The baker went to bed and forgot that he had put something in the oven to bake
The negatives of the Great Fire Of London was that many people died or got injured. It also burned down many houses.
The Great Fire of London was an accident. Because at 1am on Sunday morning on 2 September in Thomas Farriner's bakery on Pudding Lane started the fire. It may have been caused by a spark from his oven falling onto a pile of fuel nearby. The fire spread easily because London was very dry after a long, hot summer. This shows that it was an accident. -So proud of my answer :D
Thomas Farriner, the baker whose oven is often blamed for starting the Great Fire of London in 1666, faced significant scrutiny after the disaster. While he was not directly punished, he lost his bakery and suffered immense public backlash. Farriner claimed that the fire spread uncontrollably, and ultimately, he was not held legally responsible for the catastrophic event. The fire led to widespread devastation, prompting changes in building regulations and fire safety practices in the city.
Well it all began in a small bakery in bakers street (I think). The owner had forgotten to check that none of the ashes in the oven where still flickering... the bakery set alight and ad all the surrounding accommodations and buildings where wooden, thatched and attached, it spread like mad... It also didn't help that it was a windy day.
i beleive the fire originated in a bakers shop when he was making bread and then it caught his shop then the whole place just went up in flames
A spark from a baker's oven set his house alight, and this spread throughout London
The fire started in a baker's shop in Pudding Lane when the baker left his baking oven unattended and burning embers fell out of the oven.
The Great Fire of London started in a baker's shop in Pudding Lane on 2nd September 1666 when the bread oven was left unattended.
The Great Fire of London started in a baker's shop in Pudding Lane on 2nd September 1666 and burned for five days. The fire started because the baker left his bread oven unattended.
In 1666 AD. From a bakers oven, in Pudding Lane. Pudding Lane still exists. The Monument in London, was erected to memory of the Great Fire of London, by Sir Christopher Wren when he was rebuilding London (St. Paul's Cathedral included), after the Great Fire.
It started in Thomas Farriner's baker shop in Pudding Lane when the bread oven fire was left unattended.
The negatives of the Great Fire Of London was that many people died or got injured. It also burned down many houses.
The Great Fire of London was an accident. Because at 1am on Sunday morning on 2 September in Thomas Farriner's bakery on Pudding Lane started the fire. It may have been caused by a spark from his oven falling onto a pile of fuel nearby. The fire spread easily because London was very dry after a long, hot summer. This shows that it was an accident. -So proud of my answer :D
No. A regular convection oven cannot get up to the temperatures necessary for this. Causes for a fire is most likely a secondary material that is on the utensil (i.e unseen oil/grease film, spillage, etc.)
Something that opens an oven.
The Great Fire of London started in a bakers shop in Pudding Lane when the bread oven was left unattended. The fire eventually destroyed 13,200 houses, 87 churches, 1 cathedral and left 70,000 people homeless.
The Great Fire of London was in September 1666 following a long hot dry summer. The houses at that time were mostly made of wood and of tiered construction ie each floor overlapped the one below so that when they were at the fourth floor it was nearly possible to shake hands with someone leaning out of the house opposite. The fire therefore spread rapidly from house to house. Although 13,200 houses were destroyed and 70,000 people were left homeless, there were very few casualties.