The London History Show: The Great Fire

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 376

  • @timonmassarella5227
    @timonmassarella5227 Рік тому +353

    Love how the baker was called Fariner. The Italian for flour is Farina. Wonder how far their family goes back as bakers to take the surname as Latin to distinguish families by trade

    • @radiochoiu
      @radiochoiu Рік тому +13

      I thought the same! I'm from Valencia in Spain and in valencian/catalan it is also called farina (like many other words we have in common).

    • @gabitamiravideos
      @gabitamiravideos Рік тому +9

      Came to say this…
      It makes me wonder if his family name came from the trade.

    • @funnycurlysoul
      @funnycurlysoul Рік тому +26

      Could also come from the french (farine), as is the case with many food names : pork, mutton etc. words brought by the kings from normandy

    • @theohercules1943
      @theohercules1943 Рік тому +7

      It's similar in French as well: farine

    • @Koios90
      @Koios90 Рік тому +12

      Now that's interesting. Here in Norway we also have the word farin, stemming from the same Latin word. However, somewhere along the way it changed its meaning here to sugar!

  • @RegebroRepairs
    @RegebroRepairs Рік тому +710

    My lord, Julie Andrews and Audrey Hepburn somehow had a child and she is a brilliant and entertaining historian. What a world we live in. I learned a lot, and I'm a history nerd, so teaching me new stuff isn't easy. 🙂

    • @amfarrell42
      @amfarrell42 Рік тому +19

      Fancy meeting you here!
      Yes she is a pretty great presenter. London is a lovely place to visit for all the layers of history.

    • @davidlewis8814
      @davidlewis8814 Рік тому +18

      I know! Isn’t she lovely!

    • @SenshiSunPower
      @SenshiSunPower Рік тому +24

      Is that what happened after the 1964 Oscars? (Kidding.)

    • @stevecannon1774
      @stevecannon1774 Рік тому +9

      I so wish I could visit London. I would get a wheelchair if necessary to see all of the museums I could.

    • @SecretSquirrelFun
      @SecretSquirrelFun Рік тому +18

      Oh my goodness - exactly, that’s exactly who she looks like. ❤
      Spot on, well done 🙂

  • @Bombsuprise
    @Bombsuprise Рік тому +18

    Fun Fact: I was at Stonehenge in June and was chatting with a docent who mentioned that a couple famous Englishmen had scratched their name into the stones, including Christopher Wren. That sounds monstrous of course, but now it's an amazing bit of history in and of itself.

  • @JustKittylicious
    @JustKittylicious Рік тому +42

    My nan is fluent in shorthand as she was a secretary from a young age. As kids we would reach our books outloud to her and she would write it down as we were reading in short hand, and then word for word could read back what we had just said to her. Because of her I happen to have a tattoo of a shorthand symbol 💜💜 we are from the west midlands, and when she would get mad when we were kids she would say "yum mekin me savage!!!!" So I got the shorthand symbol for savage tattooed for her 💜

    • @MrNozzi
      @MrNozzi Рік тому +3

      Respect... now that is a meaningful tattoo!

    • @echognomecal6742
      @echognomecal6742 8 місяців тому

      That's killer, love it! You helped her live on in spectacular fashion ❤

  • @helenpree6177
    @helenpree6177 4 роки тому +139

    So this is being used to explore the energy of fire and wind in my lower KS2 RE lesson. It also provides an abundance of cross-curricular links for the children to enjoy, to explore further and to keep them occupied. Perfect for Virtual Home Learning during COVID-19 lockdown!

    • @sashaakua
      @sashaakua 4 роки тому +2

      MISS PREE
      This is Elinam on my moms account since it didn't work on my google account

    • @longbeardbobson4710
      @longbeardbobson4710 Рік тому

      What has any of that to do with RE?

    • @ElizabethJones-pv3sj
      @ElizabethJones-pv3sj Рік тому

      @@longbeardbobson4710 As a teacher outside the UK my guess would be looking at how is fire used or diecussed in the bible. Why is the holy spirit tongues of flame, why do saints talk about the fire of God's love... fire is used literally or figuratively throughout the bible so this serves as a hook to get the kids interested in some of the ideas around why would fire be used /talked about like this.

