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Thursday, February 1, 2024

Towering in London

Last fall we were part of a group that traveled abroad on a Shades of Ireland tour, focused on that country. However, extras included a 3-day pre-extension to London and/or a 3-day post-extension to Edinburgh. We booked London, Ireland, and Edinburgh and saw as much as possible. This post focuses on one of the most visited sights in London. 
As anyone who has visited London knows, 3-days here is not enough. We were a small group (7) and attempted to see a few highlights, including the formidable Tower of London, a 
royal fortress and London landmark, that's an imposing structure even when seen from a distance. This complex of several buildings is set within two concentric rings of defensive walls and a former moat. It's situated on the North bank of the River Thames on the border with the central City of London. 
Touring the Tower of London was included as a self-guided tour on our London pre-extension option. Upon submitting our entry voucher, we received the above map. This large complex of buildings is spread over 18 acres. We explored as much as possible on a rain-free morning learning that the buildings and grounds historically served as a royal palace, political prison, place of execution, arsenal, royal mint, exotic animal menagerie and a public records office. 

William the Conqueror
National Portrait Gallery
Following his 1066 coronation as the first Norman king of England, William the Conqueror, 
Duke of Normandy, built the White Tower as a demonstration of power after invading England and defeating Harold, the last Saxon king of England, at the Battle of Hastings. 

The tower was sited strategically on the River Thames as a fortress and gateway to the capital. It was quite unlike anything before in England. It was built to awe, subdue and terrify Londoners and to deter foreign invaders. Over 1,000 years later, the Tower still amazes those who visit, including ourselves. (Entry to the tower is by a steep set of steps along an outer wall. We did not go in; it was late in the day, we were tired from walking the grounds.)

The central keep, better known as the White Tower was begun around 1078 and built of white limestone from Caen, France, from which it derives its name, and a local building material, Kentish ragstone

A keep was built by European nobility within castles as a fortified tower during the Middle Ages. It was used as a refuge or last resort if the castle was overtaken.
The White Tower is the most famous castle keep in the world
It was designed by Gundulf of Rochester, a Norman bishop. Masons from Normandy brought stone, most of the actual labor was done by local Englishmen. It took 20 years to build. William I didn't live to see it completed; it was first used by his son, William II.
Structures within the Tower of London complex
The Tower of London encompasses more than the White Tower, which is the core of this fortress. The walls of the White Tower are up to 14-feet thick in places. It has three floors, each connected by a spiral staircase located in one of the four corner turrets. During the 12th and 13th centuries, when fortifications were extended beyond the city wall, the White Tower became the core of a series of concentric defenses enclosing an inner and an outer curtain. 
The inner curtain at the Tower of London has 13 towers surrounding the White Tower. Best known are Bloody Tower, Beauchamp Tower and Wakefield Tower. The outer curtain was surrounded by a moat, originally fed by the River Thames but drained since 1843. The wall outside the moat has openings for cannons; next to them, modern artillery pieces are fired ceremonially on state occasions. 

The curtain, a feature common to most medieval castles, was a set of walls that surrounded and protected the interior. Walls were often connected by a series of towers adding strength and providing better defense of the ground outside the castle.
As the most secure castle in England, the Tower guarded royal possessions and even the royal family in times of war and rebellion. For 500 years, monarchs used the Tower as a luxurious palace. Kings and queens imprisoned rivals and enemies within its walls. Stories of prisoners are still said to haunt the Tower.
Entry to Traitors gate from River Thames
The whole complex of buildings covers 18 acres. The only entrance from the land is at the Southwest corner, from the City. When the River Thames was still a major highway of London, a 13th-century watergate, Traitors’ Gate was in use. Prisoners were brought through it to the Tower, which was used as a state prison. A political prisoner conveyed through the gate awaited either a long period of incarceration or a usually public spectacle of execution.

The site became notorious as a site of torture, but records show that few people were tortured there; executions, however, were different and more common at the Tower of London. Prisoners were executed on Tower Green or, outside the castle, in public on Tower Hill, by means of beheading, firing squad or hanging. Initially not intended as a prison, the Tower of London housed those accused of treason or religious infractions. It witnessed 22 executions, the last in 1941. 
Princes Edward & Richard by John Everett Millais, 1878
In 1483, Princes Edward and Richard, 12 and 10, sons of the late Edward IV, were last seen in the tower before their disappearance and suspected murder by their uncle, Richard III, who claimed the throne. In 1674, two skeletons were unearthed. The bones were re-examined in 1933 and proved to be those of boys the same ages as the princes when they disappeared.
Thomas More, Guy Fawkes, Catherine Howard, Ann Bolyen were all executed
In 1535, writer and statesman Sir Thomas More was beheaded after refusing to recognize King Henry VIII as the head of the Church of England. A year later, Henry VIII ordered the beheading of his wife, Anne Boleyn and in 1542, he had his fifth wife, Catherine Howard, executed at the Tower of London. In 1554, Lady Jane Grey and her husband, Lord Guildford Dudley were beheaded on Tower Hill. Political prisoner Guy Fawkes was executed in 1606 after found guilty of guarding explosives and gunpowder in a 1605 plot to blow up Parliament,

