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360° panorama by Brian Richards. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Guildhall is a municipal building in the Moorgate area of the City of London, England. The building has been used as a town hall for several hundred years, and is still the ceremonial and administrative centre of the City of London and its Corporation. The current building began construction in 1411 and completed in 1440. Trials at the Guildhall have included those of Anne Askew (the Protestant martyr), Thomas Cranmer (Archbishop of Canterbury) and Lady Jane Grey ("the Nine Days' Queen") as well as Henry Garnet (executed for his complicity in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605). The Great Hall did not completely escape damage in the Great Fire of London in 1666; it was partially restored (with a flat roof) in 1670. The present grand entrance (the east wing of the south front), in "Hindoostani Gothic", was added in 1788 by George Dance. A more extensive restoration than that in 1670 was completed in 1866 by the City of London architect Sir Horace Jones, who added a new timber roof in close keeping with the original hammerbeam ceiling. This replacement was destroyed during the Second Great Fire of London on the night of 29/30 December 1940, the result of a Luftwaffe fire-raid. It was replaced in 1954 during works designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, though the original hammerbeam design was not retained
360° panorama by Santiago Ribas - 360portugal. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Galilee. The facade of the church is characterized by the volume of the crowns and the portal is decorated by the royal emblems of D. Jo~ao II and D. Manuel I. The interior features a unique nave, rectangular in shape and in Latin cross, highlighting the altar -mor and the Chapel of the Third Order of S. Francisco, in Baroque style. The most popular curiosity resides in the Chapel of Bones, with three naves completely formed by human bones (17th century).
360° panorama by Santiago Ribas - 360portugal. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Galilee. The facade of the church is characterized by the volume of the crowns and the portal is decorated by the royal emblems of D. Jo~ao II and D. Manuel I. The interior features a unique nave, rectangular in shape and in Latin cross, highlighting the altar -mor and the Chapel of the Third Order of S. Francisco, in Baroque style. The most popular curiosity resides in the Chapel of Bones, with three naves completely formed by human bones (17th century).
360° panorama by Santiago Ribas - 360portugal. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Galilee. The facade of the church is characterized by the volume of the crowns and the portal is decorated by the royal emblems of D. Jo~ao II and D. Manuel I. The interior features a unique nave, rectangular in shape and in Latin cross, highlighting the altar -mor and the Chapel of the Third Order of S. Francisco, in Baroque style. The most popular curiosity resides in the Chapel of Bones, with three naves completely formed by human bones (17th century).