Tower of London ~ Description

Work on the Tower of London commenced shortly after William the Conqueror's victory at the Battle of Hastings (1066). Geographically located in the southeast corner of the walled city of Londinium, the site was protected to the east and the south by existing Roman walls, while deep ditches to the north and west slashed across the foundations of several Roman buildings long since abandoned and in ruins.

The Clerk of Works and Architech, Gundulf (Bishop of Rochester), was an experienced builder in stone and so the central keep rose, to the consternation of the Saxon population of the city. Built of white stone from Caen in France, it would eventually be dubbed the White Tower during the reign of King Henry III who ordered the building whitewashed prior to the arrival of his child bride, Eleanor of Provence in 1236.

By 1270 the White Tower was enclosed within stout stone walls while a second enclosure to the south formed the Royal Ward. Thirteen towers, set at intervals, ringed the great central keep. Many of these towers would, in time, become infamous - Bell Tower, Wakefield Tower, Bloody (Garden) Tower, Lanthorn (Lantern) Tower, Salt Tower, Broad Arrow, Constable, Martin, Brick, Bowyer, Flint, Devereux and Beauchamp. In time these towers would serve to guard the Inner Ward when a second, outer wall was built and seven new towers added including the Byward Tower, St. Thomas's Tower, Cradle Tower, Well Tower, Develin Tower, Brass Mount and Legge's Mount.

Beyond these stout walls, a massive moat, 100 feet across. Today the moat is nothing but lovely green grass, but until Queen Victoria had it drained in 1843, it was a notorious cesspool filled with all manner of filth.


The Tower of London ceased being a royal residence in 1660.

Unlike most of the towers in the fortress, the Bloody Tower is square-shaped. It was originally known as the Garden Tower because it overlooked the constable's garden. Its present name dates from at least the 16th century.

The plaque on Tower Green marks the site of the wooden scaffolds were seven known executions took place - Lord Hastings (1483), Anne Boleyn (1536), Catherine Howard (1542), Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury (daughter of George, Duke of Clarence and niece of King Edward IV and Richard III), Lady Jane Grey and Lady Rochford (1554) and Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex.


There were three separate dungeons in the basement of the White Tower; the smallest of the three is beneath the Chapel. The sub-crypt, below ground level, is not open to the public. It was here that perhaps the most wicked events took place, out of sight, deep within its torch-lit recesses.
The Tower Ravens (largest member of the crow family) are housed near the Wakefield Tower. A scavenger by nature, ravens have been associated with the Tower since its inception. Legend has it that if the ravens leave the Tower it will fall and the kingdom with it. To ensure that they remain, their wings are clipped on one side. There is a raven memorial in the moat, to the east of St. Thomas's Tower.
Tower Hill - near the Tower Hill Underground station is Trinity Gardens. This is the site of 112 public executions between 1381-1747. A pleasant place to picnic!
Before it was torn down in the mid-1800's there was a semi-circular tower on the west side called the Lion Tower where the Royal Menagerie was kept. It was the original entrance which you approached from the north, across a small causeway over the outer moat. It was quite a tourist attraction in its day. The menagerie began with a bear from Norway followed by an elephant; a gift from the King of France to King Henry III. Eventually lions, leopards and tigers were added. King James I was overly fond of blood sports, visiting the Tower frequently to watch pit fights being staged. Fun entertainment like a bear being pitted against a lion or a bear and a mastiff dog! Cock fights too no doubt.
Booklet - Tower of London - Department of the Environment Official Handbook - page 50, '... there is no contemporary evidence to connect it (the Bloody or Garden Tower) with 'the Princes in the Tower'
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CROWN JEWELS

In the cross at the front of the Imperial State Crown is the 170-caret 'Black Prince's Ruby' which is not actually a ruby but a pear-shaped cabochon spinel or balas, a semi-precious stone. It was once worn as a pendant and has small holes drilled in it, one of which is now plugged with a small ruby. According to legend, it was owned by the Moorish King of Granada. Don Pedro the Cruel, the grandee of Castile acquired the stone by murdering its owner then promptly gave (or sold) it to the Black Prince after his victory at the battle of Najara. Legend also suggests that Henry V incorporated it, along with several other balas-rubies, into his helmet at the Battle of Agincourt. The legend of the stone continues through to the Battle of Bosworth were it was said to have been worn by King Richard III in his coronet - not a crown. If, as Shakespeare has suggested, Henry Tudor populated the field with impostors, that was certainly not true of King Richard. Dressed to kill on the day, the coronet alone would have singled him out. History, of course, has recorded the truth of that!

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