The Regent's Canal which opened in 1820, was the first canal to cross London.
Probably the Regents Canal (1809)
the first canal in London
He invented the first canal in London.
There is no canal between London and Southampton.
There is no single canal that ever linked London and Liverpool. But it was (and is) possible to travel by canal between these two cities by using a combination of canals.
It was never possible to go from London to Edinburgh by canal as the English canal system only went as far north as Yorkshire.
No
the longest canal in the UK is the Grand Union Canal 137 miles from London to Birmingham
He didn't. The Duke of Bridgewater had a canal built from his coal mines in Worsley to the centre of Manchester. This is not in London. The first part of his canal opened in 1763. He didn't invent canals, though. The Sankey Canal near Warrington had already opened a few years earlier. The Duke went to look at the Canal du Midi in France and the Newry Canal in Ireland, which were older. The Exeter Ship Canal had opened back in 1566 and a number of canals were built in England by the Romans, including the Foss Dyke,which is still in use, between Lincoln and the River Trent.
There isn't one.
london -malt-Egypt-Suez Canal-red sea-arabian sea
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It joins London with Birmingham.