Thank you!!

    • @FuddButter
      @FuddButter Před 13 hodinami +1

      I just ordered your book so it will remind me when I come to the UK next, to book a tour!

  • @LinusBoman
    @LinusBoman Před dnem +118

    Brilliantly done. For your own sanity though, I would recommend adding the words "Thames" "Tames" and "Tems" to your blocked words list in your comment settings. 😂

    • @gracewenzel
      @gracewenzel Před dnem +1

      are you having “coronated” flashbacks? 😉

    • @ArtemisScribe
      @ArtemisScribe Před dnem +4

      It's always interesting to hear how visitors to the city pronounce Thames. It feels like such a simple word to me purely down to familiarity but the sheer breadth of different pronunciations I've heard over the years is kind of incredible. I didn't know there were so many ways to pronounce such a short word.

    • @maikhildebrandt9921
      @maikhildebrandt9921 Před 12 hodinami +2

      @@ArtemisScribe I think it comes down to it being not very intuitive. Starts with a "th" that doesn't get pronounced like one, which is quite uncommon I think. I'm sure there are other examples, but I can't think of any right now :D It then goes on with "ames" which looks like the very common words "names" and "games" and "same", all of which are pronounced differently to how Thames is pronounced. I never really had an issue with the pronunciation being from Germany, because we call that river the "Themse" (pronounced like in English but with an added E at the end), and TH often is pronounced T in German, so the correct pronunciation feels right to me. But I can see how a lot of people can get very confused by it because it doesn't follow the most obvious pronunciation rules.

  • @chuppl
    @chuppl Před 2 dny +259

    The king isn’t allowed in my basement studio apartment either

    • @DanielsimsSteiner
      @DanielsimsSteiner  Před 2 dny +22

      Tell him

    • @aidanwotherspoon905
      @aidanwotherspoon905 Před dnem

      If we didn’t have the second amendment, the King of England could come barging into your house right now and start pushing you around. Do you want that? Huh? Do you want someone pushing you around?

    • @14caz68
      @14caz68 Před dnem +1

      😂

  • @EmpressLizard81
    @EmpressLizard81 Před 2 dny +136

    Favorite line from the video: "Paris is quite nice, only because the French didn't ruin it."😂 I love a witty Brit.😆

    • @wandererkent
      @wandererkent Před dnem

      An older, much snarkier, equally funny Jay Foreman

    • @sambell309
      @sambell309 Před 5 hodinami

      It's also funny because the French did destroy the medieval layout of Paris to replace it with wide straight streets and a radial grid

  • @Raaaahhhhbbbie
    @Raaaahhhhbbbie Před dnem +24

    “When the Industrial Revolution was picking up steam” was such a clever pun

  • @socratesmiranda
    @socratesmiranda Před 2 dny +31

    Dan, I'm from Brazil and from a very young age I was interested in the urban side of places, I have a collection of maps of the places I've visited and I've always loved the historical context involved
    and man... your channel is a gift, I believe for everyone who loves this subject
    Thank you very much!
    Hugs from Brazil❤️🇧🇷

  • @SamAronow
    @SamAronow Před 2 dny +76

    "Wake up babe, Young Peter Sarsgaard has a new map video."

    • @SamBrickell
      @SamBrickell Před 15 hodinami +2

      "Wake up babe, this joke is officially completely played out."

  • @chrischarman8707
    @chrischarman8707 Před dnem +7

    I’ve worked in London for 30 years; as a history grad you coexist and witness 2000 years of history every day as this video well illustrates

  • @DanielFoulsham
    @DanielFoulsham Před dnem +17

    Though I was born in London, lived there for four years and ain't lived there for 20, it always fills me with a sense of pride seeing my city rise up out the horizon any trip down there. It will always have a place in my heart, with it's lumps and bumps and ugly bits, but also it's beauty, impeccable character and incomparable vibe that will stay with me where'er I go. You may take the boy out of London, but you can't take the London out the boy. Bless you namesake, proper and well researched piece, more power to ya!

  • @DJVLDN
    @DJVLDN Před dnem +27

    The idea that the King can’t enter the City without asking for permission isn’t true. It’s a common misconception.
    What happens is that the monarch stops at the entrance of the City (Temple Bar, on Fleet Street) and there’s a ceremony with the Lord Mayor. People misunderstood that this was the monarch being stopped and then being let in by the Lord Mayor but it’s actually a ceremony where the Lord Mayor in a way pledges allegiance to the monarch. It’s the opposite of that people think, it establishes that the monarch rules over the City, not that the City is in some way independent.

