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+Project Gutenberg's Authorised Guide to the Tower of London, by W. J. Loftie
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Authorised Guide to the Tower of London
+
+Author: W. J. Loftie
+
+Release Date: September 11, 2004 [EBook #13436]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWER OF LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Audrey Longhurst, David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORISED GUIDE TO THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+
+
+BY W.J. LOFTIE, B.A., F.S.A.
+
+REVISED EDITION.
+
+WITH TWELVE VIEWS AND TWO PLANS, AND A DESCRIPTION OF THE ARMOURY,
+BY THE VISCOUNT DILLON, P.S.A.
+
+(_Curator of the Tower Armouries._)
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+LONDON:
+
+PRINTED FOR HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE,
+BY HARRISON AND SONS, ST. MARTIN'S LANE,
+PRINTERS IN ORDINARY TO HIS MAJESTY.
+_AND SOLD AT THE TOWER_.
+
+1904
+
+_Reprinted_ 1907.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRICE ONE PENNY.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: PLAN OF THE TOWER.]
+
+
+
+
+THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL SKETCH.
+
+The Tower of London was founded in 1078, by William the Conqueror, for
+the purpose of protecting and controlling the city. To make room for his
+chief buildings he removed two bastions of the old wall of London, and
+encroached slightly upon the civic boundaries. Part therefore of the
+Tower is in London, and part in Middlesex, but it forms, with its
+surrounding fortifications, a precinct in itself which belongs neither
+to the city nor the county. It covers an area of 18 acres within the
+Garden rails.
+
+The present buildings are partly of the Norman period; but architecture
+of almost all the styles which have flourished in England may be found
+within the walls. It is well to remember that though the Tower is no
+longer a place of great military strength it has in time past been a
+fortress, a palace, and a prison, and to view it rightly we must regard
+it in this threefold aspect.
+
+It was first built as a fortress, and has a central Keep, called the
+"White Tower." The Inner Ward is defended by a wall, flanked by thirteen
+towers, the entrance to it being on the south side under the Bloody
+Tower. The Outer Ward is defended by a second wall, flanked by six
+towers on the river face (_see_ Pl. IX, X and XI), and by three
+semicircular bastions on the north face. A Ditch or "Moat," now dry,
+encircles the whole, crossed at the south-western angle by a stone
+bridge, leading to the "Byward Tower" from the "Middle Tower," a gateway
+which had formerly an outwork, called the "Lion Tower."
+
+The Tower was occupied as a palace by all our Kings and Queens down to
+Charles II. It was the custom for each monarch to lodge in the Tower
+before his coronation, and to ride in procession to Westminster through
+the city. The Palace buildings stood eastward of the "Bloody Tower."
+
+The security of the walls made it convenient as a State prison, the
+first known prisoner being Ralf Flambard, Bishop of Durham, who had been
+active under William Rufus in pushing on the buildings. From that time
+the Tower was seldom without some captive, English or foreign, of rank
+and importance.
+
+In the Tudor period the "Green" within the Tower was used on very rare
+occasions for executions.[1] Condemned prisoners were usually beheaded
+on
+
+[Footnote 1: See page 32.]
+
+_Tower Hill_.
+
+Emerging from the Mark Lane railway station, the visitor obtains an
+excellent view of the great fortress. Within the railed space of Trinity
+Square, the first permanent scaffold on Tower Hill was set up in the
+reign of Edward III, but the first execution recorded here was that of
+Sir Simon Burley in 1388. Here also were beheaded, among others, Dudley,
+the minister of Henry VII (1510), his son the Duke of Northumberland
+(1553), his grandson, Lord Guildford Dudley (1554), Cromwell, Earl of
+Essex (1540), More and Fisher (1535), Surrey (1547), and his son,
+Norfolk (1572), Strafford (1641), and Archbishop Laud (1645), and the
+Scotch lords in 1716, 1746, and 1747, the last being Simon, Lord Lovat.
+
+The Tower moat is immediately before us. It is drained and used as a
+parade ground. Beyond it, as we approach the entrance, we have a good
+view of the fortifications. On the extreme left are the Brass Mount and
+North Bastions. In the middle is Legge's Mount. To the right is the
+entrance gateway. The highest building behind is the White Tower, easily
+distinguished by its four turrets. In front of it are the Devereux,
+Beauchamp, and Bell Towers, the residences of the Lieutenant of the
+Tower and of the Yeoman Gaoler being in the gabled and red tiled houses
+between the last two. From one of these windows Lady Jane Grey saw her
+husband's headless body brought in from Tower Hill, by the route we now
+traverse; and the leads are still called Queen Elizabeth's Walk, as she
+used them during her captivity in 1554.
+
+
+_The Lion Tower_
+
+stood where the Ticket Office and Refreshment Room are now. Here the
+visitor obtains a pass which admits him to see the Regalia, or Crown
+Jewels, and another for the Armoury. In the Middle Ages and down to 1834
+the Royal Menagerie was lodged in a number of small buildings near the
+Lion Tower, whence its name was derived and the saying arose, "seeing
+the lions," for a visit to the Tower. Where the wooden gate now stands,
+there was a small work called the Conning Gate. It marked the boundaries
+of Middlesex and the Tower Precinct. Here prisoners were handed over to
+the Sheriff.
+
+
+_The Middle Tower_ (Pl. I)
+
+was originally built by Henry III, but has been entirely refaced.
+Through its archway we reach the stone bridge, which had formerly in the
+centre a drawbridge of wood. We next reach
+
+
+_The Byward Tower_ (Pl. II),
+
+the great Gatehouse of the Outer Ward. It is in part the work of Henry
+III, and in part that of Richard II. Observe the vaulting and the dark
+recesses on the southern side. We pass on the left
+
+
+_The Bell Tower_ (Pl. IX),
+
+which may safely be attributed to the reign of King John. Here Fisher,
+Bishop of Rochester, was imprisoned by Henry VIII, and the Princess
+Elizabeth by her sister, Queen Mary. The "Curtain Wall," of great
+antiquity, is pierced by the windows of the Lieutenant's Lodgings, now
+called "The King's House," and one of these windows lights the Council
+Chamber, where Guy Fawkes and his fellow conspirators were tried and
+condemned, 1605.
+
+
+_The Traitors' Gate_ (Pl. IV),
+
+with St. Thomas's Tower, is now on our right. Observe the masonry which
+supports the wide span of the arch. This gate, when the Thames was more
+of a highway than it is at present, was often used as an entrance to the
+Tower. St. Thomas' Tower was built by Henry III, and contains a small
+chapel or oratory dedicated to St. Thomas of Canterbury. In later times
+it was found convenient as a landing place for prisoners who had been
+tried at Westminster; and here successively Edward Duke of Buckingham
+(1521), Sir Thomas More, Queen Anne Boleyn, Cromwell Earl of Essex,
+Queen Katharine Howard (1542) Seymour Duke of Somerset (1551), Lady Jane
+Grey, the Princess (afterwards Queen) Elizabeth, Devereux Earl of Essex
+(1601), and James Duke of Monmouth, passed under the arch on their way
+to a prison or the scaffold. Opposite is
+
+
+_The Bloody Tower_ (Pl. VIII),
+
+which is believed to derive its name from the suicide in it of Henry
+Percy, eighth Earl of Northumberland, in 1585. Under this Tower we enter
+the Inner Ward. It dates from the reigns of Edward III and Richard II,
+and was called by its present name as early as 1597, being popularly
+believed to be the scene of the murder of Edward V and his brother the
+Duke of York, as well as of Henry VI. It was originally known as the
+Garden Tower, as its upper storey opens on that part of the parade
+ground which was formerly the Constable's Garden. Here Sir Walter
+Raleigh was allowed to walk during his long imprisonment, and could
+sometimes converse over the wall with the passers-by. Observe the
+grooves for working the massive portcullis, which was raised by chains
+and a windlass. These still exist on the upper floor. Immediately
+adjoining the gateway on the east is the
+
+
+_Wakefield Tower_ (Pl. III).
+
+Its lower storey is the oldest building next to the Keep; it was, with
+the Lanthorn (rebuilt on the old foundation in 1884-5) and Cold Harbour
+Towers, part of the original Norman plan. The upper storey was rebuilt
+by Henry III, who made it the entrance to his palace on the east. The
+Great Hall, memorable as the scene of Anne Boleyn's trial, adjoined it,
+but was pulled down during the Commonwealth. In 1360 the records of the
+kingdom, which had previously been kept in the White Tower, were removed
+here, and this is called in ancient surveys sometimes the Record, and
+sometimes the Hall Tower. The present name is said to be derived from
+the imprisonment of Yorkists after the Lancastrian victory at Wakefield
+in 1460. It is used now for the safe keeping and exhibition of
+
+
+_The Crown Jewels_.
