This Yank thought she was doing well to miss only four, but then I saw that was barely over 50% so either there are a lot of Brits taking this quiz, or a lot of others know far more about London than I do. (Or maybe both.)
Charing Cross is not an intersection. The Cross refers to one of 12 monuments erected in memory of Queen Eleanor of Castile, Queen consort of Edward I. The crosses form a route from Lincoln to London (Charing Cross) being the final one, and some people undertook a pilgrimage. There is a major railway station at Charing Cross, but the intersection is actually at Trafalgar Square.
Wikipedia says its a junction. I'm not sure what the difference is between junction and intersection, but I changed the clue to junction just to be safe.
Intersections are where two major(ish) roads cross over (or intersect, hence the name). Charing cross only has one main road with many smaller ones going into it, making it a junction. yw
Very easy quiz, but then I grew up in London. I have travelled to Charing Cross many times in my youth; that is the only question that gave me a problem, because I simply do not see it as a junction or intersection or anything of the sort. It is a railway station and is so named because of the monumental cross, as described above. I have no idea why wikipedia wants to describe it as a junction; the nearby junction/interchange is Trafalgar Square.
The railway station is named after the area, which was named after the original Cross. They put their own 'Charing Cross' monument outside, but its not the original site.
The original Charing Cross was where (until the Civil War) the statue of Charles I is - at the south end of Trafalgar Square. Currently the statue is in the middle of a roundabout where roads from 6 directions converge, and it's always been a major junction within London - and central (to the Metropolis) given its situation where roads from Westminster, The City of London proper, and the West End, meet.
It's only relatively recently that distances have been all been measured to there, but there's a zero point plaque marking it as where roads measure distance to when you see London on a sign.
I had the same thing with bow. I think I have heard it referenced only once. I remember something being explained about you are only cockney when you were born with earshot of a certain churchbell. But that was perhaps 20 years ago that I saw that documentary or whatever it was. Amazed I pulled out that word from somewhere.
Left confirming my hypothesis.
The original Charing Cross was where (until the Civil War) the statue of Charles I is - at the south end of Trafalgar Square. Currently the statue is in the middle of a roundabout where roads from 6 directions converge, and it's always been a major junction within London - and central (to the Metropolis) given its situation where roads from Westminster, The City of London proper, and the West End, meet.
It's only relatively recently that distances have been all been measured to there, but there's a zero point plaque marking it as where roads measure distance to when you see London on a sign.
The River Isis is therefore a tributary of the Thames, if it's not just part of the river itself that people call a different name just because.