ملف:St Ermin's Hotel, London.jpg
الصوره الاصليه (4,896 × 3,672 بكسل حجم الفايل: 10.19 ميجابايت، نوع MIME: image/jpeg)
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الخلاصة
وصفSt Ermin's Hotel, London.jpg |
English: The St. Ermin's Hotel in St James's Park, London was originally a horse-shoe shaped mansion block built in 1887–89 to the designs of E. T. Hall (1851–1923).[3] Mansion blocks (high-status, serviced apartments) were first seen in Victoria Street, London in the 1850s and remain a feature of the area today. St Ermin's Mansions was typical in both plan and elevation; Hall employed the fashionable red-brick Queen Anne style for the exterior and grouped the apartments around a courtyard which functioned both as a carriageway and garden for the residents. Four entrances led off the courtyard into the apartments (the two entrances in the side wings still exist in their original form to this day). By 1894, the building appears to have been extended along Broadway as far as St Ermin's Hill.
In 1896, the building was purchased with the intention of converting it into a hotel, and by 1899, the change of use was complete. Such conversions were not uncommon. Several mansion blocks at that time were built offering apartments with a bathroom but no kitchen. Instead, an army of servants provided service in rooms plus communal dining, reading, and smoking rooms provided ground floor reception areas ready made for the needs of a hotel.[4] The new owners embarked on a major refurbishment programme undertaken by the theatre architect J. P. Briggs (1869–1944),[5] providing a spectacular sequence of public reception rooms with very rich plasterwork. Briggs remodelled the far end of the courtyard, creating a neo-Baroque space with raised verandah leading into a double-height foyer dominated by an undulating balcony at gallery level, accessed via a double staircase. In the eastern side of the building Briggs created a double-height ballroom with similar undulating balcony (reminiscent of theatre boxes) and unusual Art Nouveau plasterwork linked by anteroom with the former restaurant (now The Cloisters), the cove of which was decorated with lively rococo plasterwork. Following a change of ownership in 2010 the hotel has again undergone substantial refurbishment, restoring the building back to the original splendour created by Briggs. Recently the hotel has undergone an update to the main entrance of the hotel. IQ Projects designed and installed two elegant bronze pivoting doors to create a striking entrance design as guests enter the building. The medieval city of Westminster grew up along the approach roads to Westminster Abbey, including Tothill Street and its continuation named Petty France, from the French wool merchants who had settled the street. Just south of Tothill Street was the Great Almonry, dating from the 13th century and from where alms were distributed. The site of the hotel itself, west of the Almonry, was then occupied by a chapel dedicated to St Ermin's though both the Almonry and that chapel appear to have been demolished from around the 16th century and no trace of either now remains. Nevertheless, the network of alleys and paths that developed around such institutions over the course of the medieval period developed into the irregular streets that still pattern the area around the hotel today. The residential population of Westminster rose appreciably from the 17th century, partly illustrated by the construction of St Margaret Chapel, originally known as The New Chapell, immediately to the south of the hotel site in 1636 and where English astronomer Thomas Street was buried in 1689. By 1869 it was rebuilt on a larger scale as Christ Church and demolished in the 1950s following bomb damage. The burial ground it stood around still partly survives as gardens fronting Victoria Street. The mid- to late 19th century was an era of great change during which the area was transformed by the creation of Victoria Street in 1847–51 and the construction of the District Railway. St James's Park underground station opened in 1868. Next door the hotel has the Caxton Hall, built in 1882–83, famous for the first meeting of the Suffragette Movement in 1906, infamous for the revenge assassination of Michael O'Dwyer in 1940 and a celebrity civil marriage venue in the 1950s and '60s – Roger Moore, Peter Sellars, Diana Dors and Elizabeth Taylor all took their vows there, some more than once. The St. Ermin's Hotel has a reputation for use by the UK's secret intelligence agencies. During the 1930s the hotel and the building at 2 Caxton Street were used by officers of the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS or MI6) located close by at 54 Broadway to meet agents and is well documented from March 1938 as the headquarters first of SIS's Section D, headed by Australian George Taylor and then as home of the SOE, working under "Statistical Research Department" cover. Among the more famous personnel known to have worked from offices in the building are Kim Philby, Guy Burgess, Laurence Grand, H. Montgomery Hyde and Eric Maschwitz. Throughout the Second World War the building operated as a convenient annexe for SIS as it was surrounded by other secret organisations, including the London branch of Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Palmer Street; MI9 in Caxton Street; the SIS Chief's office at 21 Queen Anne's Gate; the SIS offices in Artillery Mansions on Victoria Street and in the basement of St Anne's Mansions and the MI8 listening post on the roof of what was then the Passport Office in Petty France. In addition, the hotel was used regularly by SIS, MI5, and Naval Intelligence Division case officers, as mentioned in Snow by Madoc Roberts and Nigel West,[7] while the SIS also interviewed prospective employees there, usually by Marjorie Maxse, the organisation's recruiter as detailed in Kim Philby's autobiography My Silent War.[8] Shortly before the war the hotel was the venue for guerrilla warfare classes run partly by MI6, and among those working for 'King and Country' within that group at the time was Noël Coward, as well as art expert and member of the Cambridge Five spy ring, Anthony Blunt From 1981, the hotel was used by St Ermins group of senior trade union leaders, who met secretly every month at the hotel to organise to prevent the left taking over the Labour Party. Four MPs also attended: Denis Howell, John Golding, Denis Healey, and Giles Radice. The group was created following the conference decision to establish an electoral college (40% trade unions, 30% members, 30% MPs) to elect the Labour Party leader and deputy |
تاريخ | |
مصدر | https://www.flickr.com/photos/seattlecamera/50376677757/ |
مؤلف | John K Thorne |
الترخيص
- إنت حر:
- فى المشاركه – علشان نسخ و توزيع و بث العمل
- إنك تمزج – فى تكييف العمل
- بالشروط دى:
- نسبه ل – لازم يتنسب العمل للى مألفه بشكل مناسب و توفير رابط للرخصه وتحديد اذا حصلت تغييرات. ممكن ده يتعمل بأى طريقه معقوله، لكن مش بطريقه تشير ان مانح الرخصه بيوافقك على الاستعمال.
