• Trafalgar Square is the true heart of England, the most important crossroads not only of its roads, but also of events of social and political life.
  • The Napoleonic Wars continued for 10 more years. Years after that, in October of 1832, Trafalgar Square was named for the famous victory.
  • The famous Nelson Column stands in the middle of Trafalgar Square. To one side of the square is the large British National Gallery (National Gallery).
  • From the 14th to the 19th centuries the present Trafalgar Square was the site of the royal mews, where Geoffrey Chaucer once toiled as a clerk of works.
  • Trafalgar Square with its two fountains surrounded by mermaids and dolphins and Nelson's Column, which is guarded by four lions...
  • London's Trafalgar Square, home to famous sites including the Nelson Column and the National Gallery, is a center of movement and culture.
  • Nelson's statue is worth a trip to the busy Trafalgar Square. We loved. our trip here, the Trafalgar Square is marvelous for visitors and locals..
  • In Trafalgar Square there are also various statues of well-known people such as George Washington, given to the English by the State of Virginia.
  • Trafalgar Square is a square in central London that commemorates the Battle of Trafalgar (1805), a British naval victory of the Napoleonic Wars.