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london - is it technically north?
I once heard or read that London, being the capital city is technically (not geographically) north and you drive up to London and down to Scotland (just an example) i think it was from King Henry VIII reign but i'm not sure, has anyone else heard this and is there anywhere i can look it up to proove what i'm saying because everyone i have asked says i am wrong, but i'm sure i've heard it somewhere!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It has nothing to do with actual direction. Coach timetables and later train timetables in Victorian times used 'up' for coaches/trains going to London whether they were coming from Newcastle, Brighton or Cardiff. The idea was that the capital is the country's most important city and so one would go 'up' to it.
Thus, the up-lines were those taking trains towards London and the down-lines were those taking them away from there. If the line had nothing to do with London as such, the up-line was the one headed for the larger or more important destination.
Thus, the up-lines were those taking trains towards London and the down-lines were those taking them away from there. If the line had nothing to do with London as such, the up-line was the one headed for the larger or more important destination.
Click here and read item No.8 for Chambers Dictionary's description of travelling 'up' to London. Will that do for somewhere that 'proves' it?