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Los chicos andan investigando todo lo relacionado con el gran incendio de Londres en 1666, han elaborado sus propios dibujos y se han sorprendido cómo este gran incendio acabó con la ciudad. Bueno, luego les estaremos compartiendo sus producciones. Gracias chicos de Rise Park Estudiantes grado cuarto y quinto El gran incendio de Londres en 1666

Great fire of London

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Great fire of London, parte del trabajo colaborativo con el proyecto FROM OUR WINDOW. Colombia e Inglaterra.

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Page 1: Great fire of London

Los chicos andan investigando todo lo relacionado con el gran incendio de Londres en 1666, han elaborado sus propios dibujos y se han sorprendido cómo este gran incendio acabó con la ciudad.Bueno, luego les estaremos compartiendo sus producciones.

Gracias chicos de Rise ParkEstudiantes grado cuarto y

quinto

El gran incendio de Londres en 1666

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At 1a.m. on Sunday September 2nd 1666 a fire broke out at Thomas Farriner’s bakery in Pudding Lane, he was the baker for King Charles II.

The bakers maid forgot to put out the ovens at the end of the night. The heat created by the ovens caused sparks to ignite the wooden bakery building. She tried to escape but couldn’t.

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By Monday 3rd September, the fire had spread very quickly. The city was basically made out of wood, all of the houses were built from wood.

Because September isn’t too long after summer, the city was very dry.

Strong winds fanned the flames which made them spread even quicker.

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This area was close to the river and there were lots of warehouses and shops full of combustible (easily set on fire) materials, such as oil, coal, timber, and alcohol.

Once these caught fire a strong wind spread the flames into the City.

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People tried to get away from the fire by hiring boats. These people could only take the things they were able to carry so a lot of their belongings were left behind.

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In those times there was no fire brigade so people tried to put the fire out with buckets of water. It didn’t really do much good because they couldn’t carry the water quick enough.

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On Tuesday 4th September 1666 the fire was so hot that St. Paul’s cathedral caught on fire and the lead on the roof melted.

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Eventually, after four days the fire ended on Wednesday 4th September 1666 because the wind changed direction and lots of the houses were pulled down to stop it spreading further.

Luckily not many people died in the fire, only six people. But thousands were left homeless, and had lost their businesses and much of their belongings.

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Lesson 2

Sequencing - What happened in the Great Fire?

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The fire lasted for four days and four nights.Day 1: Sunday 2nd September 1666

A fire broke out in a baker’s kitchen in Pudding Lane. The baker’s name was Thomas Farrinor.

The Mayor thought it was not serious.

People try to save their belongings instead of trying to put the fire out.

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Monday 3rd September 1666

The fire grew worse due to the strong east wind. The Mayor is worried that people will not listen to him.

The fire was so fierce people went into the river to escape.

The fire swept through London because the houses were made out of wood and were too close together.

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Tuesday 4th September 1666

The flames reached as far as the river Thames and the River Fleet.

St. Paul’s cathedral caught on fire and the lead on the roof melted.

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Wednesday 5th September 1666

This was the last day of the fire.

The east wind drops which causes the fire to slow down.

The King was seen helping to put out the fire by Samuel Pepys. King Charles orders that houses be blown up to stop the fire spreading further.

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• The Great Fire of London• Tuesday 28th April 2009

• Day 1: Sunday 2nd September 1666• The Great Fire of London started. • It began in a baker’s shop in Pudding Lane. A

baker forgot to switch off his oven and in the night his house caught fire.

• Day 2: Monday 3rd September 1666• The fire swept through London because the

houses were made out of wood and were too close together.

• The fire was so fierce people went into the river to escape.

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• Day 3: Tuesday 4th September 1666

• St. Paul’s cathedral caught on fire and the lead on the roof melted.

• Day 4: Wednesday 5th September 1666

• The east wind dropped which causes the fire to slow down.

• The fire swept through London because the houses were made out of wood and were too close together.

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Lesson 3

Why did it happen?

Why did the fire spread so far and stay alight for so long?

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The Great Fire of London Why did it happen?

Why did the fire spread so fast?

Why did the fire spread so far?

Why did the fire stay alight for so long?

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What did London look like before the fire?

• London was a busy city in 1666. It was very crowded. The streets were narrow and dusty. The houses were made of wood and very close together. Inside their homes, people used candles for light and cooked on open fires.

• A fire could easily get out of control. In those days there were no fire engines or firemen to stop a fire from spreading.

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The Streets

How would you describe this street scene?

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The buildings in London at the time were made of wood and had thatched roofs so they burnt very easily.

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The buildings were also very close together, so the fire spread from one street to another quickly.

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The Great Fire of London

What is happening here? Why? Where else could they go? Why?

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Great Fire of London

What is happening here?

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• In 1666 there was no organised fire brigade. Firefighting at the time was very basic and there was little skill or knowledge involved. They used leather buckets, axes and water squirts which had little effect on the fire.