    • @duncanbrown4184
      @duncanbrown4184 Рік тому +2

      @@longbeardbobson4710 firstly, lower KS2 is year 3-4 at primary school, which I believe is still Elementary school in the States. As such even lessons like RE are a general melange including history, sociology and human geography, which are all touched on in this video.
      Also, Chapter 4 in the video goes into the blame that was passed around at the time, which included the idea that the fire was God's Judgement on the sin and iniquity in the city. Plenty there for Primary school RE.

    • @je6874
      @je6874 Рік тому

      @@longbeardbobson4710I’m not sure but I assume it’s under the same heading as what we had: ‘PSHE - politics, sociology, history, economics’. If not, it should be called that for clarity.

  • @armitagehux8190
    @armitagehux8190 Рік тому +107

    I live in Paris and what you said about Saint Paul's cathedral also happened to Notre Dame, to a lesser extent. Having experienced this, I can only imagine the terror Londoners must have felt

    • @paulqueripel3493
      @paulqueripel3493 Рік тому +7

      This was St. Paul's second fire, the first one destroyed the spire a hundred or so years earlier.

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 Рік тому +11

      This is partly why Londoners were so protective if the Cathedral during the Blitz. The Germans could destroy their hones, their shops, their roads, but damn! if they’d take St. Paul’s away from them!
      It’s interesting what people will save from a fire. A summer job once asked “What would you grab if you have to escape a fire?” I pointed to the corner where I had a sleeping bag, two backpacks of my medical supplies snd clothes, and my dog. Coworkers asked if I wanted to stay with them until I could go home

    • @Weirdkauz
      @Weirdkauz Рік тому +2

      @@icarusbinns3156idk, in the German City Mainz, there was a group dedicated to save the huge old cathedral during the allied bombardment as well. Made it, too. I see things like that as sensitive vs barbarians. Wars come and go, but buildings like those...

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 Рік тому

      @@Weirdkauz wars often target buildings. Doesn’t have to be a particularly useful structure, either

    • @stekra3159
      @stekra3159 Рік тому

      Ore saint stephonse in 1945

  • @dseray9494
    @dseray9494 Рік тому +231

    Great video, really enjoyed it
    Though Tom Scott has a video about the fire brigade plaques, in which he says that it might not actually be the case that the fire brigades wouldn't have let your house burn down if you didn't have their plaque

    • @christianellegaard7120
      @christianellegaard7120 Рік тому +27

      Yes. Rather it was more a competition between the various brigades, who could get there first.

    • @sunny_muffins
      @sunny_muffins Рік тому +11

      Thanks, I was to make the same comment. :D

    • @emilyscloset2648
      @emilyscloset2648 Рік тому +5

      +1

    • @user9267
      @user9267 Рік тому +6

      I'm so confused, that was like a triple negative

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma Рік тому +5

      @@user9267 "wouldn't" should be "would".

  • @Nuggetmonk
    @Nuggetmonk Рік тому +26

    why did i just discover this channel? this is exactly my nerdy definition of evening entertainment :D

  • @robertschultz6922
    @robertschultz6922 Рік тому +24

    In larger fires we still use fire breaks. A really good example was the great earthquake in San Francisco in the early 1900's. They were using dynamite to destroy houses which actually created more fires than the quake. In Wildland fires here in the US we use them all the time. I was a fire fighter for years and it is the only way to put out a huge fire like that.

    • @renastone9355
      @renastone9355 9 місяців тому

      We watched the firefighters fight the fires in the mountains our neighborhood faces. Several years on (the fire was 2020), you can still see the firebreaks they cut along the face of the mountain - a straight line where above, all was burned, and everything below was saved. (While the firebreaks were being cut, the helicopters were doing water drops as well, of course...)

  • @sirhcmi3
    @sirhcmi3 Рік тому +8

    I love the way you frame these stories and how you narrate them.

  • @ish474
    @ish474 8 місяців тому +8

    There are so many very funny, very cute parts of this video... about... a great fire
    "He was a big wig, literally he had a big wig"😂❤

  • @jplstudios6507
    @jplstudios6507 Рік тому +5

    Jenny, your delivery is flawless. I could watch/ listen to you for hours.

