- London Airport (airport, London, United Kingdom)
Heathrow Airport, the largest and busiest airport in the United Kingdom and one of the busiest and most connected airports in the world. Opened in 1946 and located west of Central London, it provides service to more than 200 destinations in more than 80 countries. British Airways is the airport’s
- London and South America, Bank of
Lloyds Banking Group: BOLSA (Bank of London and South America) had been formed in 1923 with the merger of two Latin American banks. BOLSA acquired the business of the Anglo–South American Bank in 1936, giving it interests in France, Spain, and Portugal as well as in most Latin American…
- London Aquarium (aquarium, London, United Kingdom)
County Hall: The London Aquarium opened in the central section in 1997. It contains about 30,000 marine animals and plants representing some 350 species. Its tanks are stocked according to different marine zones, with specimens from the Indian Ocean, European rivers and lakes, the Great Barrier Reef, mangrove…
- London Assurance (work by Boucicault and Brougham)
Dion Boucicault: His second play, London Assurance (1841), which foreshadowed the modern social drama, was a huge success and was frequently revived into the 20th century. Other notable early plays were Old Heads and Young Hearts (1844) and The Corsican Brothers (1852).
- London Basin (marine basin, Europe)
Tertiary Period: Sedimentary sequences: The marine Hampshire and London basins, the Paris Basin, the Anglo-Belgian Basin, and the North German Basin have become the standard for comparative studies of the Paleogene part of the Cenozoic, whereas the Mediterranean region (Italy) has become the standard for the Neogene. The Tertiary record of the Paris…
- London bombings of 2005 (bombings, United Kingdom)
London bombings of 2005, coordinated suicide bomb attacks on the London transit system on the morning of July 7, 2005. At 8:50 am explosions tore through three trains on the London Underground, killing 39. An hour later 13 people were killed when a bomb detonated on the upper deck of a bus in
- London Bridge (bridge, London, United Kingdom [1176])
London Bridge, any of several successive structures spanning the River Thames between Borough High Street in Southwark and King William Street in the City of London. The Old London Bridge of nursery rhyme fame dates from 1176, when Peter of Colechurch, a priest and chaplain of St. Mary’s of
- London Bridge (children’s singing game)
London Bridge, children’s singing game in which there are several players (usually eight or more), two of whom join hands high to form an arch (the bridge). The other players march under the bridge, each holding onto the waist of the player in front. Either the players forming the bridge or all the
- London Bridge Station (railroad station, London, United Kingdom)
London Bridge Station, railway station in the Bermondsey district of Southwark, London. It lies southeast of London Bridge and northeast of Guy’s Hospital, and it is adjacent to the tourist attraction called the London Dungeon. The first station on the site was built of wood in 1836, but more
- London Bridge Tower (building, London, England, United Kingdom)
The Shard, skyscraper in London that was designed by architect Renzo Piano and completed in 2012. Piano took its inspiration from church spires and ships’ masts, but the Shard’s appearance better resembles the shaft of a stiletto switchblade. At a height of 1,016 feet (309.6 meters) with 95 stories
- London broil (food)
broiling: …the entrée known as the London broil, or London mixed grill, flank steaks and other meats are garnished with vinegar, oil, and minced garlic before being placed on a rack and oven-broiled.
- London Calling (album by the Clash)
the Clash: …the eclectic, sophisticated double album London Calling (released in the U.K. in 1979 and in the U.S. in 1980); steeped in reggae and rhythm and blues, it brought the Clash their first American hit single with Jones’s composition “Train in Vain (Stand by Me)”—an afterthought added to the album so…
- London City Council (British government body)
London: The City Corporation: …London as a whole, the London County Council (LCC). However, the City Corporation successfully lobbied to preserve its autonomy and secured the creation of a second tier of elected local governments, the metropolitan boroughs, to function as a political counterweight to the LCC.