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• Buckets were made from leather as it is a strong, water-tight and durable material. Metal rivets to hold it together. This bucket has a rope handle. These buckets only held a small amount of water and were passed along lines of people to throw water onto the fire.

• A squirt works like a syringe. The person using it would have placed the tapered end into a source of water, and sucked water inside by pulling out the top handle slowly. The water would then be ‘squirted’ out, pushing the water through the cylinder and on to the fire. It was able to pump water quite high, up to the height of a first floor window.

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• Used to help tear down buildings to stop fires from spreading.

• What a fire engine might have looked like.

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After the fire a fire service was set up in London to make sure that it did not happen again.

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The Great Fire of London

Why did the fire spread so fast?

Why did the fire spread so far?

Why did the fire stay alight for so long?

Fire Sorter

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There are many reasons why the fire spread so quickly.

The buildings were mostly made of wood.

The buildings were very close together.

A strong wind blew the flames to other houses.

There had been no rain, so London was very dry.

There were only a few fire engine carts.

The water squirters were too weak to quench the flames.

They couldn’t carry water fast enough to put the fire out.

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Lesson 4

How do we know what happened in the

Great Fire?

What is an eyewitness?

How can an eyewitness help us to know what happened in the past?

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• Panicking citizens seek to save their possessions as the flames sweep towards them,

• 2–6 September 1666 [picture by unnamed artist in The Mirror, 5 October 1840]

What does this eyewitness see?

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We know about the Great Fire through the diary of a man called Samuel Pepys.

What is a diary?

Is a diary fact or fiction? What sort of information do people keep in diaries. 

Why might diaries from the past be useful to us today?

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2nd September 1666S o I m a d e m y s e l f re a d y p r e s e n t l y , a n d w a l k e d t o t h e To w e r… a n d t h e r e I d i d s e e t h e h o u s e s a t t h e e n d o f t h e b r i dg e a l l o n f i r e .

So down [I went], with my heart full of trouble, to the Lieutenant of the Tower, who tells me that it began this morning in the King's baker's house in Pudding Lane, and that it hath burned St. Magnus's Church and most part of Fish Street already. So I rode down to the waterside…

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E v e r y b o d y i s t r y i n g t o m o ve t h e i r g o o d s o r f l i n g t h e m i n t o t h e r i v e r o r b r i n g t h e m o n t o b o a t s . P o o r p e o p l e s t a y i n t h e i r h o u s e s u n t i l t h e f i r e t o u c h e s t h e m . T h e n t h e y r u n i n t o t h e b o a t s .I saw the fire rage every way, and nobody trying to quench it, but instead trying to save their goods. The wind mighty high.

What do the diary's extracts tell us about the Great Fire?

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Lesson 5

How did the fire change London?

What do you remember about the Great fire of London?

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The Great Fire changed London dramatically. London before the fire was not a very nice place to be. The houses were all crowed together and made of wood which burned easily.

After the fire, thousands of people were made homeless. New houses were built using bricks and stones. The streets were widened. Streets were built with ‘fire breaks’ - a big space between sets of houses so if another fire happened the flames wouldn’t be able to jump across to other houses.

Lots of important buildings had been destroyed in the fire. Wren, an architect designed many new important buildings and he also designed St Paul’s Cathedral.

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St Paul’s Cathedral

Lets have a look at how London has changed.

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Outside Monument Station on the Underground, you will see a huge tower – a monument.

It is the tallest column in the world at 202feet. The height of the column is the same distance from the base to the baker’s house where the fire started, in Pudding Lane.

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Imagine you are King Charles IIHow would you stop the fire

from happening again?

• What could make the new houses safer? • What can be done to make the streets

cleaner? • What could they do to make the streets

wider?

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• brick or stone houses• more fire buckets• more fire hooks• fire engines• clean streets• street cleaners• wider streets

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Lesson 6

Writing a newspaper article

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The London Gazette16 6 6 : Ho u s e s d e m o li s he d as L o n d o n b u r n s

A serious fire has taken hold in the City of London, just north of the River Thames. The blaze is thoughtto have started at about 0200 in the Pudding Lane house of the King's baker, ThomasFarynor and is now spreading rapidly through the narrow streets and wooden buildings of the City. MrFarynor was woken by a workman who smelled smoke. His family fled, but a maid who worked in the house isbelieved to be one of the fire's first casualties. City residents have resorted to pulling down buildings in anattempt to stop the flames, which are being fanned by a strong east wind.

The Mayor of London, Sir Thomas Bloodworth, was said to be initially unconcerned when woken with news ofthe fire during the night. But within hours of the alarm being raised, the smoke could be seen as far away asOxford and many Londoners began frantically loading possessions into boats on the Thames before fleeing thedanger area.