  • @jessicagerber1894
    @jessicagerber1894 Рік тому +33

    I absolutely love your videos. You could be on television or schoolchildren’s videos you are so captivating. I am just a mom of 9! children in New Jersey USA who loves all things England! I hope to visit someday. Your stories and your delivery give me bits of joy- thank you. ❤

    • @marieroberts5664
      @marieroberts5664 Рік тому

      Shout out to a fellow New Jerseyan! I too love her videos and hope to see you again in the comments.

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 Рік тому +5

      Nine? Good gods, woman, when do you sleep?

  • @OutforHardRubbish
    @OutforHardRubbish Рік тому +8

    You need your own show on the BBC.

    • @stevetaylor8698
      @stevetaylor8698 Рік тому

      She's a bit white for that. Though if she's a lesbian.............

  • @lyntwo
    @lyntwo Рік тому +24

    I viewed this being a survivor of the Campfire 2018 which saw the incineration of Paradise, California within but a handful of hours.
    Terrifying still. People from all over the world reached out to help.
    Luckily London had the King they did. I will leave it at that.

    • @turtlepenguinXkizuna
      @turtlepenguinXkizuna Рік тому +2

      The fires that California goes through sound truly terrifying, my heart goes out to you.

    • @renastone9355
      @renastone9355 9 місяців тому +1

      Paradise was awful. We are in Southern California and were on evacuation alert for the Bobcat Fire (in the San Gabriel Mountains) for a couple of weeks. Tough looking around your house and trying to figure out what you'll save and what you won't...

  • @Insightfill
    @Insightfill Рік тому +13

    This is FASCINATING! Thank you for pulling this all together. Love the narrative style.

  • @angelicasmodel
    @angelicasmodel Рік тому +11

    Thank you for this detailed video. I live in regional south east Australia so a lot of the things you mention about fire are very familiar, only this is an urban setting, rather than a rural one. Things like hot weather leading up to it, lots of dry kindling, windy day, fire breaks, building fire proof structures after, homelessness.... and yeah, the sudden disappearance of leadership during the fire.

  • @awesomotommy
    @awesomotommy 4 роки тому +47

    Really enjoyed this, even though I studied the great fire of London in school I still learnt a lot here.
    You deserve a lot more subscribers

  • @RadicalEdwardStudios
    @RadicalEdwardStudios Рік тому +2

    I'm reminded of Good Omens's Adultery Pulsifer.

  • @brucehutch5419
    @brucehutch5419 Рік тому +12

    Your presentations are so educational and entertaining. Once I start I usually end up binge-watching. I guess you could say I'm a J.Draper-aholic.

  • @MrDaigoRiki
    @MrDaigoRiki Рік тому +2

    I love England and English people, I’m from Japan, English are one of the nicest people I’ve ever seen out side of where I’m from, I’m Asian, I was a student there and I thought I’d be discriminated but non of that happened and I traveled to Paris for a week and I was discriminated in day 3. 😅

  • @ds1868
    @ds1868 Рік тому +3

    One benefit of the Great Fire was that it ended the periodic incidence of the plague. This was still an issue in London with the last outbreak in 1665. The fire probably helped to clear out the plague, one useful benefit at least.

  • @CantFeelMe
    @CantFeelMe 4 роки тому +17

    Well presented, good production and very educational thanks for the upload.

  • @HighTensionWire
    @HighTensionWire 4 роки тому +17

    This was really good, thank you for making it. Please make more.

  • @theobolt250
    @theobolt250 Рік тому +1

    I'm only watching cos of the ICONIC HAT! Positively in love with that hat!

  • @amyt3949
    @amyt3949 Рік тому +5

    As an Australian who lives in Melbourne, this is fascinating. Bushfires are a huge threat here. It's interesting seeing the Parallels with black saturday fires and 2020 fires. Thanks for your passion and knowledge.

    • @chelsey8737
      @chelsey8737 Рік тому +2

      As a Californian, 100% agree and understand. Our wildfires have burned an entire town to the ground and even tiny fires are horrifying bc they spread so quick across our parched land. We often spend entire summers indoor bc the fires make smoke and ashes so thick you can't breathe outside

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 Рік тому +1

      I'm a Canadian and the forest and bush fires have been so bad this year. Here in Alberta the fires started before the plants greened up for Spring. This made everything so dry that the fires spread fast. I am still not going outside unless absolutely necessary because the smoke is bad here. We are so greatful for all the foreign countries that have sent help including Spain and Portugal from Europe. Now poor Europe is suffering from fires in the south. The summer has been hotter than normal there as well as here. Hopefully everything can be under control soon.