+
+The visitor who has obtained a ticket passes up a short stair and finds
+himself in a well-lighted circular apartment in the Wakefield Tower.
+The deep window recess opposite the door was fitted up as a small chapel,
+with Aumbry, Piscina, and Sedilia. Tradition says that Henry VI used it
+for his devotions when a prisoner in the Tower, and was here murdered.
+In the centre, in a large double case, are arranged the splendid objects
+which form the English Regalia. The following are the most remarkable:--
+
+The King's Crown. It occupies the highest place in the case. It was
+constructed in 1838 for her late Majesty's coronation, the principal
+jewels being taken from older crowns and the royal collection. Among
+them, observe the large ruby given to the Black Prince in Spain in 1367.
+Henry V wore it in his helmet at Agincourt. With seventy-five large
+brilliants it forms a Maltese cross on the front of the diadem.
+Immediately below it is a splendid sapphire, purchased by George IV.
+Seven other sapphires and eight emeralds, all of large size, with many
+hundred diamonds, decorate the band and arches, and the cross on the
+summit is formed of a rose cut sapphire and four very fine brilliants.
+The whole contains 2818 diamonds, 297 pearls, and many other jewels, and
+weighs thirty-nine ounces and five pennyweights. The Crown was enlarged
+for His Majesty Edward VII.
+
+The Crown made for the coronation of Mary of Modena, the second wife of
+James II. This is probably one of the oldest of the crowns, and contains
+some fine jewels.
+
+The Crown made for Queen Mary II, for her coronation with William III.
+
+St. Edward's Crown, which appears to be the model by which all the later
+crowns have been fashioned. It was made for the coronation of Charles
+II.
+
+The Prince of Wales's coronet, with a single arch.
+
+The Orb, of gold, with a cross and bands of jewels.
+
+St. Edward's Staff, a sceptre of gold, 4 feet 7 inches in length,
+surmounted by an orb which is supposed to contain a fragment of the true
+cross.
+
+The Royal Sceptre.
+
+The Sceptre of Equity, surmounted by a dove.
+
+Small sceptres, one of ivory.
+
+Besides these magnificent regal emblems, which chiefly date from the
+Restoration, when the places of the ancient objects, destroyed during
+the Commonwealth, were supplied as nearly as possible, observe, also--
+
+The Anointing Spoon, the sole relic of the ancient regalia, of silver
+gilt.
+
+The Eagle, for the anointing oil.
+
+The Golden Salt-cellar, a model of the White Tower.
+
+The Baptismal Font, used at the christening of the Sovereign's children,
+of silver, double gilt.
+
+The Sacramental Plate used at the coronation.
+
+A large silver-gilt wine-fountain, of good workmanship, presented to
+Charles II by the Corporation of Plymouth.
+
+In a case in the large recess, _Curtana_, the Sword of Mercy,
+pointless, the blade 40 inches long.
+
+Two Swords of Justice, Ecclesiastical and Civil.
+
+Also the State Sword offered at the coronation of His Majesty Edward
+VII, with richly jewelled hilt and scabbard.
+
+In the central case is a model of the Koh-i-noor in its original
+setting.
+
+In the cases in the recesses are also exhibited the insignia of the
+British and Indian orders of Knighthood, their collars, stars, and
+badges, and the Victoria Cross.
+
+Leaving the Wakefield Tower, we descend the slope and turn to the left
+near the site of what was the Cold Harbour Tower, a name the exact
+meaning of which is unknown. The original Jewel House was behind it to
+the east, forming with the south side of the White Tower, and portions
+of the palace, a small courtyard, in which some remains of the ancient
+buildings may still be traced. On a raised platform is the gun-carriage
+and limber on which the body of Her Majesty the late Queen Victoria
+was conveyed on the occasion of her funeral, 2nd February, 1901, from
+Windsor Railway Station to St. George's Chapel. This was placed here by
+order of the Houses of Parliament. We now reach a doorway made in the
+south wall of the
+
+
+_White Tower_ (Pl. VII),
+
+or Keep, the oldest part of the whole fortress.
+
+[Illustration: WHITE TOWER. Plan of Middle Floor.]
+
+The Conqueror, before he entered London, formed a camp, eastward of
+the city, and probably on part of the ground now occupied by the Tower.
+Immediately after his coronation he commenced the works here. At first,
+no doubt, they consisted of a ditch and palisade, and were formed partly
+on the lower bastions of the old City Wall, first built by the Romans,
+and rebuilt in 885 by King Alfred. The work of building the Keep was
+entrusted to Gundulf, a monk of Bec, in Normandy, who was shortly
+afterwards made Bishop of Rochester, and who probably commenced
+operations in 1078. In 1097, under William Rufus, the works were still
+going on and the inner ward was enclosed. A great storm in 1091 damaged
+the outworks. Ralf Flambard, Bishop of Durham, being imprisoned in the
+Tower by Henry I, contrived to escape, 1101. During the wars between
+Stephen and Matilda, the Earl of Essex was Constable of the Tower, and
+obtained a grant even of the City of London from the Empress. When he
+fell into Stephen's hands the Tower formed his ransom, and the citizens
+regained their ancient liberty. When Richard I was absent on the
+Crusade, his regent, Longchamp, resided in the Tower, of which he
+greatly enlarged the precincts by trespasses on the land of the city and
+of St. Katharine's Hospital. He surrendered the Tower to the citizens,
+led by John, in 1191. The church of St. Peter was in existence before
+1210, and the whole Tower was held in pledge for the completion of Magna
+Charta in 1215 and 1216. In 1240 Henry III had the chapel of St. John
+decorated with painting and stained glass, and the royal apartments in
+the Keep were whitewashed, as well as the whole exterior. In the reign
+of Edward III it begins to assume its modern name, as "La Blanche Tour."
+During the wars with France many illustrious prisoners were lodged here,
+as David, King of Scots; John, King of France; Charles of Blois, and
+John de Vienne, governor of Calais, and his twelve brave burgesses. In
+the Tower Richard II signed his abdication, 1399. The Duke of Orleans,
+taken at Agincourt, was lodged by Henry V in the White Tower. From that
+time the Beauchamp Tower was more used as a prison, but it is probable
+that some of the Kentish rebels, taken with Wyatt in 1554, slept in the
+recesses of the crypt of the Chapel, long known as Queen Elizabeth's
+Armoury. In 1663, and later years down to 1709, structural repairs
+were carried out under the superintendence of Sir Christopher Wren,
+who replaced the Norman window openings with others of a classical
+character. Remains of four old windows are visible on the river side.
+A few years ago some disfiguring annexes and sheds were removed, as
+well as an external staircase of wood, which led up from the old Horse
+Armoury and entered the crypt by a window.
+
+The White Tower is somewhat irregular in plan, for though it looks so
+square from the river its four sides are all of different lengths, and
+three of its corners are not right angles. The side towards which we
+approach is 107 feet from north to south. The south side measures
+118 feet. It has four turrets at the corners, three of them square,
+the fourth, that on the north-east, being circular. From floor to
+battlements it is 90 feet in height. The original entrance was probably
+on the south side, and high above the ground, being reached as usual in
+Norman castles by an external stair which could be easily removed in
+time of danger. Another or the same entrance led from an upper storey
+of the palace. The interior is of the plainest and sternest character.
+Every consideration is postponed to that of obtaining the greatest
+strength and security. The outer walls vary in thickness from 15 feet
+in the lower to 11 in the upper storey. The whole building is crossed
+by one wall, which rises from base to summit and divides it into a
+large western and a smaller eastern portion. The eastern part is further
+subdivided by a wall which cuts off St. John's Chapel, its crypt, and
+its subcrypt, each roof of which is massively vaulted. There is no
+vaulting but a wooden floor between the storeys of the other part.
+There are several comparatively modern entrances.
+
+A short external stair leads to a staircase in the thickness of the wall
+on the south side, by which we approach the Chapel. A brass plate on the
+right refers to some children's bones found in the reign of Charles II.
