London Drum

Cleopatra’s Needle – London’s ancient Eygptian obelisk guarded by Sphinx statues

Where? Cleopatra’s Needle, Victoria Embankment (between Hungerford Bridge and Waterloo Bridge) Time required? A typical visit is 5 mins Parking: Nearby car parks Buses: 1, 4, 6, 9, 11, 13, 15, 23, 26, 59, 68, 76, 87, 91, 139, 168, 171, 172, 176, 188, 243, 341, RV1, X68 Bus fares Trains: The closest station is Embankment Bakerloo Circle District Northern Other nearby stations: Charing Cross, Covent Garden and Temple Train fares

Craig’s review… Cleopatra’s Needle swapped the Nile for the Thames and the Temple of Heliopolis for Temple tube station, so she’s bound to feel a little bit homesick.

They’ve positioned a couple of sphinxes next to her to make her feel at home, I suppose. And she’s got drifts of dirt that double-up as sand. And we do occasionally have a bit of sunshine in London, so it’s not impossible for her to pretend she’s still in Egypt.

Close up of the Egyptian obelisk on Victoria EmbankmentPhoto: londondrum.com
The Egyptian obelisk on Victoria Embankment

It’s amazing to think that this monument is even older than London itself – and I mean that quite literally because back when the Romans were building the first bridge across the Thames Cleopatra’s Needle was already 1,500 years old. Just think about that for a second… this obelisk was already ancient before the Romans arrived. It was even ancient in Cleopatra’s day – the pharaoh that it was named after was born fourteen centuries after it was built! Cleopatra was as far removed from the early pharaohs as we are from the fall of Rome.

Plaque describing the early history of Cleopatra’s NeedlePhoto: londondrum.com
Plaque describing the early history of Cleopatra’s Needle

From the Temple of Heliopolis to London

It was originally one of a pair of obelisks that stood outside the Temple of Heliopolis, and it wasn’t until the Romans shifted them to the Caesareum that they obtained their current name. A short time later one of the pair fell over and spent the next 1,800 years lying face down in the sand.

That’s when Admiral Nelson and Napoleon entered the story (what an amazing history!). When Nelson beat back the French at the Battle of the Nile the grateful Egyptians gave us the long-toppled obelisk as a gift, which wasn’t as generous as it sounds because they also insisted that we had to carry it back to Britain at our own expense. Seventy years later they gifted the upright one to America just for remaining neutral in a war, and gave a third one to France in exchange for a mechanical clock.

Plaque describing why Egypt gave Britain the NeedlePhoto: londondrum.com
Plaque describing why Egypt gave Britain the Needle

How mad is that? New York basically got theirs for doing nothing, Paris swapped theirs for a clock, whilst we had to wage war on a European megalomaniac. The next time we did that in 1945 we got a free Christmas tree from Norway – we keep getting diddled on the gifts!

It was the Victorians who finally worked out how to float it over on a custom-built boat. Unfortunately a terrible storm off the Bay of Biscay left six of their sailors dead and the vessel floated alone for four days until it was hauled in by some Scots. After we’d paid them off (we had to pay them another five grand to get it back) it was finally towed back to Britain.

And so here we are, two obelisks reunited again – me and her – only this time I’m the one who’s in danger of toppling over because my knees are playing up today. I’m thinking of having a sit-down on the Egyptian-themed benches but they’re all being used as rest stops for joggers doing up their shoes, and snoozing dudes who are using them as a bed.

Statue of an Egyptian sphinxPhoto: londondrum.com
One of the Egyptian sphinxes that flank the obelisk

Egyptian hieroglyphs on the obelisk

There are a few tourists squinting up at the hieroglyphs to see what they say, but all you can make out are a few owls and faded feathers. You can see a couple of cartouches that will say either Thutmose III or Ramesses II, but good luck trying to decipher them way up there. You need to bring some binoculars with you if you want a closer look.

Close up of the hieroglyph inscriptions on the obeliskPhoto: londondrum.com
The weathered state of the hieroglyph inscriptions

Shrapnel damage from World War I

If you have a stroll around the base then you’ll see a lot of pockmarks in the concrete where it sustained some shrapnel damage during the war. Most people assume that the first bombing raid over London was during the Blitz, but it was actually when a wave of wooden fighters came over in 1917. It must have been one hell of an explosion judging by the great gouges that have been blasted out of it.

Plaque commemorating the shrapnel damage from World War IPhoto: londondrum.com
Plaque commemorating the shrapnel damage from World War I

I wonder what Thutmose III would have thought 3,500 years ago, watching his obelisk being unveiled in the desert, if he’d had a flash-forward to its apocalyptic future of fire and flames and bombs dropping on it from the sky.

Time capsule buried underneath the obelisk

When the Victorians put it into position they also buried a time-capsule underneath with a very eclectic collection of stuff. They included some pictures of the world’s most beautiful women, a few pipes and cigars, a baby’s bottle and box full of hairpins, some metal cables and hydraulic jack which they’d used to raise it up, a bronze model of the monument, a complete set of British coins, a railway timetable, a Bible, Whitaker’s Almanack, a portrait of Queen Victoria, and ten daily newspapers. It’s almost worth pushing the obelisk over just to see if they’re still there.

Worth a visit? Value for money? n/aGood for kids? Easy to get to?

I also recommend… . If you’re interested in ancient Egypt then they have lots of statues, monuments and sarcophagi at the British Museum. The Petrie Museum has a huge collection of pots and everyday objects, and Sir John Soane’s Museum has lots of statues and the sarcophagus of Seti I

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