  • @rimothytimothy1398
    @rimothytimothy1398 Рік тому +3

    Watching these older videos (Love them) since discovering your Shorts and you definitely have progressed. Your enthusiasm and passion come out more in your recent videos, and that makes the information that much more enjoyable to consume. Keep on keeping on because you make good content

  • @MR-sj6rq
    @MR-sj6rq Рік тому +3

    She's good. Really good.

  • @sylviahoward1065
    @sylviahoward1065 Рік тому +3

    "The judge thinks he's was mad.. they hanged him anyway." IDK why that made me laugh so hard.

  • @richardburke6902
    @richardburke6902 Рік тому +3

    Love, love, love all of Ms. Draper’s videos. I’ve mostly seen the “shorts”. But I also wanted to point out what seems to be a linguistic difference between U. S. and British usage.
    Here in the U. S. we say “different from” and Ms. Draper always uses the “different to” form, which I had never before heard.
    Anyway, I thought it was an interesting tidbit. 😊

  • @TulsaTaurus
    @TulsaTaurus Рік тому +3

    Great video! You missed my favorite quote from the mayor who- early on- said that "a woman could piss it out." And so he did nothing.

  • @jakecavendish3470
    @jakecavendish3470 Рік тому

    I love all the traditions of the City of London: the Customary Pye served on old Lamas eve, the annual washing of the Lady Mayoress's private corridor, the Revels of the Quantok Hundreds and every Friday there is the Seething of Meldrum down at the _Ye Olde_

  • @RustyMoffett
    @RustyMoffett Рік тому +5

    I thoroughly enjoyed being educated by you about all things London!

  • @jachymbalas4260
    @jachymbalas4260 Рік тому +3

    Wonderful video, I really enjoyed it. Small correction: even though the artist Wenceslaus (Wenzl) Hollar spent some time in Holland, he was originally Czech (Bohemian, "Böhme") and, as a protestant, was forced to flee during a period of recatholisation.

  • @proposmontreal
    @proposmontreal Рік тому +1

    Of course I know this video is 2 years old. But I,m jsut discovering your channel and I had to comment on the video that started my discovery. Merci from a Quebec historian.

  • @jenniemoroney7360
    @jenniemoroney7360 3 роки тому +11

    Only just watched this now. I've just signed up to be a patron. Thank you for making your videos, very impressed with the layout and how well you explain things 😊

  • @KevinJohnson-io1mj
    @KevinJohnson-io1mj 4 місяці тому

    I taught a class on Samuel Pepys when I was in graduate school in Tennessee. The undergraduates were really impressed by how much he drank.

  • @heatherjones6647
    @heatherjones6647 5 місяців тому

    Wow. The King really came through. I've seen a number of docs on him, but his work during the fire just gets glossed over.

  • @rogerwitte
    @rogerwitte Рік тому +3

    So recent research has shown the fire brigades worked differently - they would not ignore fires from another insurers policy. When any of them saw a fire they would note the number on the plaque before extinguishing the fire and then send an invoice to the correct insurer. There was a system of fixed fees for these transfers between insurers. However if a fire crew turned up and a rival crew was already in action, there were sometimes fights as the first crew wanted to prevent the second crew arriving in time to claim part of the fee.

  • @staypr0found
    @staypr0found Рік тому +23

    12:21 had me rolling 😂😂😂😅😂
    “The judge thought he was mad… he hanged him anyway”

    • @Firegen1
      @Firegen1 Рік тому +3

      Welcome to the 1600's

    • @staypr0found
      @staypr0found Рік тому

      @@Firegen1 I would like a refund

    • @helentee9863
      @helentee9863 7 місяців тому

      Hanging was used a punishment for many crimes at that time, he was probably found guilty of other things than wholesale arson.
      If the judge HAD found him guilty of wholesale arson it most probably would have considered terrorism, an act against the Crown/State, and he would have been 'hung, drawn and quartered' .
      Very 'nasty' ,so really he was lucky 💀

  • @marksadler4104
    @marksadler4104 Рік тому +1

    My 9th great uncle Sir John Knight was Sargent surgeon to Charles ii, he was a very good friend of Samuel Pepys and mentioned in his diaries. When my distant uncle died in 1685, some of his books were bequeathed to Samuel Pepys.