+They were identified, somewhat conjecturally, with the remains of Edward
+V and his brother who disappeared so mysteriously at the accession of
+Richard III, and were removed to Westminster Abbey in 1678. Ascending
+the stair we come to the passage which led from the palace to
+
+
+_The Chapel of St. John_ (Pl. VIII).
+
+The chapel is the largest and most complete now remaining in any Norman
+castle, and must have seen the devotions of William the Conqueror and
+his family. It is 55 feet 6 inches long by 31 feet wide, and 32 feet
+high, and is vaulted with a plain arch. There are four massive columns
+on either side and four in the apse. The south aisle, as we have seen,
+communicated with the palace, and an upper aisle, or gallery, similarly
+opened into the
+
+_State Apartments_
+
+of the White Tower, which we reach by a circuitous route through a
+passage round the walls, only wide enough for one person at a time, and
+a circular, or newel, stair in the north-east turret, gaining at every
+turn glimpses of the extensive stores of small arms. The second floor
+is divided into two large apartments, not reckoning the chapel; in the
+eastern wall of the smaller or Banqueting Chamber, is a fire-place, the
+only one till recently discovered in any Norman Keep. A second and third
+have of late years been found in the floor below, but the whole building
+was designed for security, not for comfort and in spite of the use of
+wooden partitions and tapestry must have been miserable as a place of
+residence. On leaving St. John's Chapel we enter
+
+
+_The Armoury_.
+
+In connection with the Armouries, it should be noted that the present
+collection of arms and armour had its origin in that formed at Greenwich
+by King Henry VIII, who received many presents of this nature from the
+Emperor Maximilian and others. He also obtained from the Emperor several
+skilled armourers, who worked in his pay and wore his livery. English
+iron in former days was so inferior, or the art of working it was so
+little known, that even as far back as the days of Richard II German
+and Italian armourers were the chief workmen in Europe. It should be
+remembered that the earlier kind of armour chiefly consisted of quilted
+garments, further fortified by small pieces of leather, horn, or metal.
+So far from the invention of gunpowder having driven out armour, if we
+may credit the story of the earliest employment of that explosive, it
+was at a date when plate armour was hardly in use, certainly not in
+large pieces. What actually did cause the disuse of armour was the
+change in ideas as to the movement of troops and the large quantity of
+armour which was made in the sixteenth century, and consequently the
+inferior make. In England the disuse of armour seems to have begun
+earlier than on the Continent, but at no time were the ordinary soldiers
+covered with metal as seen in Armouries and other places. The weight,
+and what was more important, the cost, prevented such a thing. It was
+only the rich who could afford to pay for and had horses to carry
+armour, who wore much of what we see now. Again, armour for war was
+much lighter and less complete than that used for the tilt yard, where
+protection to the wearer was more considered than his ability to hurt
+his opponent. The greater substance of such armour and its frequent
+enrichment with engraving and gilding no doubt led to the preservation
+of this class of defence. Chain mail suffered extremely by rust and
+neglect, and even plate armour was subject to the same deterioration.
+It is consequently not to be wondered at that little or no armour of a
+date previous to the fifteenth century is to be seen in this collection.
+On Henry VIII's death the first inventory of the Royal collection was
+made, and this includes the armour and arms at Greenwich, and arms and
+artillery at the Tower of London which, from the time of Henry VIII, was
+one of the sights for foreigners of distinction. In the troubles of the
+Civil War the arms were drawn out, and there is no doubt much, both of
+arms and armour, was used and lost. The Protector took one suit, and it
+was not till 1660 that the armour, which had meanwhile been brought to
+London, was collected, and, with the weapons still in the store, were
+formed into a kind of museum. It is to that period that may be traced
+most of the grotesque stories associated with the collection. At various
+subsequent periods additions were made to the collection, and it was
+arranged in such manner as suited the knowledge of the day. Series of
+figures of kings of England and famous persons were made and added to or
+changed on the death of the sovereign. In later times the whole has been
+arranged by Sir Samuel Meyrick. Mr. Hewitt, and Mr. Planché, and in 1859
+Mr. Hewitt drew up the first catalogue of the contents.
+
+The mounted figures from 1826 till 1883 stood in a long gallery
+adjoining the south side of the Tower, but at the latter date this was
+pulled down, and the figures removed to the top floor. Within the last
+few years the floor below has been used for the later arms, but the
+lighting of the rooms and their shape, with various other causes,
+prevent any strictly chronological arrangements of the collection,
+many objects of which also belong to long periods of time.
+
+The arms and armour are now placed on the two upper floors of the White
+Tower, the earlier weapons and all the armour, being on the top floor,
+while the later weapons and the Indian arms and armour, with various
+personal relics, are placed on what is the third stage or second floor.
+To this the visitor ascends by a circular staircase in the south front
+of the Tower. At the foot observe a brass plate recording the finding in
+1674 of the supposed remains of the "Princes in the Tower," Edward V and
+his brother Richard Duke of York. The visitor then enters the Chapel of
+St. John, and on leaving passes into the smaller of the two rooms on
+this floor.
+
+At the end of the room is a Persian horse armour of brass scales
+connected by chain mail. Near this is the quilted armour of the Burmese
+General Maha Bundoola, killed in 1824. At the other end of the room is a
+large bell from Burmah, presented by the late General Sir William Gomme,
+G.C.B., and near it are two figures with Japanese armour, one of them
+presented to Charles II when prince by the Mogul. It is interesting as
+being one of the earliest examples of Eastern armour which has an
+authentic record of its presence in this country, and it also exhibits
+the persistence in early forms so common in the East. The cases on
+either hand contain weapons, helmets, and armour from most parts of our
+Indian Empire, as well as weapons from Cabul, Persia, Africa, America,
+and the South Seas. Some of these were presented by the Honourable East
+India Company, some were acquired by purchase after the Great Exhibition
+of 1851, and others have been added at various times. In the centre of
+the room are models showing the Tower buildings in the years 1842 and
+1866.
+
+The Large Room is now entered, and on the left is a case containing
+firearms, hand grenades, and a series of the _rifled_ arms in use
+in the British Army since 1801. These include the two Baker rifles of
+1801 and 1807; the Brunswick rifle, 1836; the Minie rifle, 1851; the
+Enfield rifle musket, 1855; the Snider, 1865; the Martini-Henry, 1871;
+and the Lee-Metford magazine rifle. On the right, between two grotesque
+figures, called Gin and Beer, from the entrance to the Buttery of the
+old Palace of Greenwich, is a case containing executioners' swords
+(foreign), thumb-screws, the Scavenger's Daughter for confining the
+neck, hands, and feet, bilboes for ship use, and thumb-screws. Observe
+also the so-called "Collar taken from the Spanish Armada," which however
+was here in 1547, and has been in later times filled with lead to make
+it more terrible. It was only a collar for detention of ordinary
+prisoners. A conjectural model of the rack is also shown, but the only
+pictorial authority for this instrument (at no time a legal punishment)
+is a woodcut in Foxe's Martyrs, the illustrations for which were drawn
+from German sources.
+
+On the left hand are cases of European firearms of the first half of
+the present century, and two cannon made for the Duke of Gloucester,
+the son of Queen Anne. In the S.E. corner, on a platform, are several
+early cannon, including one, and part of another, from the wreck of
+the _Mary Rose_, sunk in action with the French off Spithead in 1545.
+These display the early mode of construction of such weapons, namely;
+bars of iron longitudinally welded together and encircled by hoops of
+the same metal. On the window side in the recesses are wall pieces,
+which belonged to the Honourable East India Company. The figure of Queen
+Elizabeth is supposed to represent her as on her way to St. Paul's
+Cathedral after the destruction of the Spanish Armada. Near the lift are
+partizans carried by the Yeomen of the Guard, and round the pillars are
+the sergeants' halberds used in the Army till about 1830. Observe the
+kettledrums captured at the battle of Blenheim, 1704.
+
+On the left hand observe the beheading axe, which has been here since
+1687, also the block on which Lord Lovat, in 1747, lost his head at one
+stroke for the share he took in the attempt of the Pretender in 1745.
+
+Beyond this, against the wall, is a model by John Bell of a monument for
+the Great Duke of Wellington. It was presented by the late Sir Daniel
+Lysons, Constable of the Tower, 1890-1898. Still on the left hand, in a
+glass case, is the soldier's cloak on which General Wolfe expired in the
+moment of victory, at Quebec, 1759.
+
+Beyond, in another case, is the uniform worn as Constable of the Tower
+by the Great Duke of Wellington from 1826 until his death, in 1852.