    • @Newportbanking
      @Newportbanking Před dnem +1

      Hmm that’s weird that someone who lives and works there says different

    • @DEFarnes
      @DEFarnes Před 17 hodinami +4

      ​​​@@Newportbanking"Never let facts ruin a good story" The trouble is the City is a very unique place because it has been unique since "Time Immemorial".
      Things that help perpetuate the myth include:
      The ceremony itself, although no permission is ever asked for or given.
      The fact that William the Conqueror essentially did a deal with the City to say "you can keep on doing what you are doing so long as you accept me as King".
      The Magna Carta says "the City of London shall have all its ancient liberties by land as well as by water". Nowhere or no one else has this clause.
      Also in the city of London, The Lord Mayor is the next important person after the Monarch, while in the rest of the country it would be the Monarch's consort and then Heir, the rest of the royal family and probably archbishops.
      As well as being a bit of a City Nerd I am sometimes a contractor to the Corporation of London.

    • @DJVLDN
      @DJVLDN Před 7 hodinami +1

      ⁠​⁠@@NewportbankingIt’s not weird when you think about it, he’s clearly a very passionate man and unfortunately someone who is passionate about a topic will sometimes believe and repeat myths that make the thing they love more interesting than it actually is.
      It’s like video game / film / book lore. Obsessive fans of a piece of content will learn everything there is to know about it and then go further by coming up with their own lore, backstories, interpretations, headcanons, etc and sometimes they like that lore so strongly that they repeat it as fact and the community just accepts it as fact. But it’s still just made up.
      This particular myth is very similar to idea of that the American who bought London Bridge thought he was buying Tower Bridge. It’s a fun story that tourists love to hear and tour guides love to tell. It’s not true but a lot of people really want it to be true.
      It’s a problem that this video seems to use a tour guide as its main source. Tour guides are generally more entertainers than historians.

  • @producedbypodcast
    @producedbypodcast Před 2 dny +20

    As a loyal follower of you, enthusiastic geography geek and primarily, Londoner, this is what I wanted to see! Awesome content as always, Dan 🙌🔥

    • @DanielsimsSteiner
      @DanielsimsSteiner  Před 2 dny +1

      This means the world!! I’m so glad 🙏🏻🙏🏻 thank you so much

  • @glennac
    @glennac Před 2 dny +23

    Daniel, stunning documentary. This is the kind of content that the History Channel or Discovery use to produce. And the cable networks wonder why no one is watching. 🙄
    Thanks You❣️🙏🏼

  • @user-qc3yk2gd5p
    @user-qc3yk2gd5p Před dnem +3

    Thanks for an outstanding collaboration. You two complement each other so well. When I inherited my mother’s diaries, I discovered I had survived the 1940 blitz (barely born!). We lived under ‘bomber alley’ so were lucky to pull through.

  • @lance1246
    @lance1246 Před 2 dny +37

    Babe, wake up. Another Daniel Steiner video just dropped.

  • @JP_TaVeryMuch
    @JP_TaVeryMuch Před dnem +4

    Forgive me for sounding a little up myself but as an Englishman, I should like to congratulate you and thank you for this production.
    It is quite simply by far the very best view by any american of the
    "ol' country"
    that I've had the pleasure to come across since first I dipped into the land of You Tube in the first place.
    Bravo!

  • @joshuafloro9352
    @joshuafloro9352 Před 2 dny +9

    Love these videos man! Keep up the great work!

  • @gibby8344
    @gibby8344 Před 2 dny +1

    I’m visiting London in about a month and after watching every video on your channel, I was really hoping this video would be posted. Thanks Daniel!

  • @dominicromeo
    @dominicromeo Před 2 dny +2

    Thank you Daniel. Again, a highly interesting video. Nice shots, perfect editing!

  • @jimhearsonwriter
    @jimhearsonwriter Před 4 hodinami +1

    Jack's great - been on all his tours, and love both the detail he goes into plus his delivery. It's clearly stayed in my head too, as when some friends came down to London recently, I was spewing out facts that I'd learned from the tours!

  • @TheKyleRogers
    @TheKyleRogers Před 2 dny +6

    I live for these and annoy all my friends to watch them.

  • @GeorgeP-uj8xc
    @GeorgeP-uj8xc Před 2 dny +1

    I love the quality and length of these videos. Few youtubers are doing it this well.

  • @POTThaesslich
    @POTThaesslich Před dnem +2

    If all the comments are doing is criticising the pronunciation of a word I think you've done well on the content. And Jack is a real fountain of knowledge.