- London City Mission (mission, London, United Kingdom)
city mission: …City Mission (1826) and the London City Mission (1835) both sought to evangelize and rehabilitate the urban poor. Beginning with home visitation and tract distribution by volunteer lay missionaries, the city mission movement expanded into Sunday school, day school, and temperance activities with paid missionaries; and eventually it provided food,…
- London Clay (geology)
London Clay, major division of Eocene rocks in the London Basin of England (the Eocene Epoch lasted from 57.8 to 36.6 million years ago); it immediately underlies much of the city of London. The London Clay overlies the Reading Beds, underlies the Bagshot Sands, and is included in the Ypresian
- London Clinic (clinic, London, United Kingdom)
clinic: Private clinics: …of special interest is the London Clinic, established in 1932 by a group of prominent consultant surgeons and physicians who wished to make available to their private patients a place where the comforts and privacy of a nursing home could be combined with facilities for diagnosis and therapy such as…
- London clubs
If it is possible to be both a midwife and a father figure, Alexis Korner played both roles for British rhythm and blues in 1962. He opened the Ealing Blues Club in a basement on Ealing Broadway and encouraged, inspired, and employed a number of musicians in his band, Blues Incorporated, some of
- London Company (British trading company)
Virginia Company, commercial trading company, chartered by King James I of England in April 1606 with the object of colonizing the eastern coast of North America between latitudes 34° and 41° N. Its shareholders were Londoners, and it was distinguished from the Plymouth Company, which was chartered
- London Convention (United Kingdom-Transvaal [1884])
Cecil Rhodes: Political involvement in Africa of Cecil Rhodes: By the London Convention of 1884, the two republics were excluded from the Transvaal, and the Cape government agreed to help finance a protectorate over Bechuanaland.
- London Customs Convention (1944)
Benelux: …countries were made in the London Customs Convention in September 1944 and became operative in 1948. By 1956 nearly all of the internal trade of the union was tariff-free. On February 3, 1958, the Treaty of the Benelux Economic Union was signed; it became operative in 1960. Benelux became the…
- London Debating Society
John Stuart Mill: Public life and writing of John Stuart Mill: At the London Debating Society, where he first measured his strength in public conflict, he found himself looked upon with curiosity as a precocious phenomenon, a “made man,” an intellectual machine set to grind certain tunes. The elder Mill, like Plato, would have put poets under ban…
- London Dispensary (clinic, London, United Kingdom)
clinic: …in the English-speaking world, the London Dispensary, was founded in 1696 as a central means of dispensing medicines to the sick poor whom the physicians were treating in the patients’ homes. The New York City, Philadelphia, and Boston dispensaries, founded in 1771, 1786, and 1796, respectively, had the same objective.…
- London Dock Strike (British history)
London Dock Strike, (1889), influential strike by workers in the Port of London that won them the famous “dockers’ tanner” (a pay rate of sixpence per hour) and revitalized the British Trades Union movement. Following a minor dispute at the South-West India Dock (Aug. 13, 1889), labour activists
- London Docklands (area, London, United Kingdom)
London Docklands, area along the River Thames in London. It covers nearly 9 square miles (22 square km) of riverfront centred on the boroughs of Tower Hamlets, Newham, Southwark, Lewisham, and Greenwich. The Docklands area was for centuries the principal hub of British seaborne trade. In the latter
- London Docklands Development Corporation (British corporation)
London: Reconstruction after World War II: During the 1980s the London Docklands Development Corporation encouraged major changes in Docklands, including the construction of new housing and a large number of new offices (notably at Canary Wharf). London had experienced substantial deindustrialization by this time, with old industries that had been installed in Victorian times collapsing…
- London dry (alcoholic beverage)
gin: The drier types, sometimes called London dry, may be served unmixed or may be combined with other ingredients to make such cocktails as the martini and gimlet and such long drinks as the Tom Collins and the gin and tonic.
- London English (dialect)
English language: Transition from Middle English to Early Modern English: …century were the rise of London English, the invention of printing, and the spread of the new learning associated with the Renaissance.