+
+Near this is a portion of the wooden pump of the _Mary Rose_, sunk
+in action off the Isle of Wight in 1545.
+
+In a case at the end of the room is a mass of fused gun flints, a relic
+of the fire which in 1841 destroyed the Great Store in the Tower and
+many thousand stand of arms, cannon, &c.
+
+The staircase in the S.W. corner is now ascended leading to the great
+upper chamber, generally known as the Council Chamber, 95 feet by 40
+feet, and, like the smaller room, 21 feet high. Round this top floor
+runs a passage cut in the thickness of the walls, with numerous openings
+inwards opposite the windows, and widening somewhat when forming as
+it does the triforium of St. John's Chapel. At the entrance are cases
+containing velvet-covered brigandines and canvas-covered jacks, garments
+which were much used in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, as giving
+protection by means of numerous small plates of metal disposed between
+the thicknesses of the material covering and lining them, and also great
+flexibility. In the cases on the right hand are specimens of chain mail
+in form of hoods, coats, sleeves, &c, mostly, if not all, of Eastern
+origin. Observe also some bronze swords and other very early weapons.
+
+Round the walls of the two rooms are arranged the various staff weapons
+used in England and the continent. In the first enclosure on the left
+are cases in which are ancient bronze tools, weapons, and ornaments from
+various localities, stone implements and weapons, and a suit of bronze
+armour from Cumæ, an ancient Greek settlement near Naples. In the centre
+of the enclosure are grouped many varieties of staff weapons of the
+fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries. Among them are boar
+spears for the chase and for war, halberds, partizans, bills, glaives,
+holy water sprinkles (a staff with a ball with spikes at its extremity),
+and the 18 foot pikes of the Civil War period.
+
+The first case on the left contains a fine archer's salade with its
+original lining, from the de Cosson collection. A Venetian salade, with
+the stamp of the maker of the Missaglia family, a heavy salade for
+jousting, a combed morion and the tilting helmet of Sir Henry Lee, K.G.,
+Master of the Armouries to Queen Elizabeth and James I. In the lower
+case are finely engraved and parcel gilt chamfrons for horses' heads, a
+gilt vamplate for the tilting lance belonging to Lord Chancellor Hatton,
+an officer's gorget of the time of Queen Anne, and various pieces of
+rich armour.
+
+In the window recess behind are shields and horns. In the next enclosure
+are three foot figures of the end of the fifteenth century and
+commencement of the sixteenth century; the first holds a long-handled
+axe as used for encounters on foot in _champ clos_. The second
+holds a two-handled sword. The third suit is enriched with engraving,
+and was formerly parcel gilt, but the helmet does not belong to the
+suit.
+
+In the centre of the room is an equestrian figure (III), the man wearing
+a fine early sixteenth-century suit of armour, bearing the Nuremberg
+stamp, and the horse protected by a barb richly repoussé, engraved, and
+formerly silvered. The designs on this display the Burgundian cross
+ragulé and the flint and steel. The steel or briquet is to be seen also
+in the hinges and in the metal coverings for the reins. It will be
+remembered that this design forms the _motif_ of the collar of the
+Golden Fleece.
+
+The next equestrian figure (IV) shows the fluted, or as it was called
+crested, armour, of about 1500. The horse armour is also fluted. On the
+right, in the centre of the room, are two armours which belonged to
+Henry VIII. Of these the first (XXVIII) is that formerly described as
+"rough from the hammer," though it has been milled or _glazed_ and
+no hammer marks are visible. It is a complete suit for fighting on
+foot in the lists, and comfort and ability to move about, have been
+sacrificed to perfect protection. The suit weighs about 93 lbs., and
+is composed of no less than 235 separate pieces of metal. Some details
+of construction point to a Spanish influence in the style. The second
+figure (XXIX), which wants the leg armour, is of the kind known as a
+tonlet, and has a skirt of horizontal lames engraved. The helmet bears
+the well-known stamp of the Missaglia family of armourers, and is very
+curious and massive. This armour is also for fighting on foot in
+_champ clos_ or the lists.
+
+The next suit (VI) on the left is one of Henry VIII, and has been parcel
+gilt; the weight of the man's armour is 81 lbs. The two foot figures are
+those of a horseman and an officer of foot, both of Henry's time. The
+first bears on it Nuremberg marks; the second has an engraving of the
+Crucifixion on the left breast. The next equestrian figure (VII), also
+of Henry VIII, much resembles the last, and has at its feet extra pieces
+for the tilt yard. Other extra pieces which might be worn with these two
+suits are in the Royal Armoury at Windsor Castle.
+
+The suit (V) on the equestrian figure in the middle of the room is
+one of the finest in existence. It was made by Conrad Seusenhofer,
+one of a family of Augsburg armourers, and given in 1514 to Henry VIII
+by the Emperor Maximilian. The man's armour is engraved with roses,
+pomegranates, portcullises, and other badges of Henry VIII and his
+first queen Katharine of Arragon, and has on the metal skirt which
+imitates the cloth _bases_ of the time the letters H and K. The horse
+armour, probably made afterwards in England by one of Henry's German
+armourers, is also covered with engraving, and has panels on which are
+depicted scenes from the life and death of St. George and St. Barbara,
+both military saints. The whole armour was formerly washed with silver,
+of which some traces still remain.
+
+In the enclosure on the left is a mounted figure (XI) of about 1550,
+and in front are a pistol shield, one of 80 made for Henry VIII, and
+a helmet with grotesque mask formerly attributed to Will Somers, the
+king's jester, but since identified as a present from the Emperor
+Maximilian. In the next cases are portions of armour of Henry VIII; also
+of a puffed and engraved suit of the same time, and of a richly worked
+russet and gilt suit of George Earl of Cumberland, who in Elizabeth's
+time fitted out at his own cost eleven expeditions against Spain. In the
+archway are some combined weapons having gun barrels in the staff and
+pole-axe heads; also the three-barrelled weapon formerly called Henry
+VIII's walking staff. In the corner of the room are an old German
+tilting saddle, which protected the legs of the rider, who stood up in
+his stirrups, a large tilting lance shown as far back as the days of
+Elizabeth as that of Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. At the end of the
+room are five suits of the second third of the sixteenth century. The
+centre one, which is damascened, has in front of it an extra gorget, and
+a placcate to strengthen the breast. The next figure (XXX) is a large
+suit of armour 6 feet 10-1/2 inches in height of the time of Henry VIII,
+though formerly incorrectly called that of John of Gaunt, of whom, of
+course, no armour exists. This suit weighs about 66 lbs.
+
+Descending the room in the first enclosure is the armour (IX) of the
+Earl of Worcester, who died 1589. This suit is very massive, the breast
+and back plates together weighing 40 lbs. 3 oz. In the same enclosure
+are two figures made up of Maximilian armour, and a bowman and a
+musketeer of the Earl of Worcester's time. In the archways will be seen
+early forms of guns and pistols of various types and swords and other
+weapons.
+
+The next mounted figure (VIII) (formerly called Sir Henry Lee) is of the
+middle of the sixteenth century, and the two foot figures are made up of
+early sixteenth-century armour.
+
+At the side is a cuir bouilli crupper as worn by the English heavy
+cavalry in the sixteenth century.
+
+The next enclosure contains an equestrian figure (X) of Robert Dudley
+Earl of Leicester, the favourite of Elizabeth. This fine suit bears all
+over it the badge of the Ragged Staff, and is engraved with the badges
+and collars of the Garter and of the Order of St. Michael of France. The
+suit was made between 1566 and 1588, and is of very great interest as
+one of the very few known which also possesses the extra pieces for the
+tilt yard, viz.: the Grandguard and the Passguard, ornamented like the
+suit, which with them weighs about 83-1/2 lbs. It will be seen that the
+extra pieces are for the left side, and the helmet has no air holes on
+that side, as the tilters passed left arm to left arm on either side of
+the tilt or barrier. The two foot figures are of about the same date.
+
+The next mounted figure (XII) is one still showing the gilt enrichment
+so many of these suits for the tilt yard originally had. It was
+attributed to Robert Earl of Essex, another favourite of his Queen, but
+has now been identified as the armour made by Jacobe Topf, for Sir John
+Smith, cousin german to Edward VI, and a great military writer of the
+sixteenth century. Many other pieces of this suit are in the Royal
+collection in Windsor Castle. The two foot figures came from the Great
+Armoury at Malta. Beyond the passage are a mounted figure showing how
+the lance was held when jousting at the tilt or barrier in the sixteenth
+century and later, and inferior suits for horsemen, and some other suits
+from Malta.