  • @pophamfresh
    @pophamfresh Před dnem

    These are some of my favorite videos on CZcams! Beautifully edited with great execution of graphics! Keep up the great work Daniel!!

  • @ljtinney
    @ljtinney Před 2 dny +4

    I can't tell you how much I look forward to these!
    Please come to Philadelphia to do one sometime.

  • @bamarol311
    @bamarol311 Před dnem

    these are legitimately my favorite videos on the internet. I hope this channel blows up and we get every city on the map!

  • @SimonWad
    @SimonWad Před dnem +1

    From watching your excellent video here, I've just bought Jack Chesher's book. I'm lucky to be able to cycle through London regularly and extensively, and love to see remnants of cool history.

  • @gabrielaroca8366
    @gabrielaroca8366 Před dnem

    Amazing content! And such a great collaboration! Jack is an incredibly knowledgeable guide. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @SpiritmanProductions
    @SpiritmanProductions Před dnem +1

    What a wonderful video. Thank you so much. 🙏

  • @xanderbastiaansen5579
    @xanderbastiaansen5579 Před 8 hodinami

    This is a great video, well done! Very interesting to watch!

  • @julierogers1155
    @julierogers1155 Před dnem

    Loved this post. Just purchased the London walking book from your link.

  • @Mathemagical55
    @Mathemagical55 Před dnem +2

    This is probably the most accurate history of the City of the London on youtube. The only real mistake is Reg believing that the monarch needs permission from the Lord Mayor to enter the City.

  • @bombaymolotov
    @bombaymolotov Před 2 dny +8

    Excellent video Dan. For future reference "Thames" is said as "Tems" - dead giveaway you aren't a Londoner 😉
    Can't wait to see what comes next.

    • @TheStarBlack
      @TheStarBlack Před 2 dny +3

      Temz would be more accurate. And it's not specific to Londoners. Whole UK knows how to pronounce it!

    • @buffaloj0e
      @buffaloj0e Před dnem

      It is very unintuitive for the rest of the world, even us Australians are quite confused at the strange dialect those in the motherland speak.

    • @Pope_Rural_I5184
      @Pope_Rural_I5184 Před dnem +1

      At least they didn't say Thaymz

  • @tomasvega5716
    @tomasvega5716 Před dnem +3

    Would be great to see Edinburgh explained, as most the older city is still here!

  • @Mr_Pengin
    @Mr_Pengin Před 2 dny +1

    These videos are so good! I’d love to see one on DC. That city has always intrigued me so much.

  • @engineering3138
    @engineering3138 Před dnem

    I was just looking for a video like this yesterday, and couldn’t find anything! This was great timing!

  • @planetkemp
    @planetkemp Před dnem

    Professional work and great knowledge in here as well. Glad i subbed

  • @mattlevault5140
    @mattlevault5140 Před 21 hodinou

    Amazing content. Well done!

  • @lanster77schannel
    @lanster77schannel Před 2 dny

    yes!!! been waiting for a new video from you!

  • @calebslaton1079
    @calebslaton1079 Před dnem

    been loving your videos!! any ideas what cities are next??

  • @mmhuq3
    @mmhuq3 Před 2 dny +1

    Thank you for the very informative video.

  • @IamFlaem1
    @IamFlaem1 Před 2 dny +1

    I absolutely love this channel! I've always been interested in history and urban areas so this channel is absolutely perfect for me
    Would love to see if a video about Manila. The old city in Intramuros has an interesting history I think.

  • @RacoonsAreJustForbiddenCats

    Watched this under my work account not my personal one (this one). Great video…. Loved it. Subscribed.

  • @TheStryder400
    @TheStryder400 Před dnem

    Awesome - thanks for a great video

  • @charlesf.5414
    @charlesf.5414 Před dnem

    Amazing video. Earned yourself a subscriber!

  • @MaazAshrafi
    @MaazAshrafi Před 22 hodinami

    Loved this, more please!

  • @paulseoighemcgee5772
    @paulseoighemcgee5772 Před 7 hodinami

    Excellent and engaging content , thanks .

  • @Hakuu_A19
    @Hakuu_A19 Před dnem

    Lived here all my life and only knew bits and pieces of this from school. Really cool to see the chronological history laid out so clearly

  • @vsznry
    @vsznry Před 14 hodinami

    Awesome vid bud!

  • @valeriegillespie7981
    @valeriegillespie7981 Před 2 dny +5

    ITS THAMES!!! (like temz)

  • @MaxPospelkov
    @MaxPospelkov Před 2 hodinami

    Awesome video!
    Thank you!