- London Evening News (British newspaper)
Alfred Charles William Harmsworth, Viscount Northcliffe: …field, purchasing the nearly bankrupt London Evening News and transforming it into a popular newspaper with brief news reports, a daily story, and a column for women. Within a year circulation had grown to 160,000 copies, and profits were substantial. Conceiving the idea of a chain of halfpenny morning papers…
- London Evening Post (British newspaper)
John Almon: …parliamentary reports, published in the London Evening Post, precipitated a crisis between printers and Parliament in 1771; others followed the example of the Post. Wilkes used his privileged position as alderman of the City of London to prevent the arrest of printers and put an end to Parliament’s power to…
- London Eye (observation wheel, Lambeth, London, United Kingdom)
London Eye, revolving observation wheel, or Ferris wheel, in London, on the South Bank of the River Thames in the borough of Lambeth. At an overall height of 443 feet (135 metres), the London Eye was the world’s tallest Ferris wheel from 1999, when it was built, until 2006, when it was surpassed by
- London Fashion Week
fashion industry: Fashion shows: Milan, New York, and London. However, there are literally dozens of other Fashion Weeks internationally—from Tokyo to São Paolo. These shows, of much greater commercial importance than the couture shows, are aimed primarily at fashion journalists and at buyers for department stores, wholesalers, and other major markets. Extensively covered…
- London Festival Ballet (British ballet company)
English National Ballet, British dance troupe. Organized in 1950 by Alicia Markova, Anton Dolin, and Julian Braunsweg with a corps de ballet drawn chiefly from the Cone-Ripman School in London and at Tring, Hertford, the troupe performs at locations throughout Great Britain and conducts world
- London Fields (film by Cullen [2018])
Billy Bob Thornton: …A Million Little Pieces and London Fields (both 2018). In 2022 he costarred with Ryan Gosling and Chris Evans in the spy thriller The Gray Man.
- London Fields (novel by Amis)
Martin Amis: London Fields (1989; film 2015) is an ambitious work set in 1999 in which a number of small-scale interpersonal relationships take place amid a society on the verge of apocalyptic collapse. His other major work of this period is Time’s Arrow (1991), which inverts traditional…
- London Film School (school, London, United Kingdom)
Greg Dyke: …he became chairman of the London Film School. His autobiography, Greg Dyke: Inside Story (2004), chronicles his career at the BBC.
- London Films (British company)
history of film: Great Britain: …and Vincent Korda, who founded London Films in 1932 and collaborated on some of England’s most spectacular pre-World War II productions (e.g., The Private Life of Henry VIII, 1933; Rembrandt, 1936; Elephant Boy, 1937; The Four Feathers, 1939), and John Grierson, who produced such outstanding documentaries as Robert Flaherty’s Industrial…
- London force (intermolecular force)
chemical association: …low temperatures the relatively weak London forces (i.e., forces acting between any two atoms brought close together) may also be strong enough to produce molecular association.
- London Gazette (British newspaper)
Sir Richard Steele: Mature life and works.: …that of gazetteer—writer of The London Gazette, the official government journal. Although this reinforced his connection with the Whig leaders, it gave little scope for his artistic talents, and, on April 12, 1709, he secured his place in literary history by launching the thrice-weekly essay periodical The Tatler. Writing under…
- London Government Act (United Kingdom [1963])
Middlesex: …1, 1965) under the 1963 London Government Act incorporated most of the area of Middlesex, along with parts of neighbouring counties. Outer London boroughs created wholly or in part from former Middlesex authorities include Hounslow, Hillingdon, Ealing, Brent, Harrow, Haringey, Enfield, Richmond upon
- London Group (art)
London Group, English artists’ association founded in November 1913 for the purpose of joint exhibition. The London Group was formed in opposition to the conservative Royal Academy and as an alternative to the New English Art Club, another exhibiting association. The London Group brought together
- London Has Fallen (film by Najafi [2016])
Angela Bassett: …Fallen (2013) and its sequel London Has Fallen (2016). Her other films include Lee’s crime dramedy Chi-Raq (2015) and the action adventure Mission: Impossible—Fallout (2018). Bassett also played the mother of the character T’Challa (the Black Panther) in the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s action adventures Black Panther
- London Heathrow Airport (airport, London, United Kingdom)
Heathrow Airport, the largest and busiest airport in the United Kingdom and one of the busiest and most connected airports in the world. Opened in 1946 and located west of Central London, it provides service to more than 200 destinations in more than 80 countries. British Airways is the airport’s
- London Interbank Offered Rate (banking)
Prince Harry, duke of Sussex: Social activism and the Invictus Games: …by the government from the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) fund, a pool of fines collected from banks that were punished for violating banking rules such as manipulating the LIBOR. Similar to the Paralympic Games, the Invictus Games include athletics (track and field), archery, wheelchair basketball and rugby, sitting volleyball,…
- London Journal (work by Boswell)
English literature: Johnson’s poetry and prose: In the London Journal especially (covering 1762–63, first published in 1950), he records the processes of his dealings with others and of his own self-imaginings with a sometimes unnerving frankness and a tough willingness to ask difficult questions of himself.