German spies (11) were executed at the Tower of London during WW I when London underwent numerous attacks, only one bomb was dropped on the Tower and landed in the moat. The facility didn't fare as well during WW II suffering significant damage during multiple bombings, including the destruction of several buildings. It was later restored for public access.
Yeoman Warder who provided us with much historical background
Since 1485, security at the Tower of London complex has been maintained by a special order of guards called Yeomen Warders, originally part of Yeomen of the Guard, the monarch’s personal bodyguard. They are informally known as Beefeaters, a name allegedly based after a 17th century Italian nobleman commented they were given a large daily ration of beef. Recognized worldwide as symbols of the Tower of London, the Yeoman Warders were originally part of the Yeomen of the Guard, the monarch’s personal bodyguards who travelled with him. Henry VIII (1507-47) decreed that some would stay and guard the Tower permanently. Today, the group of over 30 men and women are all drawn from the British military and each must have at least 22 years of active service. 

Yeomen Warders provide free guided tours within the Tower of London and carry out ceremonial duties, which include the oldest military ritual, Ceremony of the Keys, the nightly gate locking at the Tower for over 700 years. Red state dress uniforms are worn for special occasions and special events, such as Gun Salutes and the firing of the huge cannon on the Wharf.
Fusiliers Museum was originally used to house officers
The armories that now occupy the White Tower, as well as a later 17th-century brick building alongside, house arms and armor from the early Middle Ages to modern times. Arms and armor were made, tested and stored here until the 1800s. The Fusiliers Museum is housed in a building originally built as officers' quarters. The building still houses the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers' Regimental Headquarters and the Officers' Mess, used for formal dinners and ceremonial occasions.

The Tower once controlled the supply of the nation’s money and produced England's coins for five centuries. All coins of the realm were made at the Tower Mint from the reign of Edward I until 1810. Initially handcrafted, the mint introduced modern coin-making techniques and eventually relocated to a purpose-built facility in the 1800s.
Top: Imperial State Crown (1937, Sovereign's Sceptre with Cross (1661), 
Bottom: St Edward's Crown (1661) Queen Elizabeth's Crown & Koh-i-Noor diamond (1937)
Kings and queens used the Tower to safeguard themselves, their valuables and their jewels. Today, the crown jewels comprising more than 100 objects and over 23,000 gemstones worth over $30 billion are among the most popular attractions. 
Line-up of people waiting to see the Crown Jewels
Housed in the Waterloo Barracks they include the platinum crown of the late Queen Mother (Elizabeth) set with the 106-carat Koh-i-Noor diamond in 1937, and the Imperial State Crown, worn by the monarch at the State Opening of Parliament. These jewels are kept under armed guard; no photographs are permitted. (The photos above are from the Historic Royal Palaces website.)
A flock of ravens are permanent Tower residents and are cared for by the Yeoman Warder or Ravenmaster. The highly intelligent birds have a flight feather trimmed to deter them from flying off. Free to roam within during daytime hours (as shown in the photo) and are caged overnight. 

According to legend, the tower and the monarchy will fall if ravens ever leave the fortress. The raven-keeping tradition dates to King Charles II (1660-1685), the first monarch to insist that the birds be protected. When the royal astronomer complained that ravens were leaving droppings on his telescope, King Charles moved the Royal Observatory to Greenwich.
Statues of animals once in the Tower of London complex and remains of the moat
For over 600 years, the Tower of London was home to an exotic collection of wild animals that had been received as royal gifts. In 1230, King Henry III had lions, elephants and a polar bear in his collection. In the mid-1830’s, the animals were relocated to a new home, now known as London Zoo, by the Duke of Wellington.

As protector of the Crown Jewels, home of the Yeomen Warders and its legendary guardians, the ravens, the Tower of London attracts over 3 million visitors annually. Designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1988, it is an exceptional example of a medieval structure, remarkably intact that retains its historical significance. When gates are locked and visitors have left, it embraces a thriving community within as home to the Yeomen Warders and their families, the Resident Governor and a garrison of soldiers. There is also a doctor, chaplain and, of course, a pub (after all this is the UK).

The Tower of London is owned by The Crown Estate, which belongs to His Majesty The King in ‘the right of the Crown’ by virtue of being the reigning monarch. It is not the private property of the crown, and therefore cannot be sold.

This is not a final post about our UK travels from late 2023. We experienced so many new-to-us adventures. I hope you will travel along as more highlights are shared in future posts. 

24 comments:

MadSnapper said...

18 acres and all those buildings are pretty amazing just looking at the outside and the map. I think one thing about history and the further back it goes, proves that we are no meaner now than they were back then. people say they want to go back in time to better times. this place makes me so happy i was not living during those times.

Rita said...

It is huge! And in amazing condition! Wow!
Creepy that people were executed there, of course. I had heard of the princes vanishing, too. Very interesting place to visit. I can see why it gets so many visitors every year. :)

Sandra said...

