I don't know how wide it is but it's 202 feet tall.
Monument to the Great Fire of London was created in 1677.
Sir Christopher Wren as a monument to the Great Fire of London.
The Monument to the Great Fire of London, commonly called The Monument, is close to the Northern end of the London Bridge, in London, Britain. The Monument is a Roman Doric column built in 1677, designed by Christopher Wren and Robert Hooke. It is 202 feet high, which is the same as the distance of The Monument from Thomas Farynor, the king's bakery shop where the fire began.
We usually remember the Great Fire of London by the famous children's rhyme as follows: London's burning, London's burning. Fetch the engines, fetch the engines. Fire fire, Fire Fire! Pour on water, pour on water. London's burning, London's burning.
A gilded urn of fire.
202 feet tall
It's name is 'The Monument' and was built by Sir Christopher Wren to commemorate the Great Fire of London in 1666.
there is a monument in London were the fire started
monument ni the city of london There is a plaque in the street that was Pudding Lane, where the fire started......honestly why answer the way you do
'The Monument' designed by Sir Christopher Wren.
I think it`s Sir Christopher Wren..
Robert Hooke was a British Surveyor and assistant to Christopher Wren who was charged with the rebuilding of London following the Great Fire of 1666. He also worked on Londonâ??s monument to the fire. Both he and Wren were astronomers and the monument served as a telescope for observing transits as well.