Westminster Abbey
Westminster Abbey isn't just a church - it's Britain's coronation theater and royal necropolis rolled into one.
About Westminster Abbey
Westminster Abbey isn't just a church - it's Britain's coronation theater and royal necropolis rolled into one. Every monarch since William the Conqueror has been crowned here, and walking through feels like stepping inside a stone history book. The Coronation Chair sits worn smooth by centuries of ceremony, while underfoot lie the remains of Elizabeth I, Mary Queen of Scots, and seventeen other monarchs in the Lady Chapel alone.
The visit follows a set route through the nave, crossing, and chapels, but the audio guide makes it feel like a museum shuffle. The real magic happens when you stop moving and actually look up - those fan vaults in Henry VII's Chapel took sixteen years to carve, and you can see why. Poets' Corner feels surprisingly intimate for housing Chaucer's tomb, while the Cosmati pavement near the altar has geometric patterns that predate the Tudors by three centuries.
Most visitors rush through in forty minutes and miss everything that matters. The verger tours happen twice daily and cost nothing extra - they'll show you the graffiti carved by Victorian schoolboys and explain why Newton's tomb faces east. Wednesday evenings are genuinely quieter, and if you time it right, you'll hear the organ practice echoing off those stone walls. That's worth the admission alone.
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