THE TOWER OF LONDON


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The Tower took around 20 years to build.

Arms and armour were made, tested and stored here until the 1800s.

During the Wars of the Roses, Henry VI was murdered here in 1471 and, later, the children of his great rival Edward IV – the Princes in the Tower - vanished within its walls in 1483.

The Tower also has a richer and more complex history, having been home to a wide array of institutions including the Royal Mint, the Royal Armouries and even a zoo.

For 500 years monarchs also used the Tower as a surprisingly luxurious palace.
Kings and queens lived in luxurious apartments at the Tower.
They worshipped in the Chapel Royal, kept a menagerie of exotic animals, and welcomed foreign rulers at magnificent ceremonial occasions.

Henry VIII modernised the rooms inside in preparation for the coronation of his new bride, Anne Boleyn in 1533.
She and the King feasted here in splendour the night before Anne processed in triumph through the City of London to Westminster Abbey.
Three years later Anne was back at the Tower, this time accused of adultery and treason.
She was held in the same luxurious lodgings, before being exEcuted by sword on the 19th May 1536.

Some stayed for only a few days, other many years.
During the Tudor age, the Tower became the most important state prison in the country.
The future Elizabeth I, Lady Jane Grey, Sir Walter Raleigh and Guy Fawkes were all ‘sent to the Tower’.
Even in the 20th century, German spies were brought here and shot.
The stories of prisoners, rich and poor, still haunt the Tower.

Henry VIII's wives Anne and Catherine were accused of adultery and treason.
Lady Jane Grey was an unfortunate pawn in a plot to replace Mary I, and was exEcuted for high treason in 1554, aged only 17.
In 1876, when the Chapel was restored, the remains unearthed in the chancel, including those of Anne Boleyn, were reburied beneath a marble pavement, inscribed with their names and coats of arms.

The Tower of London is still home to the Yeomen Warders and their families, the Resident Governor, and a garrison of soldiers.
There is a doctor and a chaplain.
And there is even a pub!

They wear their red state ‘dress uniforms’ for important occasions at the Tower, and also for special events such as the firing of the huge cannon on the Wharf, known as the Gun Salutes.
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