'Londinium' was the Roman name for London. Any previous name would be pre-history.
London was called Londinium. It is fairly obvious if you shorten it.
London was called Londinium. It is fairly obvious if you shorten it.
The Romans called it Londinium
The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".The Romans called London "Londinium".
London is a city, it has areas called 'districts' in it that may be called towns (Camden Town, Kentish town etc). that refer back to what was there before London grew and expanded to engulf them. However they are no longer visibly separate from the rest of the London build.
A long time ago before 0 BC. It used to be called Londimun
The London bridge is called this because it is in london
As far as I can remember I was taught that there wasn't a LONDON before the Romans, it was called Londinium by them.
Because Christians believe anything before them is incomplete and uncivilised (primal) and anything after them is heresy.
It's not called anything unless there's a digit before all the zeros. If there's a ' 1 ' before them, then it's one hundred quintillion.
Because it happens in London The one in Paris in called the Paris marathon
The inn where Chaucer's pilgrims assembled before their trip to Canterbury was called the Tabard Inn, located in Southwark, London.