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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p Pudding Lane is a street in the City of London and formerly the location of Thomas Farriner's bakery where the Great Fire of London began in 1666. The lane is located off Eastcheap, near London Bridge and the Monument.According to the chronicler John Stow, it is named after the "puddings" (a medieval word for entrails and organs) which would fall from the carts coming down the lane from the butchers in Eastcheap as they headed for the waste barges on the River Thames. A commemorative plaque on the wall of a building called Faryners House, on Pudding Lane, records the site of the start of the fire. The sign was presented by the Worshipful Company of Bakers in 1986. The original name of the lane was "Offal Pudding Lane".The nearest London Underground station is Monument, a short distance to the west. The closest mainline railway stations are Fenchurch Street and Cannon Street.. }

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