Database: Piccadilly Circus: Difference between revisions
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[[File:ACS_DB_Piccadilly_Circus.jpg| | [[File:ACS_DB_Piccadilly_Circus.jpg|right|250px]] | ||
This landmark junction, now a festival of lights and advertisements, had very humble origins as a connecting point between three different sections of | This landmark junction, now a festival of lights and advertisements, had very humble origins as a connecting point between three different sections of {{Wiki|Regent Street}}. [[Piccadilly Circus]] was constructed in 1819, and derives its name from Pickadilly Hall, home of the famous seventeenth-century tailor Robert Baker, located nearby. Baker's specialty was the pickadilly, a frilly collar at the height of fashion, especially in the 1620s. | ||
Personally, I think the frilly pickadilly is due for a comeback. Make it so, hipsters. | Personally, I think the frilly pickadilly is due for a comeback. Make it so, hipsters. | ||
Latest revision as of 08:19, 27 June 2020

This landmark junction, now a festival of lights and advertisements, had very humble origins as a connecting point between three different sections of Regent Street. Piccadilly Circus was constructed in 1819, and derives its name from Pickadilly Hall, home of the famous seventeenth-century tailor Robert Baker, located nearby. Baker's specialty was the pickadilly, a frilly collar at the height of fashion, especially in the 1620s.
Personally, I think the frilly pickadilly is due for a comeback. Make it so, hipsters.
Okay, one thing I must make clear is that there was never an actual circus at Piccadilly Circus. No clowns, no animals, no eight-fingered wranglers. Circus here refers to the fact that the junction was once a circle, but the shape of Piccadilly changed in the 1880s, when Shaftesbury Avenue was created and cut through the circle.