词条 | Buckingham Palace |
释义 | Buckingham Palace palace, Westminster, London, United Kingdom palace and London residence of the British sovereign. It is situated within the borough of Westminster (Westminster, City of). The palace takes its name from the house built (c. 1705) for John Sheffield, duke of Buckingham (Buckingham and Normanby, John Sheffield, 1st duke of, 3rd Earl Of Mulgrave). It was bought in 1762 by George III for his wife, Queen Charlotte, and became known as the queen's house. By order of George IV, John Nash (Nash, John) initiated the conversion of the house into a palace in the 1820s. Nash also reshaped the Buckingham Palace Gardens and designed the Marble Arch entryway, which was later removed (1851) to the northeast corner of Hyde Park. The Mall front, or Fore Court (east side), was expanded in 1847 by Edward Blore and redesigned in 1913 by Sir Aston Webb as a background for the Queen Victoria Memorial statue. Nash's garden front (west side) remains virtually unchanged. Victoria was the first sovereign to live there (from 1837). ![]() Since the mid-18th century the Royal Mews (stables and coach houses with living quarters above) have been located on the palace grounds; the current buildings date from 1824–25. Within the mews are the luxurious motorcars, dozens of carriages, and horses that figure prominently in royal processions and ceremonies. Notable among the carriages are the Gold State Coach (1762), the Irish State Coach (1852), and the Glass State Coach (1910). Leading northeast from the palace and the Queen Victoria Memorial, the straight avenue of the Mall divides St. James's Park (Saint James) from Green Park, skirts the grounds of St. James's Palace (Saint James), and eventually reaches the Admiralty Arch, gateway to Charing Cross. |
随便看 |
|
百科全书收录100133条中英文百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容开放、自由的电子版百科全书。