Admiralty Arch

Admiralty Arch is a large office building in London which incorporates an archway providing road and pedestrian access between The Mall, which extends to the southwest, and Trafalgar Square to its northeast. It was commissioned by King Edward VII in memory of his mother Queen Victoria, although he didn't live to see its completion. A large Latin inscription along the top reads "ANNO DECIMO EDWARDI SEPTIMI REGIS VICTORI REGIN CIVES GRATISSIMI MDCCCCX" which means "In the tenth year of King Edward VII, to Queen Victoria, from most grateful citizens, 1910." It was designed by Sir Aston Webb.
   

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
richard bandler
accumulate and fire
threading
rendezvous
vancouver sun
paul gottfried
military robot
george, prince of wales
perl design patterns book
negationism
programming practice
hostel
adapt to adapt
prince arthur, duke of connaught and strathearn
aggregate pattern
elisabeth of austria
anonymous subroutine objects pattern
the province
assertion (computing)
duke of connaught and strathearn
boat anchor
assertion
caching failure
black footed ferret
code momentum
code smell
c. rajagopalachari
citytv
constraint system
image response
constructor
automatic gain control
container pattern
thomas lenk
copy and paste programming
valmiki
narada
lanka
dynamic programming language
radiotelephone
event listener
crystal filter
lower limb
extensibility pattern