- London Labour and the London Poor (work by Mayhew)
Henry Mayhew: …voluminous writer best known for London Labour and the London Poor, 4 vol. (1851–62). His evocation of the sights and sounds of London in this work influenced Charles Dickens and other writers.
- London Library (library, London, United Kingdom)
library: Subscription libraries: …founded in 1807; and the London Library, opened largely at the request of Thomas Carlyle in 1841, which today has a wide-ranging collection for loan to its members in their homes.
- London Magazine (British periodical)
Charles Lamb: …under the pseudonym Elia for London Magazine, which was founded in 1820. His style is highly personal and mannered, its function being to “create” and delineate the persona of Elia, and the writing, though sometimes simple, is never plain. The essays conjure up, with humour and sometimes with pathos, old…
- London Marathon (sports)
London Marathon, annual 26.2-mile (42.2-km) footrace through the streets of London that takes place in April. The event was first held in 1981 and is one of the world’s six major marathons, along with the Berlin, Boston, Chicago, New York City, and Tokyo races. The course of the London Marathon has
- London Mechanic’s Institution (college, London, United Kingdom)
George Birkbeck: …was the first president of Birkbeck College.
- London Meeting for Sufferings (religious group)
Society of Friends: Polity: London Meeting for Sufferings in the 17th century served as a political pressure group, lobbying Parliament for relief from persecution, coordinating legal strategy, and using the press for public appeals; in the 19th century they broadened their concerns to respond to sufferings everywhere.
- London Merchant: or, the History of George Barnwell, The (play by Lillo)
George Lillo: …in whose domestic tragedy The London Merchant: or, the History of George Barnwell (1731) members of the middle class replaced the customary aristocratic or royal heroes. The play greatly influenced the rise of bourgeois drama in Germany and France, as well as in England.
- London Mercury (British periodical)
history of publishing: Britain: …Pound and the Imagists; the London Mercury (1919–39), started by J.C. (later Sir John) Squire, one of the Georgian poets; the Criterion (1922–39), founded and edited by T.S. Eliot; the Adelphi (1923–55), of John Middleton Murry; New Writing (1936–46), edited by John Lehmann, who also later revived the old London…
- London Metropolitan Police (British police)
Scotland Yard, the headquarters of the London Metropolitan Police and, by association, a name often used to denote that force. It is located on the River Thames at Victoria Embankment just north of Westminster Bridge in the City of Westminster. The London police force was created in 1829 by an act
- London Missionary Society
Congregationalism: England: …was the founding of the Missionary Society (1795), later named the London Missionary Society (1818). Its purpose was not necessarily to spread Congregationalism but to proclaim “the glorious gospel of the blessed God,” leaving the new churches to determine their own form. Although it has always received support from Congregational…
- London Mumming (play)
theatre: The Middle Ages in Europe: …the later mumming plays; the London Mumming circa 1427 was presented by an all-female cast, while in the Christmas Mumming at Hertford the young king Henry VI saw a performance consisting of “a disguysing of the rude upplandisshe people compleynynge on hir wyves, with the boystous aunswere of hir wyves.”