All the executions made me queasy, especially those boys. It is a massive place.

Bijoux said...

It’s much bigger than I imagined. Thanks for the history behind it. That must have been a magnificent trip!

Lois Evensen said...

What a fun post! I've been there, too, and enjoyed my visit to the Tower of London. You have many more images than I got while there before digital cameras. I was using a Canon A-1 film camera back then. Great pictures, but heavy camera, and generally fewer pictures since it was film. With digital we can shoot images to our heart's content, then delete those we don't like. Thank you so much for sharing!

DUTA said...

I've been there, of course, like most tourists in London.
However, towers, fortresses, walls, people disappearing between these walls - are not 'my cup of tea', and so I took only a few pictures.

Emma Springfield said...

For some reason I never thought of The Tower of London as being so large. I suppose the word tower threw me off. It is a beautiful building amid an amazing fortress.

Marcia said...

Dorothy, this brings back memories of our visit there in 2014 after we walked the Cotswolds for 7 days. The AirBnB we had looked out on the Tower and the Tower Bridge. It is quite an interesting place.

David M. Gascoigne, said...

Then there are those of us for whom three days in London is already too much.

photowannabe said...

Oh thank you so much for the informative tour of a place I have always wanted to visit but seems like I never will.
I agree with Sandra that people are just the same today as centuries ago. Those that have good hearts and those that let evil and greed rule.
It certainly is beautiful scenery in its own way.
Sue

Ginny Hartzler said...

Wow, what an awesome tour! Did you take all these photos? We watched a T.V.series about the tower on P.B.S. The Warders and their families live in the tower complex in their own very nice apartments. I have the book about the tower crows, but have not read it yet. You have written a wonderful history of it, with lovely photos as well.

David said...

Hi Beatrice, Thanks for the great photos and the history lesson too! We both enjoy history but we've never been to London other than to fly in and then drive north to York and Edinburgh. We've been to Scotland twice and Ireland once...on self-driving tours. We loved the entire experience... Keep these posts coming! Take Care, Big Daddy Dave

Linda G. said...

I’ve been there, many years ago. Thanks for the history lesson and the memories from the many pictures that you got.

Anvilcloud said...

You covered it extremely well. It is always hard to warp my head around The Tower as if it were one single tower.

Debby said...

This is the most fascinating place. So many stories. We walked there for literally hours.

My name is Erika. said...

Fun read Dorothy. The Tower of LOndon is a really interesting place, and a working castle too, even after all those years. You should check out Phillipa Langley's book about the Princes in the Tower. She's a renown archaeologist who believes that the bones found in the tower in the 1930's were not the princes. It's quite interesting. Have a super rest of the week. hugs-Erika

Jeanie said...

This is an excellent and comprehensive post on the Tower, Dorothy. (Have you seen the docs on PBS and Smithsonian? You'd enjoy them, especially after being there!). You did a terrific job on your research and photo selection.

Veronica Lee said...

Thank you for this captivating journey through the Tower of London, Dorothy!
Your photos beautifully capture the grandeur of the historic site.
It's incredible to think about the layers of history within those walls

baili said...

first to your last line dear Dorothy .may be many of us (excluding me ) will visit the Tower of London but i bet none can give such brief and detailed virtual tour with awesome details regarding everything about it :)
i mean WOW i so really really enjoyed the post ,first i was struck with tower placed on 18 acers but i found out it was large complex building full of wonders
14 feet thick walls ???wow sounds like one if the FINEST and Strongest building for land security .

the facts about disappeared family and executed ones are sad
but raven legend sounds intriguing .
thank you for wonderful post loved it .hope some day my son will visit it as well .
peace ,health and joy to both of you my friend!

gigi-hawaii said...

I just love London, having spent 2 weeks there in Nov. 1969. So long ago. I remember touring the Tower of London and seeing the chopping block in the courtyard, where Anne of Boleyn was supposedly executed. Awesome post!

Linda P said...

I've visited the site many times, but the most atmospheric tour was in an evening after a ceremonial banquet. The tour guide took us around holding a lantern. It was very memorable visit. I look forward to hearing more in future blog posts.

Linda said...

Very interesting. I’ve heard many stories about the tower and the executions. It doesn’t do a whole lot for your faith in humanity though.

Salty Pumpkin Studio said...

Fascinatging place. I'm glad y'all had a chance to tour the palace.
The alleged murder of the two princes could be solved if the king allows the DNA testing that his mother refused to grant.

Sallie (FullTime-Life) said...

I loved this ! I realized a childhood dream when we visited ithe Tower and grounds and museum during our time in London (too long ago now. ). After our visit, We went to the street around to the back of the tower buildings catch a bus and I snapped one of my favorite candid shots of all time …laundry hanging on a balcony from the building where those guards and their families live! It still strikes me to realize that they live a normal life amongst that ancient history …and then to think that , similarly, people lived there normal lives working there back when all those terrible events were taking place!