+
+On leaving the large room, in the case in the archway will be seen axes,
+horsemen's hammers and maces, all designed for breaking and rending
+armour. Observe also various forms of the bayonet, from the early plug
+bayonet to the later socketed type of that weapon.
+
+The first case on the right contains crossbows of various types.
+This weapon, at no time our national arm, was used for the defence of
+fortresses, and later on for sport. The heavy kind were bent by means of
+arrangements of pulleys, the windlass, or a kind of lifting jack called
+the Cranequin or Cric. The lighter forms were bent by an attached lever
+called the Goat's Foot. Specimens of these are in the case, as also two
+bowstaves from the wreck of the _Mary Rose_, 1545, and some leaden
+sling bullets from the battle field of Marathon. In the next case are
+firearms of early types. Among these observe two guns which belonged to
+Henry VIII, both of them breechloaders on a system resembling the modern
+Snider rifle. Note also the German Reiter wheel-lock pistols, with ball
+pommel; the William III match-lock, with plug bayonet stuck in the
+muzzle; the bandoliers, each containing twelve charges of powder and a
+bullet bag; the Vauban lock, combining the flint and match; also a still
+earlier form of this lock of English make. Montecucuh says he had
+similar locks made, having seen them used still earlier by the Turks.
+
+The next case contains rapiers and swords and bucklers. Observe the
+raised bars on the latter, to entangle and break the sword-point. The
+mounted figure in brown armour shows the equipment of the cavalry in the
+early part of the seventeenth century, the armour being browned or
+blacked to prevent rust and to avoid detection at a distance.
+
+The figure (XXIV) in the first enclosure is that of James II. It will be
+seen that it only consists of a headpiece, breast and back plates, and a
+long gauntlet to protect the bridle arm. All the pieces bear the King's
+initials, and the face guard is pierced with the design of the Royal
+Arms. The next equestrian figure is a gilt suit of Charles I (XIX),
+said to have been given to him by the City of London. It is the latest
+complete suit in the collection, and was probably never worn by him. In
+the centre of the room is a case containing gun locks, powder flasks,
+and other pieces for the furnishing of a soldier's equipment. The cannon
+were made for the instruction of Charles II when a prince. In the wall
+case observe with other objects two swine feathers, or feather staffs,
+having one long and two short blades which can be concealed in the
+shaft, also a German Calendar sword with the saints' days marked in
+gold, and other swords. Below are two _waistcoat_ cuirasses opening
+down the front.
+
+In the next enclosure on the right is a mounted figure (XVIII) of
+Charles I when young. The armour is apparently of French make, and
+is very interesting as being a double suit--that is, it represents
+the equipment of the cuirassier or cavalryman of about 1610, and
+then by removing the helmet and the armour for the arms and legs, and
+substituting the pott and the short thigh defences (in the small glass
+case) we have the equipment of the foot soldier as seen in the figures
+of pikemen on the other side of the room. The small silvered cap and
+breast and back in another glass case was made for Charles II when
+prince.
+
+In a table case are a gun and pistol dated respectively 1614 and 1619,
+made for Charles I when Prince of Wales. The gun is not quite perfect,
+but the two weapons are the earliest examples of _flint locks_ in
+the collection. Note also a fine wheel lock of about 1600. The gunner's
+axe was used for laying cannon, and has on its shaft scales showing the
+size of cannon balls of stone, iron, lead, and slag. It belonged to the
+Duke of Brunswick Luneburg. The last enclosure contains a suit (XVII) of
+richly decorated armour given to Henry Prince of Wales by the Prince de
+Joinville. This suit, though rich, is of late and inelegant form, as may
+be seen by observing the breast and the treatment of the feet. In the
+suit of his brother Prince Charles also will be seen an instance of the
+decay of the armourer's art, namely, the thigh-pieces, which are marked
+as though of several pieces of metal whilst being of one rigid piece.
+
+In a small case are unfinished portions of a helmet and gorget, and a
+gilt and engraved vamplate belonging to a suit of Henry Prince of Wales.
+
+The figures on the opposite side of the room are horsemen and pikemen
+of the seventeenth century, after which time armour may be said to have
+ceased to be worn, till at the coronation of George IV in 1820, when the
+Household Cavalry appeared in cuirasses. In the table cases in this room
+are odd portions of armour: gorgets, gauntlets, cuisshes, &c., daggers,
+knives, and swords, including good examples of the Cinquedea, or short
+broad-bladed sword peculiar to Northern Italy.
+
+In the series of wall cases at the end of both rooms will be found
+several varieties of helmets, including salades, close helmets, tilting
+helmets; also morions and cabassets and breasts and backs. Among these
+observe the fine painted archers' salade, with vizor; two fine Venetian
+salades, like the ancient Greek helmets, and bearing armourers' stamps;
+sixteenth-century tilting helmets, with side doors for air; spider
+helmets, &c. Those on the upper shelves are either false or imitations
+of real examples. In the case by the door is a helmet made for and worn
+by the late Emperor Napoleon III (when prince) at the Eglinton
+Tournament, in 1839.
+
+On the walls are portions of horse armour, bucklers for foot soldiers,
+and several shields simulating the embossed ornamentation of the
+sixteenth century.
+
+
+_The Parade_.
+
+The Waterloo Barracks are opposite, built in 1845 on the site of
+storehouses burnt in 1841. The building of similar character to the
+right is the Officers' Quarters: between the two a glimpse is obtained
+of the Martin or Brick Tower, whence Blood stole the crown in 1671.
+Observe, on the left, the extensive collection of cannons of all ages
+and countries, including triple guns taken from the French, of the time
+of Louis XIV, and some curious and grotesque mortars from India.
+
+Observe, on the right, almost adjoining the Barrack, the Chapel of St.
+Peter "ad Vincula," so called from having been consecrated on that
+well-known festival of the Latin Church, the 1st of August, probably in
+the reign of Henry I (1100-1135). The old chapel was burnt in 1512, and
+the present building erected only in time to receive the bodies of the
+first victims of the tyranny of Henry VIII. It was considered a Royal
+Chapel before 1550; the interior is not shown to the public. Here it is,
+in the memorable words of Stow, writing in the reign of Queen Elizabeth,
+that there lie before the high altar, "two dukes between two queens, to
+wit, the Duke of Somerset and the Duke of Northumberland, between Queen
+Anne and Queen Katharine, all four beheaded." Here also are buried Lady
+Jane (Grey) and Lord Guildford Dudley, the Duke of Monmouth, and the
+Scotch lords, Kilmarnock, Balmerino, and Lovat, beheaded for their share
+in the rebellion of 1745. The last burial in the chapel was that of Sir
+John Fox Burgoyne, Constable of the Tower, in 1871.
+
+The space in front of the chapel is called Tower Green, and was used as
+a burial ground; in the middle is a small square plot, paved with
+granite, showing the site on which stood at rare intervals the scaffold
+on which private executions took place. It has been specially paved by
+the orders of Her late Majesty. The following persons are known to have
+been executed on this spot:--
+
+1. Queen Anne Boleyn, second wife of Henry VIII, 19th May, 1536.
+
+2. Margaret Countess of Salisbury, the last of the old Angevin or
+Plantagenet family, 27th May, 1541.
+
+3. Queen Katharine Howard, fifth wife of Henry VIII, 13th February,
+1542.
+
+4. Jane Viscountess Rochford, 13th February, 1542.
+
+5. Lady Jane (Grey), wife of Lord Guildford Dudley, 12th February, 1554.
+
+6. Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, 25th February, 1601.
+
+They were all beheaded with an axe except Queen Anne Boleyn, whose head
+was cut off with a sword by the executioner of St. Omer, brought over
+for the purpose. The executioner of the Earl of Essex was not able to do
+his work with less than three strokes, and was mobbed and beaten by the
+populace on his way home. The bodies of all six were buried in the
+Chapel of St. Peter.
+
+Lord Hastings was also beheaded on Tower Green by order of the Duke of
+Gloucester in 1483.
