Actions

Difference between revisions of "Museum of London"

From Londonhua WIKI

Line 43: Line 43:
 
This exhibit details   
 
This exhibit details   
 
==Roman London==
 
==Roman London==
 +
<br><br>
 +
 
==Medieval London==
 
==Medieval London==
 
==War, Plague & Fire==
 
==War, Plague & Fire==

Revision as of 14:22, 15 May 2017

Museum of London

Museum of London
Article Image
Representative Article Image
The Chandos Portrait of William Shakespeare
Artist Attributed to John Taylor
Year c. 1600s
Dimensions 55.2 cm × 43.8 cm ( 21 3⁄4 in ×  17 1⁄4 in)
Location National Portrait Gallery, London

Use this page as a template when creating new articles by clicking Actions>View Source and create a new page with the name of the article you're creating. In the newly copied page, upload your own image, then replace the "Articlepicture.jpg" above with the new image name. Replace "Representative Image" in both the image line and the top-level heading above with your first and last name. Delete this whole paragraph beneath the Representative Image title but not including the Table of Contents tag __TOC__.

Overview

The paragraph should give a three to five sentence abstract about your article. PLEASE NOTE: this article template has only a few sections as examples, but your actual article contributions should have many relevant sections and subsections. Please start to block out and complete those sections with relevant information such as the very objective, fact-based, and heavily referenced "who, what, when, where, and why" about this article. Articles don't just have to be huge buildings; individual artifacts and lesser-known people, places, and things count as article topics! Don't forget to include relevant category tags for each article!


London Before London


Begin writing the background information of this article, or use this format to begin a new article with some other relevant section filled with important information.

Use Subsections Headings


Organize each section of this article so that it has a logical flow. If you intend to discuss one aspect of the origin of a person, place, thing, or idea, identify the appropriate existing section of the article, or create that section if it doesn't exist. Then, make a clear subheading. If you notice that some other information is not organized clearly, rearrange the information, but do so cautiously and responsibly! The goal here is clarity for the reader.

Add links to other articles, but do not link to personal student profile pages or milestone pages. Add media as needed in the appropriate sections.

Representative Image


The Exhibits at the Museum of London

London Before London

This exhibit details

Roman London



Medieval London

War, Plague & Fire

Expanding City

The Victorian Walk

People's City

World City

The Lord Major's Coach

The London 2012 Cauldron

References

If appropriate, add a references section

External Links

If appropriate, add an external links section

Image Gallery

If appropriate, add an image gallery