  • @garethamery3167
    @garethamery3167 5 місяців тому

    Sweetheart! Thank you for popping up in my recommendations: A joy to discover a good mind applied...

  • @kirkmorrison6131
    @kirkmorrison6131 Рік тому +6

    I studied English and American History in College back in the 1970s. A lot of what you went over I knew, some I had forgotten. A good bit of it I never knew. A wonderful video, and very professional. I have thought about doing one on our Civil War, in Virginia or South Carolina if I do, I hope I do even a third as well as your videos.
    I have also by the way thought of doing one on our Revolutionary War here in South Carolina as that has been mostly forgotten.

  • @andrea22213
    @andrea22213 6 місяців тому +1

    The birth of Building Regs as we know them.
    Nicholas Hawksmoor built some lovely churches after the fire too, such as the sublime Christ Church, Spitalfields.

  • @BradRushing
    @BradRushing 5 місяців тому

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you.

  • @alboyer6
    @alboyer6 Рік тому +3

    I remember reading Pepys diary, or at least the part about the great fire, in my US high school brit lit class. This is a great video explaining the fire! Thank you.

  • @georgiakent363
    @georgiakent363 Рік тому

    This channel & PBS Eons are the only UA-cam notifications I let thru! Can't wait for another long form documentary

  • @lesterkong6439
    @lesterkong6439 Рік тому +1

    You are criminally undersubscribed

  • @WiliamBennettwildarbennett
    @WiliamBennettwildarbennett Рік тому +1

    Absolutely Outstanding. Excellent video. Have read about the Great Fire of London but you have brought it to life.

  • @johnsonrob
    @johnsonrob Рік тому

    Great presentation - wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. Could watch all day!

  • @mikehorton6225
    @mikehorton6225 Рік тому +1

    Brilliant as always.

  • @FransJSuper
    @FransJSuper Рік тому +1

    Discovered your channel only 3 days ago. I am struck by all the stories I've binged so far, your diction and pronunciation, your charm AND the sticker on your laptop saying it kills fascists. 😉

  • @haileybalmer9722
    @haileybalmer9722 Рік тому +4

    One correction: it is apparently not true that fire brigades wouldn't put out fires on buildings that weren't insured by their company. When there was a fire, all six brigades would rush to be the first ones there, because the first company there got most of the pay. The second company got some, the third company got none, so sometimes you would see the third brigade to arrive just sort of stand there and not do anything, because the first two had it handled, and they weren't getting paid anyway. There's also the problem that a fire in an uninsured building can very easily spread to an insured building, especially in a place as dense as London. Tom Scott (ugh) did a video on it and pointed out that there are no primary sources indicating that firefighters would just let uninsured buildings burn.
    In short, no pay, no spray was simply too cruel and short sighted for Olden London. The rural US in the modern day will do that, but not Charles Dicken's London.

  • @darta1094
    @darta1094 Рік тому +2

    Interesting video and well presented. Thank you, J D.

  • @mitchpoole179
    @mitchpoole179 Рік тому

    These are wonderful little lessons and lectures. Thank you so much for making them!

  • @Craig-tw4wk
    @Craig-tw4wk 3 роки тому +2

    Excellent job. Very informative. Thank you.

  • @scottbradshaw6396
    @scottbradshaw6396 3 роки тому +5

    This is fabulous, I like so many people cant/wont return to London cause of Covid, my family is here in Australia and also there in London and about. . . These videos I’m loving, makes your feel like you’re there. I think you’re so interesting and knowledgeable. I came over from your TicTok account. Not sure how to encourage you accept you have one super fan here cheering you on . . Ps: i hope my family contact you for a Freelance tour. . .

  • @tedward123
    @tedward123 4 роки тому +3

    Love this! Thank you so much for doing this!