+
+
+_The Beauchamp Tower_
+
+is on the west side of Tower Green, facing the White Tower, and is on
+the inner wall between the Bell Tower on the south and the Devereux
+Tower on the north, being connected with both by a walk along the
+parapet. Its present name probably refers to the residence in it as a
+prisoner of Thomas, third Earl of Warwick, of the Beauchamp family, who
+was attainted under Richard II in 1397, but restored to his honours and
+liberty two years later under Henry IV. It is curious that the most
+interesting associations of the place should be connected with his
+successors in the earldom. Although built entirely for defensive
+purposes, we find it thus early used as a prison, and during the two
+following centuries it seems to have been regarded as one of the
+most convenient places in which to lodge prisoners of rank, and in
+consequence many of the most interesting mural inscriptions are to
+be found in its chambers.
+
+In plan the Beauchamp Tower is semicircular, and it projects eighteen
+feet beyond the face of the wall. It consists of three storeys, of which
+the middle one is on a level with the rampart, on which it formerly
+opened. The whole building dates from the reign of Edward III. We enter
+at the south-east corner and ascend by a circular staircase to the
+middle chamber, which is spacious and has a large window, with a
+fire-place. Here are to be found most of the inscriptions, some having
+been brought from other chambers. A few are in the entrance passage and
+on the stair. All are numbered and catalogued. The following--to which
+the numbers are appended--will be found the most interesting:--
+
+2. On the ground-floor, near the entrance, ROBART DVDLEY. This was the
+fifth son of John, Duke of Northumberland, and next brother to Guildford
+Dudley, the husband of Lady Jane Grey. When his father was brought to
+the block in 1553 he and his brothers remained in prison here, Robert
+being condemned to death in 1554. In the following year he was liberated
+with his elder brother Ambrose, afterwards created Earl of Warwick, and
+his younger brother Henry. In the first year of Queen Elizabeth he was
+made Master of the House and elected a Knight of the Garter. In 1563 he
+was created Earl of Leicester. He died at Cornbury, in Oxfordshire, in
+1588.
+
+8. On the left, at the entrance of the great chamber, is a carved cross,
+with other religious emblems, with the name and arms of PEVEREL, and the
+date 1570. It is supposed to have been cut by a Roman Catholic prisoner
+confined during the reign of Queen Elizabeth.
+
+13. Over the fire-place this inscription in Latin:--"The more suffering
+for Christ in this world the more glory with Christ in the next," &c.
+This is signed "Arundel, June 22, 1587." This was Philip Howard, son of
+Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, beheaded in 1573. Philip inherited from his
+maternal grandfather the earldom of Arundel in 1580. He was a staunch
+Roman Catholic and was constantly under suspicion of the Government, by
+which in 1584 he was confined in his own house for a short time. On his
+liberation he determined to quit the country, but was committed to the
+Tower in 1585, and died in custody ten years later, having refused
+release on condition of forsaking his religion. His body was buried in
+his father's grave in the Chapel of St. Peter, but was eventually
+removed to Arundel. He left other inscriptions, one in the window (79),
+and one on the staircase (91), dated 1587.
+
+14. On the right of the fire-place is an elaborate piece of sculpture
+(Pl. XII), which will be examined with peculiar interest as a memorial
+of the four brothers Dudley: Ambrose (created Earl of Warwick 1561),
+Guildford (beheaded 1554), Robert (created Earl of Leicester 1563), and
+Henry (killed at the siege of St. Quintin, 1558), carved by the eldest,
+John (called Earl of Warwick), who died in 1554. Under a bear and a lion
+supporting a ragged staff is the name "JOHN DVDLE," and surrounding
+them is a wreath of roses (for Ambrose), oak leaves (for Robert,
+_robur_, an oak), gillyflowers (for Guildford), and honeysuckle
+(for Henry). Below are four lines, one of them incomplete, alluding
+to the device and its meaning. It is on record that the Lieutenant
+of the Tower was allowed 6_s._ 8_d._ a day each for the diet of these
+captive brothers.
+
+33. This is one of several inscriptions relating to the Poole or Pole
+family (see also Nos. 45, 47, 52, 56, 57). They were the sons of the
+Countess of Salisbury, by Sir Richard Pole, K.G. No. 45 contains the
+name of "GEFFRYE POOLE 1562." He was the second son and gave evidence
+against his elder brother, Lord Montagu, who was beheaded in 1539.
+
+48. "IANE." This interesting inscription, repeated also in the window
+(85), has always been supposed to refer to the Lady Jane Grey, daughter
+of the Duke of Suffolk, and wife of Guildford Dudley, fourth son of the
+Duke of Northumberland. A second repetition in another part of the room
+was unfortunately obliterated in the last century when a new window
+was made to fit this chamber for a mess-room. It is sometimes, but
+erroneously, supposed that the name was carved by this Queen of ten
+days herself, but it is improbable that she was ever imprisoned in the
+Beauchamp Tower. She is known to have lived in the house of Partridge,
+the Gaoler. It is much more probable that the two inscriptions were
+placed on the wall either by Lord Guildford Dudley, her husband, or
+by his brother, whose large device has been described above.
+
+66. In the window is the rebus, or monogram, of Thomas Abel: upon
+a bell is the letter A. This was Dr. Abel, a faithful servant to Queen
+Katharine of Arragon, first wife of King Henry VIII. He acted as her
+chaplain during the progress of the divorce, and by his determined
+advocacy offended the King. For denying the supremacy he was condemned
+and executed in 1540.
+
+The visitor who has time to spare will find many other records of this
+kind in the Beauchamp Tower, the oldest of all being the name of "Thomas
+Talbot 1462" (89), supposed to have been concerned in the Wars of the
+Roses. Emerging again upon Tower Green we see on the right the
+
+
+_Lieutenant's Lodgings_ (Pl. VI),
+
+now called the King's House. The Hall door, where a sentry stands, is
+the same through which Lord Nithisdale escaped in female dress, the
+night before he was to have been beheaded, 1716. Some parts of the house
+are of great antiquity, among them the rooms in the Bell Tower, those on
+the upper storey which open on the leads and the rampart known as The
+Prisoners' Walk, and the Council Room, a handsome apartment containing a
+curious monument of the Gunpowder Plot. In this room Guy Fawkes and his
+associates were examined, 1605. The interior of the King's House is not
+shown to the public. Next to it is the house of the Gentleman Gaoler,
+or Chief Warder. It was in this house that Lady Jane Grey lived when
+a prisoner, and from its windows saw her husband go forth from the
+adjoining Beauchamp Tower to his execution on Tower Hill, and his
+headless body brought to the chapel "in a carre," while the scaffold was
+being prepared for her own death on the Green in front, which took place
+on the same day, Monday, 12th February, 1554.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTE.--Visitors who wish to know more about the Tower are referred to
+the works of Bayley, of Brayley and Britton, of Doyne C. Bell, of G.T.
+Clark, and of Hepworth Dixon.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+DRILL AND TRAINING (Number of days in each year).
+
+---------------+----------------------------------------+-----------
+ | | In
+ | In first year. | subsequent
+ | | years.
+ ARM OF THE +---------+----------+----------+--------+-----------
+ SERVICE | | Musketry | | Total |
+ | Recruit | or | Usual | during | Usual
+ | Drill. | Gunnery | Annual | the | Annual
+ | | Drill. | Training | year. | Training
+---------------+---------+----------+----------+--------+-----------
+Artillery } | | | | |
+Infantry } | 49 | 14 | 27 | 90 | 27
+Medical } | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+Engineers | | | | |
+ { Fortress | 63 | 14 | 41 | 118 | 41
+ { Submarine | | | | |
+ { Miners | 63 | 14 | 55 | 132 | 55
+---------------+---------+----------+----------+--------+-----------
+
+
+BOUNTY, PAY, EXTRA DUTY PAY, AND ENGINEER PAY, &c.
+
+During the first year of service the rate of Bounty of a Militiaman
+varies from 10s. to £2.
+
+A Training Bounty of £1 10s. is issued on the completion of each Annual
+Training. Ex-Army N.C.O.'s, who are appointed Sergeants, receive a
+training bounty of £3. Non-training bounty of £3 is issued in sums of
+£1 on each of the following dates--1st October, 1st December, and 1st
+February, to men who have completed two trainings or the equivalent
+thereof. A Special bounty of £1 is also given on the completion of
+an authorised course of instruction other than during the 28 days
+immediately preceding the training of the unit.
+
+During Drill and training, N.C.O.'s and men receive Army rates of pay of
+their rank, also rations; and provided they are 19 years of age and have
+attended one training, or the equivalent thereof, messing allowance at
+3d. a day.