  • @HumblElephant
    @HumblElephant Před 23 hodinami

    Was NOT expecting to watch a full 30 min video on the map of london but god damn that was fascinating - i gotta get more into the rich history of london

  • @MarloSoBalJr
    @MarloSoBalJr Před 2 dny +2

    This video was damn amazing. I plan to go to London next year and this is becoming such a creature case to find clues of olden times.
    So much history & stories that line the streets itself is beyond comprehension. Cant wait!

    • @EmpressLizard81
      @EmpressLizard81 Před 2 dny +1

      I went last year, and I might need to go back! The tour I was on didn't point out any old bits of wall.

    • @mosesdevadass6056
      @mosesdevadass6056 Před 2 dny

      @@EmpressLizard81What tour did you go on?

  • @jacklynk
    @jacklynk Před dnem

    Love love love these videos

  • @Broken_Femur
    @Broken_Femur Před 5 hodinami +1

    Being German I am kind of ashamed that I didn't recognize where the name for the street "Strand" came from because the modern day German word for beach is still "Strand" like in old English :D

  • @gnarboi
    @gnarboi Před 11 hodinami

    Visiting London for the first time this week! Im from LA, too excited

  • @jimlawton4184
    @jimlawton4184 Před dnem

    Another interesting one!

  • @SL89999
    @SL89999 Před 20 hodinami

    Having lived in Clerkenwell near St John’s Gate & working on Fleet St for 10 years - my BEST ADVICE to NEW AND EXPERIENCED visitors to London - is to explore on foot, avoid main roads and get lost in the many narrow alley ways around London Wall, Temple, Blackfriars, Guildhall and Leadenhall in particular.
    It’s in these alleys you will discover some of the oldest & unique & near forgotten remnants of the city, which most tourists and residents miss.
    Enjoy!

  • @MrAlexs888
    @MrAlexs888 Před 20 hodinami

    learned alot, thanks!

  • @planetkemp
    @planetkemp Před dnem

    Such a useful channel for people interested in traveling! Dang i wanna go to London now 🤣🙌

  • @originstory-earth
    @originstory-earth Před 4 hodinami

    Just as I get ready to wrap up my time in London you make me curious about it again. Damn.

  • @pdolsk
    @pdolsk Před dnem

    So cool! Would love to see you do Milwaukee at some point. Lots of cool history in how the city developed

  • @blahblah5924
    @blahblah5924 Před 3 hodinami

    Love these vids! Would love to see the map of Toronto explained!

  • @abdullahfaisal9264
    @abdullahfaisal9264 Před dnem

    Speechless about this content… keep it up

  • @trollenz
    @trollenz Před dnem

    Fascinating ! Thanks.

  • @schlosss1610
    @schlosss1610 Před 23 hodinami

    Very informative and entertaining video. I’d love to see Montreal or Quebec City next please

  • @gilliankirby
    @gilliankirby Před 16 hodinami +1

    Sydney Australia would be an interesting one to look at. From indigenous sites, colonial times (c.1788-1820s) and then the creation of the city we know today

  • @johnnzboy
    @johnnzboy Před 2 dny +28

    Not sure I can believe that you really went to London if you pronounce the name of the river like that ;)

    • @hens0w
      @hens0w Před dnem +3

      He might have been in greater manchester

  • @martinowen4658
    @martinowen4658 Před 4 hodinami

    Great video. Thanks Daniel. As a Londoner and lover of history, I really enjoyed Edward Rutherfurd's fiction book "London", which takes you through 2,000 years of London's history through the experiences of some of its inhabitants. Unfortunately, he didn't choose to feature me.

  • @sowcow86
    @sowcow86 Před dnem +1

    Excellent videos! I'd love to see an episode on Seattle. I feel like there is some interesting history with the city layout and its close relationship with local Indigenous American tribes.

  • @kevinlaroche5425
    @kevinlaroche5425 Před 2 dny

    Awesome video

  • @livingstonekamau4689
    @livingstonekamau4689 Před 2 dny +1

    This videos have great 👍 explanations

  • @shk1542
    @shk1542 Před dnem

    Great vid, would love to see one on Seoul

  • @mastersingleton
    @mastersingleton Před dnem

    I can see the Map Men influence in this video. Great quality video.

  • @louisjames8325
    @louisjames8325 Před dnem

    Your videos feel like old Johnny Harris videos. I mean that as a high praise. Thanks so much for this

  • @yurkshirelad
    @yurkshirelad Před 17 hodinami +1

    I think Time Team did an episode many years ago, looking for the first roman bridge across the Thames.