  • @Green__one
    @Green__one 11 місяців тому +3

    It seems that these are lessons that need to be learned by every city anew, every city seems to start by building with wood, then has a major disastrous fire, then bans wood for a time. My own city is much more modern than London. But still had a major fire in the early 1900s after which would construction was banned. Here, they used sandstone. But over time that fell out of favor, and wood made a comeback.
    About 20 years ago we had a spate of fires in four story wood apartment buildings. All brand new construction. After outrage, many new fire suppression bits were mandated. But instead of learning the lesson, they are in the process of changing the building code to allow wood structures of up to 10 stories instead of only four. Wood is a nice easy material to work with, but history is full of major fires showing, that just maybe, we should look at other ways of building our cities.

  • @MickeForsberg-yy3ul
    @MickeForsberg-yy3ul Рік тому

    Brilliant and thanks for the history lesson about the Big Fire in London. I'm new to this channel at sept 2023

  • @BeckyMarshallDesign
    @BeckyMarshallDesign Рік тому

    This is a particularly fun lesson for me as a Chicago tour guide!

  • @angrytedtalks
    @angrytedtalks 7 місяців тому

    Wonderful retelling and delightfully informative.

  • @AngelusaNobilis
    @AngelusaNobilis Рік тому

    New favorite channel! I love everything to do with the UK!

  • @zulimi
    @zulimi Рік тому

    Talented guide, I see this was done during the pandemic. The way you put locations on a map for locals to explore and told the full story online was something my local guide association could not figure out how to do well. Fantastic job!

  • @hypermap
    @hypermap Рік тому +34

    Very interesting, for me this video helps bring the 1660s and Pepy's Diary a live (for the past 20 years I've been a regular Pepys's diary reader).
    Pepys intended his diary only to be read by him in his life time though in his old age full of ill health - kidney stones - he had it bound and put in his library for later generations to find.
    Pepys oddly only uses this phonic mixture of foreign languages (mostly Spanish) when he is referring to that day's extra marital sexual adventures - which he most definitely hides from his wife. The phonic mixture of foreign languages are alway just short phrases where the action gets hot, perhaps too hot for puritanical by modern standards Pepys - so perhaps he feels he can't write the hot action in his normal short hand.
    The rest of the diary is all in short code and so totally unreadable to the causal reader (unfamiliar with the short hand Pepys uses) but the actually fairly rare (every week or two after the fire, may be roughly every 2 or 3 weeks before) phonic mixture that appears in diary entries is in regular a to z letters and so stands out. This is odd because his wife is French and so is fluent in French and English - any casual reader with a gift for European languages can read these phrases!
    Btw Pepys's diary entries for the fire of London are worth reading as of course is his diary - though it takes a while to get use to the old English language style.

    • @catofthecastle1681
      @catofthecastle1681 Рік тому

      Middle English more likely!

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma Рік тому +6

      @@catofthecastle1681 Pretty sure they meant "the old style of [Modern] English", not "Old English". And, regardless, "Middle English" gives way to "Early Modern English" by the late 15th century, and "Modern English" in the mid-to-late 17th century.

    • @thysonsacclaim
      @thysonsacclaim Рік тому +5

      @@catofthecastle1681 "old" isn't capitalized so they just mean the "old form of English spoken at this time". Not "Old English" by name.

  • @davidhoward4715
    @davidhoward4715 Рік тому +3

    5:57 I wish people would stop using the word "panic" to describe perfectly logical reactions. In fact, it took considerable presence of mind to behave the way the citizens did.

  • @zng7568
    @zng7568 Рік тому

    Great to learn new facts about all those wellknown places.

  • @annieseaside
    @annieseaside Рік тому

    Hands down the most Superb explanation I’ve ever heard in a a short summation! ❤👏🏻

  • @johnm2879
    @johnm2879 Рік тому +3

    We think that only old cities can burn but, in fact, anything can burn given the right conditions. Witness the fires in thoroughly modern suburbs north of Denver, Colorado. These are built on high prairie with minimal biomass (no forest), just grassland. But the humidity is in single digits and winds exceeding 140 km an hour. If these well spaced, modern suburbs can burn, any human settlement can.

  • @scraps7624
    @scraps7624 Рік тому +2

    You make incredible videos! Absolutely loved this

  • @vishypai7554
    @vishypai7554 Рік тому

    Lovely little video, but very informative! An yodu are expressive and charming! Well done!

  • @victoriacaddy1287
    @victoriacaddy1287 Рік тому

    Outstanding episode. Thank you so much.