- London Museum (museum, London, United Kingdom)
Museum of London: …the Guildhall Museum and the London Museum. The former, founded by the Corporation of London in 1826, housed many archaeological discoveries of the previous two centuries from Roman and medieval London, the Hanbury Beaufoy collection of tradesmen’s tokens, and material relating to the city guilds and livery companies. The London…
- London Naval Conference (British history)
London Naval Conference, (Jan. 21–April 22, 1930), conference held in London to discuss naval disarmament and to review the treaties of the Washington Conference of 1921–22. Hosted by Great Britain, it included representatives of the United States, France, Italy, and Japan. At the end of three
- London Pantheon (building, London, United Kingdom)
James Wyatt: …to England, he designed the London Pantheon (opened 1772; later demolished), a Neoclassical building inspired by Hagia Sophia in Istanbul. The Pantheon made Wyatt one of the most fashionable architects in England.
- London Pavilion (theater, London, United Kingdom)
Western theatre: Popular entertainment: …luxurious of which was the London Pavilion. An evening’s bill could feature more than 20 different acts, including jugglers, acrobats, conjurers, ventriloquists, dancers, slapstick comedians, and singers ranging from vulgar to light classical. Two of the most famous performers of the 1880s were Marie Lloyd, who specialized in risqué songs,…
- London Pharmacopoeia (physiology)
pharmaceutical industry: Pharmaceutical science in the 16th and 17th centuries: The London Pharmacopoeia became mandatory for the whole of England and thus became the first example of a national pharmacopoeia. Another important advance was initiated by Paracelsus, a 16th-century Swiss physician-chemist. He admonished his contemporaries not to use chemistry as it had widely been employed prior…
- London Philharmonic Orchestra (British orchestra)
Sir Thomas Beecham, 2nd Baronet: …in 1932 he founded the London Philharmonic Orchestra, which became a major symphony ensemble under his direction. In 1932 he also became artistic director at Covent Garden and was thus reunited with the Beecham Opera Company, which had become the British National Opera Company in 1923 and had been absorbed…
- London plane tree (plant)
plane tree: The London plane (P. acerifolia), a hybrid between the American and the Oriental planes, combines characteristics of both in varying degrees. It is a little shorter and more squat than the American tree and usually has bristly, paired seedballs. There are variegated forms of London plane.…
- London Polyglot Bible (work by Walton)
polyglot Bible: …considered the finest is the London Polyglot, also called the Londoninesis or Waltonian (1657), compiled by Brian Walton, with the aid of many contemporary scholars; the Waltonian was one of the first English books assembled under public subscription. Its six volumes contain a total of nine languages: Hebrew, Samaritan, Aramaic,…
- London Prize Ring rules (boxing)
London Prize Ring rules, set of rules governing bareknuckle boxing, which were adopted in 1838 and revised in 1853. They superseded those drawn up by Jack Broughton, known as the father of English boxing, in 1743. Under the London rules, bouts were held in a 24-ft (7.3-m) square “ring” enclosed by
- London Programme (British television program)
Greg Dyke: …editor of the topical weekly London Programme.
- London Protocol (United Kingdom-Prussia [1852])
Neuchâtel crisis: Four years later, in the London Protocol of 1852, the other Great Powers formally acknowledged his rights in Neuchâtel, but with the proviso that Prussia should do nothing to assert them without their concurrence. In September 1856 there was an unsuccessful pro-Prussian coup d’etat in Neuchâtel, conducted by loyalist aristocrats…
- London riots of 2011 (British history)
London: Reconstruction after World War II: …August 2011 a wave of riots swept the city after police shot and killed a 29-year-old man who was suspected of involvement with gun-related crimes. What began as a peaceful gathering at the police station in the Tottenham neighborhood soon spiraled into violence. Over the following days, dozens of fires…
- London rocket (plant)
rocket: London rocket (S. irio) has been used in folk medicine and is considered an invasive species in many places outside its native Eurasian range.
