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  2. Traitors' Gate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traitors'_Gate

    Traitors' Gate, 2007 Traitors' Gate. The Traitors' Gate is an entrance through which many prisoners of the Tudors arrived at the Tower of London.The gate was built by Edward I to provide a water gate entrance to the Tower, part of St. Thomas' Tower, a section of the tower designed to provide additional accommodation for the royal family.

  3. A Dialogue of Comfort against Tribulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Dialogue_of_Comfort...

    A Dialogue of Comfort against Tribulation is a work that was written by St. Thomas More while imprisoned in the Tower of London in 1534. William Frederick Yeames, The meeting of Sir Thomas More with his daughter after his sentence of death, 1872

  4. Tower of London - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_of_London

    A recreation of Edward I's bedchamber in the river-side St Thomas's Tower above Traitors' Gate [138] The Tower of London has become established as one of the most popular tourist attractions in the country. It has been a tourist attraction since at least the Elizabethan period, when it was one of the sights of London that foreign visitors wrote ...

  5. Thomas More - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_More

    More's corpse, minus his head, was unceremoniously buried in an unmarked mass grave beneath the Royal Chapel of St. Peter Ad Vincula, within the walls of the Tower of London, as was the custom for traitors executed at Tower Hill. The chapel is accessible to Tower visitors.

  6. Church of St Peter ad Vincula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_St_Peter_ad_Vincula

    St Peter ad Vincula was the church of the extra-parochial area of Tower Within, part of the Liberties of the Tower of London. [15] On 16 December 1729 the church was added to the bills of mortality , a record of burials in London, but was excluded in 1730 because of a successful claim by the inhabitants of it being extra-parochial and outside ...

  7. Siege of the Tower of London (1460) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_the_Tower_of...

    The White Tower and part of the curtain wall, from the south bank of the Thames. Lord Scales was a committed supporter of the House of Lancaster, and also a veteran commander of the Hundred Years' War, used to ruthless methods. [12] As the Yorkists occupied London, Scales opened fire from the Tower indiscriminately into the surrounding streets.