I love Greenwich, this is the most amazing place! I traveled with my partner and parents who were deeply impressed by the intricacies and beauty of the place. I can’t wait to do it again and I think it will be a regular spot for our weekend walk now! My dream is to get married here!
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I love Greenwich, this is the most amazing place! I traveled with my partner and parents who were deeply impressed by the intricacies and beauty of the place. I can’t wait to do it again and I think it will be a regular spot for our weekend walk now! My dream is to get married here!
We visited Greenwich via the foot tunnel under the Thames. The Old Royal Naval College is a beautiful building and a big part of the Greenwich skyline. Will go inside next time we visit.
UNESCO designated a "World Heritage Site". Most of the buildings on the site are not open to the public, only the painting hall is free to visitors. Part of the Royal Naval Academy site was transformed into a Maritime Museum (including Queens) and part of the University of Greenwich. At the end of the nineteenth century, the Qing government sent a large number of naval students to study here, including the famous thinker Yan Fu, Fang Boqian (the villain in the film "Jiawu Fengyun"), Sa Zhenbing, Deng Zhaoxiang (the captain of the "Chongqing"), etc.
Tickets for £12 a year are simply not worth it unless you live in London and want to visit this auditorium regularly. But there are no one-day tour tickets here. The hall is impressive and certainly worth a visit, but even in London the price is not quite reasonable. If it was more appropriate, I would give it 5 stars.
It’s the location of University of Greenwich which is the super cool university as many Hollywood films shot here such as Thor 2, The man called U.N.C.L.E, James Bond, etc.
The glorious moment of the empire is over, the Royal Naval Academy is gone, and the wheels of history have crushed the past.
The Royal Naval Academy in Greenwich, GreenWich College, is located in Greenwich, outside London. To be precise, it should be the former Royal Naval Academy, founded in 1635, during which time or during the main period mainly to train middle and lower-level officers in the active Navy. The original site was the former king's palace. During the Anglo-French war, it was changed to a hospital for wounded soldiers and health care. It was converted into a Naval Academy in 1871. Most of its buildings are not open to the outside world, and there are not many remaining open parts, such as Painted Hall. The Observatory area and the original site of the Royal Naval Academy in Greenwich were designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1997 (World Heritage Site). The Naval Academy moved out at the end of the last century and changed to the University of Greenwich. Transportation: Light rail, DLR (Greenwich, Cutty Sark station), or by train at Greenwich station. Tips: City Pass, such as 24-hour Pass, including Thames cruise tickets, can be taken to the shore of Greenwich. Postscript: London foggy. Filled Greenwich. Like through fog and history, the talents of China's old navy are faintly in Greenwich Naval Academy. Memories of previous lives or night readings are faintly remembered. In the old navy, the British and Japanese schools are faintly divided, gathered in Mawei Port. And the Majiang River in World War I, the first noon of World War II, was finally almost all the army. History is always foggy. The old people blame one and two. Today people still blame two. Extremely looking for it, always thinking that they are on the right boat. Extreme is piercing the thick fog. On New Year's Eve, I also walked through the fog. And I really don't want to see the world. At most, when I go home, at most when I read a book, and people, that's all. The man with the broken hat and the cold eyebrows said to the gentleman, I really don't want to be in the same boat with you.