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The
Palace of Westminster was the principal residence of the kings
of England from the mid-11th century until the early-16th
century. The Westminster Hall was built in 1097, during
the reign of William Rufus, its 14th century hammer-beam roof
replaced an earlier version, which had been supported by a
line of posts either side
After a fire in 1512 the Palace
of Westminster ceased to be a royal residence and became the
seat of the Houses of Parliament. Parliament was first
housed in the choir stalls of St Stephen's Chapel, Members
of Parliament facing each other from opposite sides of the
chapel, a tradition which continues today.
In 1834 a fire destroyed the
Palace of Westminster, and only Westminster Hall, the crypt
of St Stephen's Chapel, the cloisters and the Jewel Tower
survived.
The present Neo-Gothic building
was built over the following 30 years by Sir Charles Barry
and his assistant, Augustus Welby Pugin. Barry
incorporated Westminster Hall and the remnants of St Stephen's
into his new building, and Pugin embellished the late-perpendicular
style with Gothic details.
In 1941, during the Blitz, the
House of Commons Chamber was destroyed by a German bomb.
The rebuilding work, under Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, preserved
the essential feature's of Barry's original building.
The Houses of Parliament contain
1,000 rooms, 11 courtyards, 8 bars and 6 restaurants - none
open to the public.
The
Palace of Westminster is dominated by its famous clock tower,
316 feet high and 40 feet square, with 393 steps to the very
top. Big Ben is not the clock but the great bell that
strikes each hour, there are also four quarter-hour bells.
Big Ben is named after Sir Benjamin
Hall, Chief Commissioner of Works when the bell was hung in
1858. Made in Whitechapel, Big Ben was the second bell
to be cast for the clock - the first one cracked during
test ringing, although the present bell also has a slight
crack. The clock is the largest in Britain and has kept
exact time almost continuously since 1859. It is checked
three times a week and is accurate to within one second.
The clock tower originally contained
a small prison cell, and the last occupant was Emmeline Pankhurst,
in 1902. A statue of the Suffragette can be seen in
Victoria Tower Gardens by the river on the south side of Parliament.
Big
Ben's famous deep chimes can be heard daily on BBC radio.
The Palace of Westminster comprises
two Houses of Parliament - the Commons and the Lords.
The House of Commons is made
up of 659 elected Members of Parliament (MPs) representing
a number of political parties. The party with the majority
of MPs forms the Government, with its leader becoming Prime
Minister. The remaining MPs represent the Opposition. In
the green upholstered Commons' Chamber the Government sits
of the left and the Opposition on the right.
Commons debates are impartially
chaired by an MP designated as Speaker, who presides over
the Commons from a chair set between the Government and the
Opposition.
The House of Lords is presently
unelected and comprises law lords, bishops, archbishops, life
peers and some hereditary peers.
At the yearly State Opening
of Parliament the reigning monarch passes through the Royal
Gallery to deliver a speech from the throne in the Gothic
Hall of the House of Lords. This speech, supplied by
the Government, outlines the Government's plans for the present
session of parliament. The legislation formulated in
the Commons is debated in both houses before becoming law.
The 1.5 million Acts of Parliament passed since 1497 are stored
in the magnificent Victoria Tower.
Members of the public can watch
the Commons or Lords in session from the visitors' galleries,
you need tickets from a local MP, apply eight weeks in advance,
or queue up outside St Stephen's entrance.
The best spectacle is Prime Minister's
Question Time which is held at 15:00 on Wednesdays, though
visitors will require tickets in advance for this.
Guided tours of the Palace and
Westminster Hall are by arrangement only. Apply well
advance to your local MP, the Public Information Office, or
your embassy. Telephone 0207 219 4272 for details.
Visitors who come to meet their
MP wait under the rich mosaic ceiling of the Central Lobby.
The galleries remain open
to the public for guided tours (which are not free) when Parliament
is in recess.
Admission free
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