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Many of the royal palaces and crown-related buildings are in the city of “Westminster” which is next door to the City of London.



Then head to the British Museum. Like most government-owned museums, it is free to access. However, I would recommend booking a reservation in advance. Rick Steves has a nice audio guide on touring the British Museum that I would recommend.


Start the day with the Imperial War Museum (London). It isn’t very popular, so, you can just show up without reservation. I don’t think it is particularly great, especially, if you have seen the museums focused on the world wars elsewhere but worth a few hours of visit, if you are interested.

Back to the City of London, start with St Clement Danes Church, first built about 1000 years ago and then destroyed and rebuilt several times. It is maintained by the UK’s Royal Air Force.
Another church with a fair bit of history including Roman-era artifacts is St. Bride’s church.



Start the day with Monument to the Great Fire of London in 1666. Like many buildings that were rebuilt after this fire, this monument was also built by Christopher Wren. It costs 6£ (4.5£ student) to enter. I would highly recommend going in and climbing to the top to get a great view of London.

Then head to the Bank of England museum. You can hold a real gold bar in your hand here. The museum has a pretty good history of money and specifically, paper money.

Getting to Stonehenge is expensive and the site is underwhelming. I love archeology and loved visiting it but if you aren’t a fan of archeology, feel free to skip Stonehenge.
Getting to Stonehenge requires taking a train to Salisbury. A one-way ticket costs £50 and a round-trip £52.5! So, don’t buy one-way by mistake. Further, the restaurants in Salisbury open after 11 AM. So, get food in London before coming here. Also, while you need a bus ticket £19 bus ticket to Stonehenge (or £41.50 with Stonehenge ticket included), you can skip a £25 ticket to Stonehenge and walk the final 1 KM to Stonehenge. Contrary to common belief, the site is free to visit, a ticket is only required for a private bus journey (~1 KM) and visiting the museum afterward. Overall, it takes ~2 hours of public transport to reach Stonehenge. One hour is sufficient for Stonehenge, and another half an hour for the museum would suffice. During the return journey, I stopped at the Old Sarum, it is quite useless though, I wouldn’t recommend stopping here. Also, download the audio guides in advance to enjoy Stonehenge.

I would highly recommend visiting it for 1-2 hours. Again, use Rick Steves’s audio guide to guide you to the best historical artifacts worth seeing.

The Natural History Museum is good and expansive. So, one can spend hours here. I would recommend starting from the top floor and going downwards.

In the evening, visit the Westminster Abbey, one can visit here for free during the service. This is the church where the coronation happens.


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