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Every Sunday we’ll pluck just one walk from the vast London Walks repertoire and put it centre stage.
But if you only
take one walking tour this week, why not make it…
Down, Dirty, Disastrous London. And Pubs.
Barbican Tube Stop
Saturday 1st April 7.15pm
Guided by Andrew
Plague, Fire & Revolution. The Black Death.
Churchyards brimming with bodies. The harvest of Death. The zombie apocalypse –
but for real. What changes? Everything. We start at an ancient Carmelite
monastery built next to a plague pit so the monks could pray for the tormented
souls of the dead. We visit an execution spot. But not just any execution spot
– THE execution spot – Protestants (yep, the big reboot) and Mel Gibson (ahem).
We visit the site of revolt – in effect tour a battlefield – a poll tax – not
Maggie – this is 1381, a Lord Mayor, a king, a revolutionary. Spoiler alert. It
ends badly. Fast forward to 1666 and the Great Fire (we'll see several pre-fire
structures), the Duke of York and 100 men, poised, a last stand - Cock Lane
(yep, it's exactly what it says on the tin) and then a peek at London's great
phoenix, St. Paul's, raised from the ashes in all its glory. You're going to
need to quench your thirst so how about a pint at Shakespeare's gaff? Yes, he
finally bought a place, in Ireland Yard, the Blackfriars gatehouse.
Shakespeare's cellar is still there. It's our pub cellar, our pints will come
up from Shakespeare's cellar.
CODA: So it's pubs, stunning vistas, historical
alleyways, centuries old architecture and, yes, ahem, filthy street names. What
more from a walk? Violence, mayhem, fire, sedition, sex and booze. The London
Walk that just keeps on giving.
Down, Dirty, Disastrous London. And Pubs.
Barbican Tube Stop
Saturday 1st April 7.15pm
Guided by Andrew
About
Your Guide…
Andrew
Andrew is
"the Queen Mum's favourite". Or, in the words of the Evening
Standard, "a class act". Astrikingly talentedyoung actor – and
budding historian – he received rave reviews for his one-man show, "George
VI in Heaven". Andrew is good company: laid back, friendly, fun, at ease
with himself and his walkers and his handsome, historic old patch. Add to the
mix the fact that he's completely in command of his material and you've got a
great walk fronted by a very gifted young guide.
A London Walk costs £10 – £8 concession. To join a London Walk, simply meet your guide at the designated tube station at the appointed time. Details of all London Walks can be found at www.walks.com.










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