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
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.
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".
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.
[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.
[30] Between the Wakefield and Lanthorn Towers, the innermost ward's wall also serves as a curtain wall for the inner ward.
[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.
The inner ward's western curtain wall was rebuilt by Edward I.
[33] The Beauchamp Tower is one of 13 towers that stud the curtain wall.
[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.
[38] Between 1339 and 1341, a gatehouse was built into the curtain wall between Bell and Salt Towers.
The three rectangular towers along the east wall 15 metres (49xc2xa0ft) apart were dismantled in 1843.
[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.
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.
The Tower of London's outer curtain wall, with the curtain wall of the inner ward just visible behind.
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.
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.
[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.
A new moat was created in front of the new curtain wall.
The western part of Henry III's curtain wall was rebuilt, with Beauchamp Tower replacing the castle's old gatehouse.
They hacked a hole in his cell wall and Mortimer escaped to a waiting boat.
[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.