+
+In addition to the ordinary pay, extra-duty pay varying from 2_d._
+to 6_d._ per day will be issued during the annual training to non
+commissioned officers and men of the Militia for the performance of
+certain specified duties.
+
+Engineer Pay varying from 4d. to 2s. a day, will also be
+allowed to non commissioned officers and men of the Militia Engineers
+according to their qualifications.
+
+Corps pay, varying from 4d. to 1s. a day, is granted to
+N.C.O.'s and men of the Royal Army Medical Corps, who are reported as
+duly qualified.
+
+
+GENERAL ADVANTAGES OF THE MILITIA.
+
+A Pamphlet containing detailed information as to the Conditions of
+Service in the Militia and in the Reserve Division of the Militia can be
+obtained free of charge at any Post Office in the United Kingdom, from
+any Sergeant Instructor of Volunteers, or other Recruiter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE I. MIDDLE TOWER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE II. Legge's Mount. Devereux Tower. Beauchamp Tower.
+Yeoman Gaoler's House. Site of Drawbridge. Gateway of Byward Tower.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE III. Bloody Tower and Gateway. Wakefield Tower.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE IV. ST. THOMAS'S TOWER AND TRAITORS' GATE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE V. Cradle Tower and Wall of Outer Ward. Lanthorn
+Tower restored. Curtain Wall of Inner Ward.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VI. Tower Green. Queen's House. Yeoman Gaoler's
+Lodgings.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VII. WHITE TOWER FROM THE NORTH-WEST.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VIII. ST. JOHN'S CHAPEL--INTERIOR.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE IX. Middle Tower and Gate. Byward Tower. Bell
+Tower. Queen's House.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE X. Lieutenant's Lodging or Queen's House. Bloody
+Tower. Constable's Garden. St. Thomas's Tower and Traitors' Gate.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XI. New Lanthorn Tower. Old Armoury. Salt Tower.
+Cradle Tower. Well Tower. Irongate Tower.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XII.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Authorised Guide to the Tower of London
+by W. J. Loftie
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWER OF LONDON ***
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of
+ Authorised Guide to the Tower of London,
+ by W.J. Loftie
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Authorised Guide to the Tower of London, by W. J. Loftie
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Authorised Guide to the Tower of London
+
+Author: W. J. Loftie
+
+Release Date: September 11, 2004 [EBook #13436]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWER OF LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Audrey Longhurst, David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div style="height: 8em;"><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h1>
+ AUTHORISED
+<br>
+ GUIDE TO THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+</h1>
+<center><b>BY</b></center>
+<h3>
+ W.J. LOFTIE, B.A., F.S.A.
+</h3>
+<center>
+ REVISED EDITION.
+<br>
+ WITH TWELVE VIEWS AND TWO PLANS,
+<br>
+ AND A
+<br>
+ DESCRIPTION OF THE ARMOURY,
+<br>
+ BY
+<br>
+ THE VISCOUNT DILLON, P.S.A.
+<br>
+ (<i>Curator of the Tower Armouries.</i>)
+</center>
+
+<center>
+<img src="images/seal.png" width="185" height="155"
+alt="Seal">
+</center>
+
+<center>
+ LONDON:
+<br>
+ PRINTED FOR HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE,
+<br>
+ BY HARRISON AND SONS, ST. MARTIN'S LANE,
+<br>
+ PRINTERS IN ORDINARY TO HIS MAJESTY.
+<br>
+ <i>AND SOLD AT THE TOWER</i>.
+<br>
+<br>
+ 1904
+<br>
+ <i>Reprinted</i> 1907.
+</center>
+<hr>
+<center>
+ PRICE ONE PENNY.
+</center>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plan-01.png">
+<img src="images/plan-01.png" width="100%"
+alt="Plan of the Tower."></a>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h2>
+ THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+</h2>
+<hr>
+<h3>
+ <b>GENERAL SKETCH.</b>
+</h3>
+<p>
+ The Tower of London was founded in 1078, by William the Conqueror, for
+ the purpose of protecting and controlling the city. To make room for his
+ chief buildings he removed two bastions of the old wall of London, and
+ encroached slightly upon the civic boundaries. Part therefore of the
+ Tower is in London, and part in Middlesex, but it forms, with its
+ surrounding fortifications, a precinct in itself which belongs neither
+ to the city nor the county. It covers an area of 18 acres within the
+ Garden rails.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The present buildings are partly of the Norman period; but architecture
+ of almost all the styles which have flourished in England may be found
+ within the walls. It is well to remember that though the Tower is no
+ longer a place of great military strength it has in time past been a
+ fortress, a palace, and a prison, and to view it rightly we must regard
+ it in this threefold aspect.
+</p>
+<p>
+ It was first built as a fortress, and has a central Keep, called the
+ "White Tower." The Inner Ward is defended by a wall, flanked by thirteen
+ towers, the entrance to it being on the south side under the Bloody
+ Tower. The Outer Ward is defended by a second wall, flanked by six
+ towers on the river face (<i>see</i> Pl. IX, X and XI), and by three
+ semicircular bastions on the north face. A Ditch or "Moat," now dry,
+ encircles the whole, crossed at the south-western angle by a stone
+ bridge, leading to the "Byward Tower" from the "Middle Tower," a gateway
+ which had formerly an outwork, called the "Lion Tower."
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Tower was occupied as a palace by all our Kings and Queens down to
+ Charles II. It was the custom for each monarch to lodge in the Tower
+ before his coronation, and to ride in procession to Westminster through
+ the city. The Palace buildings stood eastward of the "Bloody Tower."
+</p>
+<p>
+ The security of the walls made it convenient as a State prison, the
+ first known prisoner being Ralf Flambard, Bishop of Durham, who had been
+ active under William Rufus in pushing on the buildings. From that time
+ the Tower was seldom without some captive, English or foreign, of rank
+ and importance.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the Tudor period the "Green" within the Tower was used on very rare
+ occasions for executions. [<a href="#page32">See page 32</a>.] Condemned prisoners were usually beheaded
+ on
+</p>
+
+<h3>
+ <i>Tower Hill</i>.
+</h3>
+<p>
+ Emerging from the Mark Lane railway station, the visitor obtains an
+ excellent view of the great fortress. Within the railed space of Trinity
+ Square, the first permanent scaffold on Tower Hill was set up in the
+ reign of Edward III, but the first execution recorded here was that of
+ Sir Simon Burley in 1388. Here also were beheaded, among others, Dudley,
+ the minister of Henry VII (1510), his son the Duke of Northumberland
+ (1553), his grandson, Lord Guildford Dudley (1554), Cromwell, Earl of
+ Essex (1540), More and Fisher (1535), Surrey (1547), and his son,
+ Norfolk (1572), Strafford (1641), and Archbishop Laud (1645), and the
+ Scotch lords in 1716, 1746, and 1747, the last being Simon, Lord Lovat.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Tower moat is immediately before us. It is drained and used as a
+ parade ground. Beyond it, as we approach the entrance, we have a good
+ view of the fortifications. On the extreme left are the Brass Mount and
+ North Bastions. In the middle is Legge's Mount. To the right is the
+ entrance gateway. The highest building behind is the White Tower, easily
+ distinguished by its four turrets. In front of it are the Devereux,
+ Beauchamp, and Bell Towers, the residences of the Lieutenant of the
+ Tower and of the Yeoman Gaoler being in the gabled and red tiled houses
+ between the last two. From one of these windows Lady Jane Grey saw her
+ husband's headless body brought in from Tower Hill, by the route we now
+ traverse; and the leads are still called Queen Elizabeth's Walk, as she
+ used them during her captivity in 1554.
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Lion Tower</i>
+</h3>
+<p>
+ stood where the Ticket Office and Refreshment Room are now. Here the
+ visitor obtains a pass which admits him to see the Regalia, or Crown
+ Jewels, and another for the Armoury. In the Middle Ages and down to 1834
+ the Royal Menagerie was lodged in a number of small buildings near the
+ Lion Tower, whence its name was derived and the saying arose, "seeing
+ the lions," for a visit to the Tower. Where the wooden gate now stands,
+ there was a small work called the Conning Gate. It marked the boundaries
+ of Middlesex and the Tower Precinct. Here prisoners were handed over to
+ the Sheriff.
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Middle Tower</i> (Pl. I)
+</h3>
+<p>
+ was originally built by Henry III, but has been entirely refaced.
