Admiralty Arch, London, Travel Tips, UK Travel Guide

Home  |  Destinations  |  Travel Guides  |  World in Pictures  |  Travel Books  |  London Accommodation  |  Mailing List  |  Contact

Bookmark and Share




Admiralty Arch, London
Photo: C Ford, GNU Free Documentation License.



Admiralty Arch seen from Trafalgar Square
Photo: Gerry Lynch,GNU Free Documentation License.



Admiralty Arch is an office building facing Trafalgar Square. It incorporates an archway for road and pedestrian access between The Mall and Trafalgar Square. It was built in 1912, and adjoins the Old Admiralty Building. The Admiralty Arch was commissioned by King Edward VII, in memory of his mother, Queen Victoria, though he died before it was completed.

On the top of the building are these Latin words:

ANNO DECIMO EDWARDI SEPTIMI REGIS
VICTORIÆ REGINÆ CIVES GRATISSIMI MDCCCCX


Translated, it says: In the 10th year of the reign of Edward VII, to Queen Victoria, from most grateful citizens, 1910

An oddity to the building, in addition to its shape, is that there is a small protrusion on the side wall of the northernmost arch, the size and shape of a human nose. There is no official information why it is there. The nose is seven feet high, which makes it waist height for someone riding through the arch on a horse. Tradition hold that it is Napoleon's nose. It was to be rubbed by anyone riding through the arch.




EarthDocumentary logo and Trademarks copyright © 2007-2008 Timothy Tye  All rights reserved.

This article is researched and written by Timothy Tye. The content is available under GNU Free Documentation License. Wikipedia is one of the sources. You are free to use it for your travels. Photographs appearing on this website are governed by licenses as captioned below them; they can only be used under terms of the licensed. Copyrighted photographs may not be reused unless you first obtain permission from the owner. Contact us at this email address. EarthDocumentary is a Christian-run site.