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The Lamb and Flag is a Grade II listed public house at Rose Street, Covent Garden, London, WC2. [1] The building is erroneously said to date back to Tudor times, and to have been a licensed premises since 1623, but in fact dates from the early 18th century, [2] or according to its official listing, perhaps from 1688. [1] The building became a ...
Lamb & Flag Passage runs through the south side of the building, connecting St Giles' with Museum Road, where there is an entrance to Keble College to the rear of the pub. The name of the pub comes from the symbol of Christ as the victorious Lamb of God ( Agnus Dei ) of the Book of Revelation, carrying a banner with a cross, and often gashed in ...
Lamb and Flag or Lamb & Flag may refer to: The insignia of the Middle Temple; A religious pub name. Lamb & Flag (Oxford) – a pub in Oxford; Lamb and Flag, Covent Garden – a pub in Covent Garden, London
Launderers' Hall, [note 1] London Bridge Worshipful Company of Leathersellers: 15 Soli Deo Honor et Gloria Latin Honour and Glory to God Alone Leathersellers' Hall, Garlick Hill Worshipful Company of Lightmongers: 96 Lightmongers Dominus illuminatio mea et Salus mea Latin The Lord is my light and my help [5] Worshipful Company of Loriners: 57
East India House was the London headquarters of the East India Company, from which much of British India was governed until the British government took control of the company's possessions in India in 1858. It was located in Leadenhall Street in the City of London. The first East India House on the site was an Elizabethan mansion, previously ...
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The college placed it on the market for £1.2 million in December 2003, saying that it needed to rebalance its property portfolio. It was bought by the nearby St John's College, which also owns the Lamb and Flag pub opposite. [5] The Eagle and Child is a Grade II listed building. [9]
The Lamb. The Lamb is a Grade II listed pub at 94 Lamb's Conduit Street, in the London Borough of Camden, London. [1]The Lamb was built in the 1720s and the pub and the street were named after William Lamb, who repaired the Holborn Conduit, later renamed Lamb's Conduit in his honour, a few metres to the south, in 1577.