- London Rules (chess)
chess: The world championship and FIDE: …agreement, at a tournament in London in 1922, of the world’s other leading players to a written set of rules for championship challenges. Under those rules, any player who met certain financial conditions (in particular, guaranteeing a $10,000 stake) could challenge the World Champion. While the top players were trying…
- London School of Economics and Political Science (university, London, United Kingdom)
London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), institution of higher learning in the City of Westminster, London, England. It is one of the world’s leading institutions devoted to the social sciences. A pioneer institution in the study of sociology and international relations, it offers
- London School of Jewish Studies (college, London, United Kingdom)
Nathan Marcus Adler: …the British Empire, who founded Jews’ College and the United Synagogue.
- London school of linguistics
John R. Firth: …the originator of the “London school of linguistics.”
- London smog (air pollution)
smog: …types of smog are recognized: sulfurous smog and photochemical smog. Sulfurous smog, which is also called “London smog,” results from a high concentration of sulfur oxides in the air and is caused by the use of sulfur-bearing fossil fuels, particularly coal. This type of smog is aggravated by dampness and…
- London Spy, The (periodical)
history of publishing: Beginnings in the 17th century: …again later, was struck by The London Spy (1698–1700), issued by a tavern keeper, Ned Ward, and containing a running narrative of the sights and sounds of London.
- London Stock Exchange (British company)
London Stock Exchange (LSE), a London marketplace for securities. After having long been situated closer to the Bank of England and the Royal Exchange, in 2004 the London Stock Exchange relocated elsewhere in the City of London to Paternoster Square. The market was formed in 1773 by several
- London Stock Exchange PLC (British company)
London Stock Exchange (LSE), a London marketplace for securities. After having long been situated closer to the Bank of England and the Royal Exchange, in 2004 the London Stock Exchange relocated elsewhere in the City of London to Paternoster Square. The market was formed in 1773 by several
- London Straits Convention (Europe [1841])
Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi: …privileges when it signed the London Straits Convention of 1841.
- London Symphonies (works by Haydn)
harmony: Modulation: 104 in D Major, the London Symphony).
- London Symphony Orchestra (British orchestra)
Claudio Abbado: … (1986–91) and principal conductor of London Symphony Orchestra (1979–88) and the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (1989–2002). Abbado also frequently worked with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.
- London Telecom Tower (communications tower, London, United Kingdom)
BT Tower, communications tower and landmark located west of the Bloomsbury district in the borough of Camden, London. One of the taller structures in southeastern England, it was erected in 1961–65 to the architectural designs of Eric Bedford. Including its crowning 40-foot (12-metre) mast, the
- London Transports (short stories by Binchy)
Maeve Binchy: …Line (1983; also published as London Transports), are closely observed portraits of the struggles of contemporary women.
- London Underground (subway, London, England, United Kingdom)
London Underground, underground railway system that services the London metropolitan area. The London Underground was proposed by Charles Pearson, a city solicitor, as part of a city improvement plan shortly after the opening of the Thames Tunnel in 1843. After 10 years of discussion, Parliament
- London Was Yesterday, 1934-1939 (essays by Flanner)
Janet Flanner: …Paris Was Yesterday, 1925–1939 (1972), London Was Yesterday, 1934–1939 (1975), and Janet Flanner’s World: Uncollected Writings 1932–1975 (1979). In addition to her collections of essays, Flanner wrote a novel, The Cubical City (1926, reprinted 1974), and translated Colette’s Chéri (1920) and Georgette Leblanc’s Ma vie avec Maeterlinck (U.S. title Souvenirs:…
- London Weekend Television (British company)
John Birt, Baron Birt: …appointed director of programs of London Weekend Television (LWT), one of the most profitable companies in British independent television, not least because of its knack of producing light entertainment programs with mass appeal. Despite being more familiar with the more austere end of television output, Birt found little difficulty in…
- London Zoo (zoo, London, United Kingdom)
London Zoo, zoo in the northern part of Regent’s Park, in the City of Westminster, London. It has one of the most comprehensive animal collections in the world and the largest zoological library of any zoo. The London Zoo is administered by the Zoological Society of London. The zoo opened in 1828,
- London’s Festival Ballet (British ballet company)
English National Ballet, British dance troupe. Organized in 1950 by Alicia Markova, Anton Dolin, and Julian Braunsweg with a corps de ballet drawn chiefly from the Cone-Ripman School in London and at Tring, Hertford, the troupe performs at locations throughout Great Britain and conducts world
- London, Artur (Czechoslovak official)
Artur London was a Czechoslovak Communist official who wrote a powerful autobiographical account of his own political trial. A Communist from the age of 14, London joined the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War in 1936. During World War II he worked for the French Resistance from August
- London, Artur Gerard (Czechoslovak official)
Artur London was a Czechoslovak Communist official who wrote a powerful autobiographical account of his own political trial. A Communist from the age of 14, London joined the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War in 1936. During World War II he worked for the French Resistance from August
- London, City of (borough, London, United Kingdom)
City of London, municipal corporation and borough, London, England. Sometimes called “the Square Mile,” it is one of the 33 boroughs that make up the large metropolis of Greater London. The borough lies on the north bank of the River Thames between the Temple Bar memorial pillar (commemorating the
- London, Conference of (history of international relations)
Lord Palmerston: Views on nationalism: …matter, as chairman of the London Conference, Palmerston first showed his diplomatic proficiency. The outcome was an independent constitutional Belgium, with its neutrality guaranteed by the Five Powers in a famous “scrap of paper.”
