1 / 12

www.learnanywhere.co.uk

www.learnanywhere.co.uk. History at Key Stage 2 Unit 5: . How do we know about the Great Fire of London?. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?. Can you name this city?. This is London. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?.

lilka
Download Presentation

www.learnanywhere.co.uk

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. www.learnanywhere.co.uk History at Key Stage 2 Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  2. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? Can you name this city? This is London Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  3. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? Here is a close-up of the top of the monument. Can you see the sculpture of an urn of fire? This picture shows a monument in London. It was built in memory of the Great Fire of London. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  4. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? When did the Great Fire take place? 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000 1850s: Florence Nightingale 1666: The Great Fire of London Nowadays Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  5. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? Look at these pictures. Do you know who these people are? Can you tell what period in history they are from? Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  6. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? This is Charles II Charles was King of England at the time of the Great Fire of London. This is Samuel Pepys Samuel Pepys was an MP and naval official who kept a diary which describes the events of the Great Fire of London. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  7. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? How did the fire start? The fire started during the night, in a baker’s shop on Pudding Lane St. Paul’s Cathedral Within three days, it had spread throughout most of the north of London Tower of London Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  8. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? Why did the fire spread so quickly? Most of the houses in London were made of wood, and had straw scattered on the floor, so they burned very easily. Houses were built very close together, so the fire spread quickly from house to house. There was no proper fire service, and the fire was too large for people to put it out using buckets of water. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  9. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? How did the fire end? Some houses were destroyed with gunpowder to stop the fire Some houses were torn down to prevent the spread of the fire The wind, which had been fanning the flames, stopped. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  10. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? How was gunpowder used to stop the fire? The fire couldn’t spread past the gap, so the houses on the other side were saved The fire spread from house to house Gunpowder was used to destroy houses to make a gap Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  11. Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London? What were the results of the Great Fire? 6 people lost their lives. 87 churches were destroyed, including St. Pauls cathedral. About 13,200 houses were destroyed. New fire brigades were set up to stop something like this happening again.. People began to take out fire insurance. St. Paul’s cathedral was rebuilt between 1675 and 1708 by an architect called Christopher Wren Unit 5: How do we know about the Great Fire of London?

  12. For more e-learning materials in the range, visit: www.learnanywhere.co.uk

More Related