Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6747523> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 36 of
36
with 100 triples per page.
- Q6747523 subject Q16791496.
- Q6747523 subject Q8807400.
- Q6747523 abstract "Template:ForManchester Square is an 18th-century garden square in the Marylebone area in London, England, a short distance north of Oxford Street. It is one of the smaller but better preserved Georgian squares in central London. The central section of the northern side of the square is occupied by a mansion once known as Manchester House and later as Hertford House, which is now the home of the Wallace Collection, a major collection of fine and decorative arts. The house and square form part of Marylebone's Portman Estate. Construction on both was underway by around 1776. Famous residents in the square have included Julius Benedict, the German-born composer, who lived at no. 2, John Hughlings Jackson, the English neurologist, who lived at no. 3, and Alfred, Lord Milner, the British statesman and colonial administrator, at no. 14. Admiral Sir Thomas Foley (Royal Navy officer) and his wife (later widow) Lady Lucy Anne FitzGerald occupied no. 1 as their London townhouse during the first half of the nineteenth century. In 1814–15 Manchester Square became briefly famous, when newspapers reported that a pig-faced woman was living there.The Beatles cover photograph of their first LP Please Please Me was taken by Angus McBean in 1963 of the group looking down over the stairwell inside EMI house, EMI's London headquarters, in Manchester Square at the time (now demolished). A repeat photo taken in 1969 was intended for their Get Back album cover but was changed to the Let It Be album but eventually used on the retrospective albums 1962–1966 and 1967–1970.In the early 21st century, the chemical company ICI moved into a new headquarters in the north west corner of the square, which was designed in a style that blends in with the traditional architecture to some extent. The remainder of the square is still occupied by tall brick Georgian terraced houses, many of which are now offices.Manchester Square Fire Station, actually a few blocks away in Chiltern Street, was decommissioned in June 2005 by the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority (LFEPA), and is now a luxury hotel and restaurant.".
- Q6747523 thumbnail Manchester_Square_1799_edited.jpg?width=300.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q1125300.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q123634.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q1299.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q1327919.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q1426279.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q16791496.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q17361841.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q181826.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q183412.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q1950377.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q199585.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q209714.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q3525120.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q356361.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q4410750.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q510435.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q552784.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q611821.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q664064.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q6670416.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q7232115.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q841983.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q8807400.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q899151.
- Q6747523 wikiPageWikiLink Q924074.
- Q6747523 point "51.5167 -0.15272".
- Q6747523 type SpatialThing.
- Q6747523 comment "Template:ForManchester Square is an 18th-century garden square in the Marylebone area in London, England, a short distance north of Oxford Street. It is one of the smaller but better preserved Georgian squares in central London. The central section of the northern side of the square is occupied by a mansion once known as Manchester House and later as Hertford House, which is now the home of the Wallace Collection, a major collection of fine and decorative arts.".
- Q6747523 label "Manchester Square".
- Q6747523 lat "51.5167".
- Q6747523 long "-0.15272".
- Q6747523 depiction Manchester_Square_1799_edited.jpg.