  • @LufyC
    @LufyC Před dnem

    Its crazy how you been there done that and realising many many historical things were around you like its not just some random wall or pillar 😮

  • @jammin023
    @jammin023 Před dnem

    This was fascinating. I lived in and near London for many years so I knew some of it, but still learned a lot. Although there is so much history still extant, a lot of it is hidden away or non-obvious and you can walk past it every day without realising. I will check out some of these places on a future visit, thank you. FYI, Thames is pronounced "temz".

  • @MrBoliao98
    @MrBoliao98 Před dnem

    I think some featuring of the traditional street names be fun, based around various trades and industries.

  • @tandooribox
    @tandooribox Před 6 hodinami

    Well done

  • @FC-ds9ve
    @FC-ds9ve Před dnem

    I’d love to see you do one in Edinburgh.
    I moved here from Vancouver, Canada a few years back and it’s such a fascinating city

  • @mildtrash
    @mildtrash Před 2 dny

    Amazing as always! Just a heads up, it might be my headphones but every time you placed your elbows on the table during VO makes a pretty noticeable thud sound

  • @PotatoSalad614
    @PotatoSalad614 Před dnem +1

    You can still see shrapnel damage on buildings in central London such as the Victoria and Albert museum. A bomb landed on Exhibition road and sent shrapnel flying into buildings on both sides of the street and these scars still exist today.

  • @richardb4665
    @richardb4665 Před 2 dny

    Thank you Daniel. What cities are next?

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 Před dnem +1

    When the Industrial Revolution was picking up steam (13:33) --- "Great play with words."

  • @frypanini
    @frypanini Před 16 hodinami

    27:03 Slight hiccup. The Roman Fort Ruins are actually part of the section of wall to the Northeast of St Paul's (by the Southeast corner of the roundabout on your map). Awesome intriguing video. I learnt a lot more about London than I expected to.

  • @markieman64
    @markieman64 Před hodinou

    Great video! I love London!
    One minor thing. The river is pronounced like tems. Rhymes with dems or hems. As pronounced at 25:09

  • @Bioniking
    @Bioniking Před dnem +1

    Something I really admire about European and non-American cities is the integration of old architecture into the city. Whereas here in America, they are lionized as historic buildings/monuments/neighborhoods, “trapped in amber”.

  • @nathannewt
    @nathannewt Před 2 dny

    well made!

  • @MarcosKunBass
    @MarcosKunBass Před 2 dny

    you have to go to Buenos Aires City! the history of the city and the river is very interesting, also how many little rivers shaped neighbourhoods, and how the city built land over the river. Many of that land came from demolishing blocks of houses to widen streets and highways

  • @terrancebrown87
    @terrancebrown87 Před 2 dny

    What a great video.

  • @W2APS
    @W2APS Před hodinou

    There's a superb episode of You're Dead To Me podcast (BBC Sounds) that covers the rise of the "Tudors". A name they didn't have/use at the time, which was given to them later.

  • @mtrxishere3772
    @mtrxishere3772 Před 2 dny

    Love these, you should do one for Kolkata (formerly Calcutta).

  • @triplix9336
    @triplix9336 Před 2 dny +1

    Fantastic

  • @TeamMormor
    @TeamMormor Před 20 hodinami +1

    You should do Copenhagen! Museum of Copenhagen has a brilliant city model.

  • @nicki8731
    @nicki8731 Před dnem

    Will you ever do an Atlanta video? There is so much history there!

  • @eddaines237
    @eddaines237 Před 15 hodinami

    Good video. Having had a lifelong fascination with my home city, I was aware of much of this already, but nicely put together. London is layers and layers of stories over the top of each other.
    Where institutions are in the city tells another layer of history too. One way of characterising London’s history is in terms of imagining it as the perpetual struggle between political or royal power and the desire to get on with making money without that pesky political interference. The Money set up in the City and the politics out west, outside the walls. Naturally, to adjudicate on any arguments, the lawyers and the courts set up midway between the two on the Strand. In order to report on the latest spat, the journalists set up next door to them in Fleet Street. The nicer areas to live historically are to the west because the prevailing winds carried the smoke of the city over the east. And so on… There’s a whole layer of social uses over the top of the physical fabric that all tells the story of the city.

  • @FrankDijkstra
    @FrankDijkstra Před dnem +1

    Fun fact, strand is still a Dutch word for beach