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Tudor Walking Tour London: Our Tudor Tours Aren't Just for Schools

Updated: Mar 23

Interior of the King's Chapel of the Savoy showing stained glass and ornate ceiling, the sole surviving building from Henry VII's early 16th century hospital complex, featured on our Tudor walking tour London
The King's Chapel of The Savoy

Step Into Tudor London's Hidden History With Me


"I believe history isn't just in museums and textbooks—it's beneath your feet on London's ancient streets."


I'm Yvette, founder of Hidden Tudors Tours. If you've been searching for Tudor walking tour London experiences, you've found exactly what you're looking for—immersive walking experiences that reveal the vibrant, diverse Tudor London most visitors never discover.


Six Tudor Queens Walking Tour: Guided group exploring London's historical sites connected to Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard, and Catherine Parr
Yvette (tour guide in photo)

How My Tudor Tours London Journey Began


As a former teacher, I never expected a volunteer opportunity would change my life. In 2020, after George Floyd's death sparked conversations about representation, Open House London called for narratives highlighting Black British history. I proposed a Westminster walking tour exploring the lives of Black Tudors—and was stunned when it sold out within hours.


Diverse group of participants on our Tudor walking tour London exploring Westminster historical sites with Hidden Tudors Tours guide
Black Tudors Westminster Walk - 2020

The overwhelming response showed me something important: people are hungry for the untold stories of Tudor London. These aren't the tales you find in standard history books or typical tourist experiences. When I added a second Southwark route and saw the same enthusiasm, I knew I had to make these Tudor walking tours in London a permanent offering.


From Classroom to London's Streets


I founded Hidden Tudors Tours as part of my educational company, More Curricular, but don't let that confuse you—these Tudor London tours aren't just for schools. While my teaching background ensures educational quality, my tours are designed for everyone: history buffs, curious tourists, families seeking meaningful experiences, and yes, school groups too.

When you book directly through our Hidden Tudors Tours website, you'll find Tudor walking tour London experiences that go beyond Black Tudor history to include women's stories, the East India Company's origins, and interactive quests—all designed to engage and fascinate.


My Promise to You on Our Tudor Walking Tour London


When you join my Tudor tours London, you won't be following someone reciting memorized facts. Together, we'll analyze historical evidence, question established narratives, and develop critical thinking skills while standing in the very locations where Tudor history unfolded.

I'm not just showing you Tudor London—I'm inviting you to experience it with me.


Tudor Treasures That Shaped My London Walking Tours


Why am I so passionate about Tudor history? It's a period where England transformed from medieval kingdom to emerging world power, where religious turmoil changed society forever, and where personalities loomed larger than life. It is a time before race was to become the social construct as we know it now - making the stories of Black Tudors particularly fascinating and often surprising to modern visitors. On our private tour visits to London's livery companies, I've been captivated by three treasures that exemplify why this era fascinates me:


The Great Bible of 1539, first authorised English Bible commissioned by Henry VIII, featured in our Tudor walking tour London stories
The Great Bible of 1539

The Great Bible of 1539 at Grocers' Hall with its politically-charged imagery reminds me how revolutionary it was to have scripture in English—a change that empowered ordinary people to engage with religion directly for the first time.



Historical artifact - Merchant Taylors' Charter given by Queen Mary I, highlighted on the top right is a pomegranate symbolising her mother Catherine of Aragon.
The Charter (pomegranate is visible in the top right)
Historical artifact - Queen Mary I's charter at Merchant Taylors' Hall showing royal connections, highlighted on London Tudor tours
The Seal

Queen Mary's charter seal at Merchant Taylors' Hall, with its personal touches honouring her Spanish mother and husband, shows the human side of royalty amid dynastic politics - these weren't just historical figures but real people with attachments and loyalties.


Tudor-era Elizabethan weights used to regulate trade and commerce in London, featured in our Tudor walking tour London stories
Elizabethan Weights

And the Elizabethan weights at Goldsmiths' Hall represent something practical yet profound: how the Tudor quest for standardisation shaped commerce. These weights, bearing royal marks, show how the crown regulated trade. They ensured fair dealings in precious metals across England, protecting both merchants and customers.


While we won't see these specific treasures on our walks, they've inspired me to look deeper into Tudor London's streets, where equally fascinating stories await discovery.




About More Curricular's Hidden Tudors Tours

Hidden Tudors Tours offers engaging walking experiences that uncover the diverse stories of Tudor London. Our meticulously researched routes explore the forgotten lives of Black Tudors, powerful women, and the origins of institutions that shaped history, all brought to life through interactive storytelling by our passionate guides.

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