Chislehurst
(c) Ian Capper, CC BY-SA 2.0 | |
Państwo | |
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Kraj | |
Hrabstwo | |
Populacja (2011) • liczba ludności |
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Kod pocztowy | BR7 |
Położenie na mapie Wielkiego Londynu Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right, CC BY-SA 3.0 | |
Położenie na mapie Wielkiej Brytanii (c) Karte: NordNordWest, Lizenz: Creative Commons by-sa-3.0 de | |
51°24′54″N 0°04′44″E/51,415000 0,078900 | |
Portal Wielka Brytania |
Chislehurst – podmiejska dzielnica w południowo-wschodnim Londynie, leżąca w gminie London Borough of Bromley i ceremonialnym hrabstwie Kent. W 2011 Chislehurst liczyło 14831 mieszkańców[1].
Zobacz też
Przypisy
- ↑ Neighbourhood Statistics. [dostęp 2015-03-28]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2015-04-02)].
Media użyte na tej stronie
Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right, CC BY-SA 3.0
Map of Greater London, UK with the following information shown:
- Administrative borders
- Coastline, lakes and rivers
- Roads and railways
- Urban areas
The data includes both primary routes and railway lines.
Equirectangular map projection on WGS 84 datum, with N/S stretched 160%
Geographic limits:
- West: 0.57W
- East: 0.37E
- North: 51.72N
- South: 51.25N
(c) Karte: NordNordWest, Lizenz: Creative Commons by-sa-3.0 de
Location map of the United Kingdom
Flag of England. Saint George's cross (a red cross on a white background), used as the Flag of England, the Italian city of Genoa and various other places.
(c) Ian Capper, CC BY-SA 2.0
Chislehurst village sign. The sign depicts Queen Elizabeth I knighting Thomas Walsingham IV in 1597. The Walsinghams had owned the nearby manor of Scadbury from 1424, and Sir Thomas had earned his knighthood for raising and funding Kentish troops against an anticipated Spanish invasion. Their Manor House, built in the 15th century, was demolished around 1738. See 54682 for the site (although much of the brickwork visible there dates from the 1930s, marking out the original building). Although the plaque at the foot suggests that the sign dates from 1953, in commemoration of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, the current sign in fact is a 1981 replica, restored in 2003. The bricks in the base come from the manor at Scadbury.