- London, Declaration of (international relations)
contraband: The resulting Declaration of London classified goods as (1) absolute contraband; (2) conditional contraband; and (3) free. The first class, military equipment, was subject to seizure on its way to any destination in enemy territory. The second class consisted of items such as food, clothing, and rolling…
- London, Fritz Wolfgang (American physicist)
Fritz Wolfgang London was a German American physicist who did pioneering work in quantum chemistry and on macroscopic quantum phenomena of superconductivity and superfluidity. London received his doctorate in philosophy (1921) from the University of Munich before switching in 1925 to study
- London, Heinz (German physicist)
Fritz Wolfgang London: With his brother, Heinz London, he developed the first successful phenomenological theory (1935) of superconductivity, which crucially depends on the existence of an energy gap in electron states. London also suggested that Bose-Einstein condensation is responsible for superfluidity and predicted the quantization of magnetic flux.
- London, Jack (American author)
Jack London was an American novelist and short-story writer whose best-known works—among them The Call of the Wild (1903) and White Fang (1906)—depict elemental struggles for survival. During the 20th century, he was one of the most extensively translated of American authors. Deserted by his
- London, Museum of (museum, London, United Kingdom)
Museum of London, museum dedicated to recording and representing the history of the London region from prehistoric times to the present day. It is the largest urban-history museum in the world. Situated at the junction of London Wall and Aldersgate Street in the Barbican district of the City of
- London, Port of (area, London, United Kingdom)
London Docklands, area along the River Thames in London. It covers nearly 9 square miles (22 square km) of riverfront centred on the boroughs of Tower Hamlets, Newham, Southwark, Lewisham, and Greenwich. The Docklands area was for centuries the principal hub of British seaborne trade. In the latter
- London, Tower of (tower, London, United Kingdom)
Tower of London, royal fortress and London landmark. Its buildings and grounds served historically as a royal palace, a political prison, a place of execution, an arsenal, a royal mint, a menagerie, and a public records office. It is located on the north bank of the River Thames, in the extreme
- London, Treaties of (history of international relations)
Edward III: Hundred Years’ War: …but forced him by the Treaty of London (1359) to surrender so much territory that the agreement was repudiated in France. In an effort to compel acceptance, Edward landed at Calais (October 28) and besieged Reims, where he planned to be crowned king of France. The strenuous resistance of the…
- London, Treaty of (European history [1915])
Treaty of London, (April 26, 1915) secret treaty between neutral Italy and the Allied forces of France, Britain, and Russia to bring Italy into World War I. The Allies wanted Italy’s participation because of its border with Austria. Italy was promised Trieste, southern Tyrol, northern Dalmatia, and
- London, University of (university, London, United Kingdom)
University of London, federation of British institutions of higher learning, located primarily in London, that includes 19 virtually autonomous colleges, 10 separate institutes known collectively as the School of Advanced Study, an institute in Paris, and a marine biological station. The university