  • @LeifNelandDk
    @LeifNelandDk Рік тому +1

    One reason for each story being wider than the one below is that the wall pushing down on the floor beam create a lift on the center of the beam so it doesn't sag as much.

  • @cristinaenglish2098
    @cristinaenglish2098 3 роки тому +1

    Wonderful video. Really interesting!! Thanks a lot..

  • @sadmimikyu8807
    @sadmimikyu8807 Рік тому

    Wow I saw your shorts and love them and just now see you have a whole channel and.... well now I gotta binge watch it all! Love history videos thank you! Interesting topic!

  • @wehojm7320
    @wehojm7320 10 місяців тому

    Another great English history lesson. 👍🙏😎

  • @davidtucker3008
    @davidtucker3008 Рік тому

    I think Ms.Draper and her vids are very entertaining. I may just fall in love with her....

  • @motocrusader72
    @motocrusader72 Рік тому

    Fire insurance and plaques…same in US. You can see these in Philadelphia. I suspect we inherited this system from over the pond. Good channel and nice work. Factual and concise.

  • @ImaginIllyar
    @ImaginIllyar Рік тому

    Second time watching this one. Your videos are amazing.

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman6101 Рік тому

    Great Plauge & Fires of London.

  • @lucieirl
    @lucieirl Рік тому

    I remember learning about this in Year 2, my favourite fact is that the fire started on Pudding Lane and finished in Pie Corner.

  • @DJMarcO138
    @DJMarcO138 Рік тому

    Oh my stars and garters! 😍🤩😍

  • @morganpony2
    @morganpony2 4 роки тому +1

    Fabulous! I know this is on the KS2 curriculum so I can see myself showing it to children at some point.

  • @rksnj6797
    @rksnj6797 Рік тому +1

    This was very interesting!!! Love these history videos!

  • @raghavendra_adiga
    @raghavendra_adiga 4 роки тому +1

    Excellent video! Keep it up and please make more

  • @davidreay5911
    @davidreay5911 Рік тому

    At 5.50. When 'He looked out of the window'. The same thing happened in the book, ' Isaac's Storm'. Everything gone after the 1900 Galveston Great Storm where just the night before were houses.

  • @kevinjohnston7707
    @kevinjohnston7707 Рік тому +1

    Bravo! Well told.

  • @BritishBriggsy
    @BritishBriggsy 4 роки тому +15

    This was fantastic! I still can't believe only two people are supposed to have died in the fire... I'm sure the lack of proper certification meant that perhaps deaths went unnoticed?

  • @tripanski
    @tripanski Рік тому

    From a Montréal guide and historical interpreter, i love your vidéos !

  • @echognomecal6742
    @echognomecal6742 8 місяців тому

    That map is awesome

  • @literally-just-a-leaf
    @literally-just-a-leaf Рік тому +1

    5:03 Pepys' London house is now longer there. I believe his house near Huntingdon (in Cambridgeshire) is very much still there (or maybe I'm wrong, I'm not very clever)

  • @jeremyarbour7183
    @jeremyarbour7183 4 роки тому +1

    great video, very well done. thank you!

  • @alec4672
    @alec4672 Рік тому +1

    Actually the insurance company fire brigades were a bit more complicated then that. If you weren't insured but your neighbor was they'd usually put the fire out still to keep it from spreading to the insured property. Sometimes the man in charge would try to get you to pay up for your first month of insurance and then they'd put it out cause he got a commission for new clients. All sorts of odd deals like that.

  • @davidodonovan1699
    @davidodonovan1699 Рік тому

    Fantastic work. Great video. Well done

  • @ChuffedDom
    @ChuffedDom Рік тому

    Love this video. Thanks muchly

  • @janetmackinnon3411
    @janetmackinnon3411 Рік тому

    Thank you. As always instuctive and intersting

  • @yacawntmiss
    @yacawntmiss Рік тому

    Excellent vid. Thank you.

  • @annfahy2589
    @annfahy2589 11 місяців тому

    Brilliant 👏

  • @smudolinithegreatdragobear2433

    You are an amazing storyteller.

  • @rabidsamfan
    @rabidsamfan Рік тому

    I wrote a paper in college about the rebuilding and one thing that really struck me was how long some of the guild buildings burned because of stores of precious metals and oils.