I don’t have live access to up-to-date news feeds right now, but I can share what is widely documented about the London tornado of 1091 and why it’s notable.
Core answer
- The London tornado of 1091 is considered one of the earliest and most powerful tornado events in British history, striking London on October 17–23, 1091 (dates vary by source) and damaging or destroying hundreds of structures, including the church of St Mary-le-Bow and more than 600 wooden houses. It is frequently cited as possibly the strongest recorded tornado in the British Isles, with modern assessments placing it around the upper end of historical tornado intensity scales. Contemporary accounts describe churches and walls left as heaps and significant destruction across central London. [Wikipedia: London tornado of 1091][Historic UK: Great London Tornado of 1091][BBC/other historical summaries often reference similar details]
Context and key details
- Intensity and damage: Modern readers often see this event described as a very high-intensity tornado (roughly TORRO T8, comparable to an F4 on the Fujita scale), suggesting wind speeds capable of devastating damage to timber-frame housing and large structures. The destruction of St Mary-le-Bow’s roof timbers and the extensive damage to hundreds of wooden houses are commonly cited benchmarks. [Wikipedia: London tornado of 1091][Historic UK: Great London Tornado of 1091]
- Notable features: It is frequently noted as the first well-documented tornado in England and one of the strongest in British history, with multiple sources recounting the collapse or removal of a large number of structures within the city. The event has been the subject of historical discussion and is sometimes used in educational materials about early meteorology and extreme weather in the British Isles. [Wikipedia: London tornado of 1091][Historic UK: Great London Tornado of 1091]
Representative sources you can consult
- Historic UK article: Great London Tornado of 1091. Provides a concise summary of the event, the damage, and a historical note on the bridge and St Mary-le-Bow. [Historic UK: Great London Tornado of 1091]
- Wikipedia: London tornado of 1091. Synthesizes historical accounts and presents the commonly cited intensity estimates and affected sites. [Wikipedia: London tornado of 1091]
If you’d like, I can pull a short timeline of events and a simple comparison of reported impacts (e.g., which churches damaged, approximate number of houses affected) from those sources, and I can also help locate more scholarly discussions on the event’s historical interpretation.
Sources
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kids.kiddle.coThis Day In History: October 23, 1091 Tornadoes aren’t the first thing to leap to mind when picturing Merry Olde England, but a whopper of a twister tore through London on October 23, 1091. It is thought to be the largest known tornado in the UK, as well as the earliest – at least that we know about. From contemporary [...]
www.todayifoundout.comLondon Bridge has a long history of ‘falling down’, however on this occasion the wooden bridge, built by William the Conqueror, was one of the victims of the London Tornado of 17th October 1091...
www.historic-uk.comPosts about London Tornado 1091 written by cottagecapers
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