Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Tower of London' has mentioned 'Wall' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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As most of the Tower's windows were enlarged in the 18th century, only two original xe2x80x93 albeit restored xe2x80x93 examples remain, in the south wall at the gallery level. | WIKI |
There is a recess in the north wall of the crypt; according to Geoffrey Parnell, Keeper of the Tower History at the Royal Armouries, "the windowless form and restricted access, suggest that it was designed as a strong-room for safekeeping of royal treasures and important documents". | WIKI |
The upper floor contained a grand hall in the west and residential chamber in the eastxc2xa0xe2x80x93 both originally open to the roof and surrounded by a gallery built into the wallxc2xa0xe2x80x93 and St John's Chapel in the south-east. | WIKI |
[21] Construction of Wakefield and Lanthorn Towers xe2x80x93 located at the corners of the innermost ward's wall along the river xe2x80x93 began around 1220. | WIKI |
[30] Between the Wakefield and Lanthorn Towers, the innermost ward's wall also serves as a curtain wall for the inner ward. | WIKI |
[31] The main entrance to the inner ward would have been through a gatehouse, most likely in the west wall on the site of what is now Beauchamp Tower. | WIKI |
The inner ward's western curtain wall was rebuilt by Edward I. | WIKI |
[33] The Beauchamp Tower is one of 13 towers that stud the curtain wall. | WIKI |
[36] Immediately west of Wakefield Tower, the Bloody Tower was built at the same time as the inner ward's curtain wall, and as a water-gate provided access to the castle from the River Thames. | WIKI |
[38] Between 1339 and 1341, a gatehouse was built into the curtain wall between Bell and Salt Towers. | WIKI |
The three rectangular towers along the east wall 15 metres (49xc2xa0ft) apart were dismantled in 1843. | WIKI |
[45] With the addition of a new curtain wall, the old main entrance to the Tower of London was obscured and made redundant; a new entrance was created in the southwest corner of the external wall circuit. | WIKI |
In this wall, he built St Thomas's Tower between 1275 and 1279; later known as Traitors' Gate, it replaced the Bloody Tower as the castle's water-gate. | WIKI |
The Tower of London's outer curtain wall, with the curtain wall of the inner ward just visible behind. | WIKI |
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that in 1097 King William II ordered a wall to be built around the Tower of London; it was probably built from stone and likely replaced the timber palisade that arced around the north and west sides of the castle, between the Roman wall and the Thames. | WIKI |
New creations included a new defensive perimeter, studded with towers, while on the west, north, and east sides, where the wall was not defended by the river, a defensive ditch was dug. | WIKI |
[83] At the Tower of London, Edward filled in the moat dug by Henry III and built a new curtain wall along its line, creating a new enclosure. | WIKI |
A new moat was created in front of the new curtain wall. | WIKI |
The western part of Henry III's curtain wall was rebuilt, with Beauchamp Tower replacing the castle's old gatehouse. | WIKI |
They hacked a hole in his cell wall and Mortimer escaped to a waiting boat. | WIKI |
[125] For the most part, the 18th-century work on the defences was spasmodic and piecemeal, although a new gateway in the southern curtain wall permitting access from the wharf to the outer ward was added in 1774. | WIKI |