By 0600 London Bridge was burning and it was only a small gap between two of the structure's buildings,acting as a firebreak, which prevented the fire spreading south of the river to Southwark. King Charles IIcommanded Sir Thomas to pull down as many houses as was necessary to contain the flames after being warned ofthe fire's seriousness by Secretary of the Admiralty Samuel Pepys. But Sir Thomas told Mr Pepys thesituation was close to hopeless in a city tinder dry following months of drought. "I have been pulling down houses –but the fire overtakes us faster than we can do it," he said. The flames have so far claimed 300 houses and are nowthreatening to engulf St Paul's Cathedral.

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The London GazetteFire in London

"I am here live in Pudding Lane where the tragic blaze isthought to have started.

I understand that the fire actually started in the baker's house,just down the road from where I am now.

As I'm standing here I can see many people frantically loadingtheir possessions on boats on the Thames in an attempt to flee theawful fire. The fire can be seen as far away as Oxford.

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Writing a newspaper article

Success Criteria

• Who

• Where

• When

• Why

• What

• Capital letters and full stops.

Page 47: Great fire of London

Word Bank

• eyewitness diary Samuel Pepys boats churches King Charles II

• fire fighting leather bucket hook water houses narrow wood big booms

• flaming smoky raging warm dangerous blazing hot scorching boiling roasting

• glowing yellow orange red crackling popping

• then after before when because

Success Criteria• Who• Where• When• Why• What• Capital letters and full stops.

Page 48: Great fire of London
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Question 1

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When was the Great Fire of London?

A 1660

B 1566

C 1666

D 1766

Page 51: Great fire of London

When was the Great Fire of London?

A 1660

B 1566

C 1666

D 1766

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£100

Page 53: Great fire of London

Question 2

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Where did the fire start?

A In a bookshop

B In a clothes shop

C In a sweet shop

D In a bakers shop

Page 55: Great fire of London

Where did the fire start?

A In a bookshop

B In a clothes shop

C In a sweet shop

D In a bakers shop

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£200

Page 57: Great fire of London

Question 3

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How did the fire start?

A By burning wood

B With a cigarette

C By playing with fire

D Left the cooker on

Page 59: Great fire of London

How did the fire start?

A By burning wood

B With a cigarette

C By playing with fire

D Left the cooker on

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£500

Page 61: Great fire of London

Question 4

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How long did the fire burn for?

A 3 days

B 5 days

C 7 days

D 9 days

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How long did the fire burn for?

A 3 days

B 5 days

C 7 days

D 9 days

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£1000

Page 65: Great fire of London

Question 5

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Why did the fire spread?

A Houses were small

B Houses were made of bricks

C Houses were made of wood

D Houses were made of stone

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Why did the fire spread?

A Houses were small

B Houses were made of bricks

C Houses were made of wood

D Houses were made of stone

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£2,000

Page 69: Great fire of London

Question 6

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Why did the fire stop?

A The wind died down.

B All the houses were burnt.

C The water put out the fire.D The rain put out the fire.

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Why did the fire stop?

A The wind died down.

B All the houses were burnt.

C The water put out the fire.D The rain put out the fire.

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£4,000

Page 73: Great fire of London

Question 7

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When the fire started people escaped to the…

A Forests

B Farms

C Churches

D Shops

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When the fire started people escaped to the…

A Forests

B Farms

C Churches

D Shops

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£8,000

Page 77: Great fire of London

Question 8

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People escaped to the churches because…

A it was very hot.

B it was raining.

C churches were made of stone.

D churches were made of wood.

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People escaped to the churches because…

A it was very hot.

B it was raining.

C churches were made of stone.

D churches were made of wood.

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£16,000

Page 81: Great fire of London

Question 9

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How many people died in the fire?

A 6B 16C 60

D 66

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How many people died in the fire?

A 6B 16C 60

D 66

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£32,000

Page 85: Great fire of London

Question 10

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After the fire what did people decide to rebuild

their houses with?

A Wood

B Bricks and stone

C Straw

D Glass

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After the fire what did people decide to rebuild

their houses with?

A Wood

B Bricks and stone

C Straw

D Glass

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£64,000

Page 89: Great fire of London

Question 11

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How do we know about the fire?

A People saw it in a movie.

B People saw it in their dreams.

C People saw it in a cartoon.

D People saw it & wrote about it.

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How do we know about the fire?

A People saw it in a movie.

B People saw it in their dreams.

C People saw it in a cartoon.

D People saw it & wrote about it.

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£125,000

Page 93: Great fire of London

Question 12

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Who was Samuel Pepys?

A Singer

B Actor

C Eyewitness

D Shop keeper

Page 95: Great fire of London

Who was Samuel Pepys?

A Singer

B Actor

C Eyewitness

D Shop keeper

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£250,000

Page 97: Great fire of London

Question 13

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What did Samuel Pepys write?

A Diary

B Story

C Letter

D Poem

Page 99: Great fire of London

What did Samuel Pepys write?

A Diary

B Story

C Letter

D Poem

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£1,000,000