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Westminster Hall has also served Buy Property in London ceremonial
functions. From the twelfth century to the nineteenth, coronation
banquets honouring new monarchs were held here. The last coronation
banquet was that of King George IV, held in 1821;[23] his successor,
William IV, abandoned the idea because he deemed it too expensive.
The Hall has been used for lyings-in-state during state and ceremonial
Buy Property in London funerals. Such an honour is usually
reserved for the Sovereign and for their consorts; the only non-royals
to receive it in the twentieth century were Frederick Sleigh Roberts,
1st Earl Roberts (1914) and Sir Winston Churchill Buy Property in London (1965). The most recent lying-in-state was that of Queen Elizabeth
The Queen Mother in 2002.
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Westminster Hall has the largest
Buy Property in London clearspan medieval roof in England, measuring
20.7 by 73.2 metres (68 by 240 ft).[10]
Despite an Essex legend that the oak timber came from woods in
Thundersley, Essex, it is known that the roof Buy Property in London timberwork was entirely framed in 1395 at Farnham in Surrey,
56 kilometres (35 mi) south-west of London.[19
Accounts record the large number of wagons and barges which delivered
the jointed timbers toBuy Property in London Westminster for assembly.[20]
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Buy Property in London Westminster Hall has served numerous
functions. It was primarily used for judicial purposes,
housing three of the most important courts in the land: the Court
of King's Bench, the Court of Common Pleas and the Court of Chancery.
In 1875, these courts were amalgamated into the High Court of Justice,[21]
which continued to meet in Westminster Hall until it moved to the
Royal Courts of Justice in 1882.[22] In addition toBuy Property in London regular courts, Westminster Hall also housed important
trials, including impeachment trials and the state trials of King
Charles I at the end of the English Civil War, Sir William Wallace,
Sir Thomas More, John Cardinal Fisher, Guy Fawkes, the Earl of Strafford,
the rebel Scottish Lords of the 1715 and 1745 uprisings, and Warren
Hastings.
George IV's coronation banquet was held Buy Property in London
in Westminster Hall in 1821; it was the last such banquet held.
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