Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Tower of London' has mentioned 'Parliament' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Henry III often held court at the Tower of London, and held parliament there on at least two occasions (1236 and 1261) when he felt that the barons were becoming dangerously unruly.
Political tensions between Charles I and Parliament in the second quarter of the 17th century led to an attempt by forces loyal to the King to secure the Tower and its valuable contents, including money and munitions.
In 1642, Charles I attempted to arrest five members of parliament.
When this failed he fled the city, and Parliament retaliated by removing Sir John Byron, the Lieutenant of the Tower.
The Trained Bands had switched sides, and now supported Parliament; together with the London citizenry, they blockaded the Tower.
Parliament replaced Byron with a man of their own choosing, Sir John Conyers.
By the time the English Civil War broke out in November 1642, the Tower of London was already in Parliament's control.