نَشَر John K Thorne هذه الصُّورة على موقع فلِيكر بتاريخ https://flickr.com/photos/89918055@N05/50376677757. ورَاجَعها FlickreviewR 2 في 12 اكتوبر 2020، وتأكَّدَ أَنَّها مُرخَّصة برخصة cc-by-2.0. |
12 اكتوبر 2020
العناصر المصورة في هذا الملف
يُصوِّر العربية
قيمة ما بدون عنصر ويكيداتا
1 ديسمبر 2012
طراز الكاميرا العربية
وقت التعرض العربية
0.025 ثانيه
عدد البؤرة العربية
3.3
البعد البؤري العربية
4.28 مليمتر
سرعة أيزو العربية
100
مصدر الملف العربية
نوع الوسائط العربية
image/jpeg
Flickr photo ID الإنجليزية
حجم البيانات العربية
10,684,483 بايت
الارتفاع العربية
3,672 بكسل
4,896 بكسل
تدقيق المجموع العربية
6b2a24c0efa13a29ca711d07e294c1e148bd2e4e
تاريخ الفايل
اضغط على الساعه/التاريخ علشان تشوف الفايل زى ما كان فى الوقت ده.
الساعه / التاريخ | صورة صغيرة | ابعاد | يوزر | تعليق | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
دلوقتي | 19:34، 12 اكتوبر 2020 | 4,896 × 3,672 (10.19 ميجابايت) | Ham II | Uploaded a work by John K Thorne from https://www.flickr.com/photos/seattlecamera/50376677757/ with UploadWizard |
استخدام الفايل
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الويكيات التانيه دى بتستخدم الفايل ده:
بيانات ميتا
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منتج الكاميرا | SONY |
---|---|
موديل الكاميرا | DSC-HX10V |
مدة التعرض | 1/40 ثانية (0.025) |
العدد البؤرى | البعد البؤرى/3.3 |
تقييم سرعة أيزو | 100 |
تاريخ و وقت الإنتاج | 16:04، 1 ديسمبر 2012 |
البعد البؤرى للعدسة | 4.28 ملم |
التوجيه | عادي |
الدقة الأفقية | 350 نقطة لكل بوصة |
الدقة الرأسية | 350 نقطة لكل بوصة |
البرمجيات المستخدمة | Photoshop Express 20.35.0.3173 |
تاريخ و وقت تغيير الملف | 16:04، 1 ديسمبر 2012 |
برنامج التعرض | برنامج عادى |
نسخة Exif | 2.3 |
تاريخ و وقت التحويل الرقمى | 16:04، 1 ديسمبر 2012 |
معنى كل مكون |
|
طور ضغط الصورة | 3 |
سرعة القافل | 5.3219279976198 |
فتحة القافل | 3.444932000465 |
الضي | 4.9234375 |
تعويض التعرض | 0 |
أقصى قافل أرضى | 3.4453125 أبكس (f/3.3) |
طور القياس بالمتر | نمط |
مصدر النور | مش معروف |
فلاش | الفلاش ما بدأش، ضغط فلاش إجبارى |
نسخة فلاش بكس المدعومة | 1 |
فرق اللون | إس آر جي بي |
مصدر الملف | دى إس سي |
نوع المشهد | صورة متاخدة على طول |
تظبيط الصورة حسب الطلب | عملية عادية |
طريقة التعرض | تعرض أوتوماتيكي |
توازن الأبيض | توازن الأبيض اوتوماتيكي |
نسبة الزوم الرقمية | 1 |
نوع تصوير المشهد | مظبوط |
التعارض | طبيعي |
التشبع | عادي |
الحده | عادي |
حالة جهاز الاستقبال | شمول القياس |
المرجع لاتجاه الصوره | الاتجاه المغناطيسي |
اتجاه الصوره | 322 |
بيانات استطلاع الجيوديسيك المستخدمة | WGS-84 |
تصحيح GPS التفاضلي | 0 |
نسخة علامة ال چى بى إس | 2.3.0.0 |
العدسة المستخدمة | 4.3-68.5 mm f/3.3-5.9 |
نسخة IIM | 2 |