+ Through its archway we reach the stone bridge, which had formerly in the
+ centre a drawbridge of wood. We next reach
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Byward Tower</i> (Pl. II),
+</h3>
+<p>
+ the great Gatehouse of the Outer Ward. It is in part the work of Henry
+ III, and in part that of Richard II. Observe the vaulting and the dark
+ recesses on the southern side. We pass on the left
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Bell Tower</i> (Pl. IX),
+</h3>
+<p>
+ which may safely be attributed to the reign of King John. Here Fisher,
+ Bishop of Rochester, was imprisoned by Henry VIII, and the Princess
+ Elizabeth by her sister, Queen Mary. The "Curtain Wall," of great
+ antiquity, is pierced by the windows of the Lieutenant's Lodgings, now
+ called "The King's House," and one of these windows lights the Council
+ Chamber, where Guy Fawkes and his fellow conspirators were tried and
+ condemned, 1605.
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Traitors' Gate</i> (Pl. IV),
+</h3>
+<p>
+ with St. Thomas's Tower, is now on our right. Observe the masonry which
+ supports the wide span of the arch. This gate, when the Thames was more
+ of a highway than it is at present, was often used as an entrance to the
+ Tower. St. Thomas' Tower was built by Henry III, and contains a small
+ chapel or oratory dedicated to St. Thomas of Canterbury. In later times
+ it was found convenient as a landing place for prisoners who had been
+ tried at Westminster; and here successively Edward Duke of Buckingham
+ (1521), Sir Thomas More, Queen Anne Boleyn, Cromwell Earl of Essex,
+ Queen Katharine Howard (1542) Seymour Duke of Somerset (1551), Lady Jane
+ Grey, the Princess (afterwards Queen) Elizabeth, Devereux Earl of Essex
+ (1601), and James Duke of Monmouth, passed under the arch on their way
+ to a prison or the scaffold. Opposite is
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Bloody Tower</i> (Pl. VIII),
+</h3>
+<p>
+ which is believed to derive its name from the suicide in it of Henry
+ Percy, eighth Earl of Northumberland, in 1585. Under this Tower we enter
+ the Inner Ward. It dates from the reigns of Edward III and Richard II,
+ and was called by its present name as early as 1597, being popularly
+ believed to be the scene of the murder of Edward V and his brother the
+ Duke of York, as well as of Henry VI. It was originally known as the
+ Garden Tower, as its upper storey opens on that part of the parade
+ ground which was formerly the Constable's Garden. Here Sir Walter
+ Raleigh was allowed to walk during his long imprisonment, and could
+ sometimes converse over the wall with the passers-by. Observe the
+ grooves for working the massive portcullis, which was raised by chains
+ and a windlass. These still exist on the upper floor. Immediately
+ adjoining the gateway on the east is the
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>Wakefield Tower</i> (Pl. III).
+</h3>
+<p>
+ Its lower storey is the oldest building next to the Keep; it was, with
+ the Lanthorn (rebuilt on the old foundation in 1884-5) and Cold Harbour
+ Towers, part of the original Norman plan. The upper storey was rebuilt
+ by Henry III, who made it the entrance to his palace on the east. The
+ Great Hall, memorable as the scene of Anne Boleyn's trial, adjoined it,
+ but was pulled down during the Commonwealth. In 1360 the records of the
+ kingdom, which had previously been kept in the White Tower, were removed
+ here, and this is called in ancient surveys sometimes the Record, and
+ sometimes the Hall Tower. The present name is said to be derived from
+ the imprisonment of Yorkists after the Lancastrian victory at Wakefield
+ in 1460. It is used now for the safe keeping and exhibition of
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Crown Jewels</i>.
+</h3>
+<p>
+ The visitor who has obtained a ticket passes up a short stair and finds
+ himself in a well-lighted circular apartment in the Wakefield Tower. The
+ deep window recess opposite the door was fitted up as a small chapel,
+ with Aumbry, Piscina, and Sedilia. Tradition says that Henry VI used it
+ for his devotions when a prisoner in the Tower, and was here murdered.
+ In the centre, in a large double case, are arranged the splendid objects
+ which form the English Regalia. The following are the most remarkable:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+ The King's Crown. It occupies the highest place in the case. It was
+ constructed in 1838 for her late Majesty's coronation, the principal
+ jewels being taken from older crowns and the royal collection. Among
+ them, observe the large ruby given to the Black Prince in Spain in 1367.
+ Henry V wore it in his helmet at Agincourt. With seventy-five large
+ brilliants it forms a Maltese cross on the front of the diadem.
+ Immediately below it is a splendid sapphire, purchased by George IV.
+ Seven other sapphires and eight emeralds, all of large size, with many
+ hundred diamonds, decorate the band and arches, and the cross on the
+ summit is formed of a rose cut sapphire and four very fine brilliants.
+ The whole contains 2818 diamonds, 297 pearls, and many other jewels, and
+ weighs thirty-nine ounces and five pennyweights. The Crown was enlarged
+ for His Majesty Edward VII.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Crown made for the coronation of Mary of Modena, the second wife of
+ James II. This is probably one of the oldest of the crowns, and contains
+ some fine jewels.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Crown made for Queen Mary II, for her coronation with William III.
+</p>
+<p>
+ St. Edward's Crown, which appears to be the model by which all the later
+ crowns have been fashioned. It was made for the coronation of Charles
+ II.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Prince of Wales's coronet, with a single arch.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Orb, of gold, with a cross and bands of jewels.
+</p>
+<p>
+ St. Edward's Staff, a sceptre of gold, 4 feet 7 inches in length,
+ surmounted by an orb which is supposed to contain a fragment of the true
+ cross.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Royal Sceptre.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Sceptre of Equity, surmounted by a dove.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Small sceptres, one of ivory.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Besides these magnificent regal emblems, which chiefly date from the
+ Restoration, when the places of the ancient objects, destroyed during
+ the Commonwealth, were supplied as nearly as possible, observe, also&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Anointing Spoon, the sole relic of the ancient regalia, of silver
+ gilt.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Eagle, for the anointing oil.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Golden Salt-cellar, a model of the White Tower.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Baptismal Font, used at the christening of the Sovereign's children,
+ of silver, double gilt.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Sacramental Plate used at the coronation.
+</p>
+<p>
+ A large silver-gilt wine-fountain, of good workmanship, presented to
+ Charles II by the Corporation of Plymouth.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In a case in the large recess, <i>Curtana</i>, the Sword of Mercy,
+ pointless, the blade 40 inches long.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Two Swords of Justice, Ecclesiastical and Civil.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Also the State Sword offered at the coronation of His Majesty Edward
+ VII, with richly jewelled hilt and scabbard.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the central case is a model of the Koh-i-noor in its original
+ setting.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the cases in the recesses are also exhibited the insignia of the
+ British and Indian orders of Knighthood, their collars, stars, and
+ badges, and the Victoria Cross.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Leaving the Wakefield Tower, we descend the slope and turn to the left
+ near the site of what was the Cold Harbour Tower, a name the exact
+ meaning of which is unknown. The original Jewel House was behind it to
+ the east, forming with the south side of the White Tower, and portions
+ of the palace, a small courtyard, in which some remains of the ancient
+ buildings may still be traced. On a raised platform is the gun-carriage
+ and limber on which the body of Her Majesty the late Queen Victoria was
+ conveyed on the occasion of her funeral, 2nd February, 1901, from
+ Windsor Railway Station to St. George's Chapel. This was placed here by
+ order of the Houses of Parliament. We now reach a doorway made in the
+ south wall of the
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>White Tower</i> (Pl. VII),
+</h3>
+<p>
+ or Keep, the oldest part of the whole fortress.
+</p>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plan-02.png">
+<img src="images/plan-02.png" width="100%"
+alt="White Tower. Plan of Middle Floor."></a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ The Conqueror, before he entered London, formed a camp, eastward of the
+ city, and probably on part of the ground now occupied by the Tower.
+ Immediately after his coronation he commenced the works here. At first,
+ no doubt, they consisted of a ditch and palisade, and were formed partly
+ on the lower bastions of the old City Wall, first built by the Romans,
+ and rebuilt in 885 by King Alfred. The work of building the Keep was
+ entrusted to Gundulf, a monk of Bec, in Normandy, who was shortly
+ afterwards made Bishop of Rochester, and who probably commenced
+ operations in 1078. In 1097, under William Rufus, the works were still
+ going on and the inner ward was enclosed. A great storm in 1091 damaged
+ the outworks. Ralf Flambard, Bishop of Durham, being imprisoned in the
+ Tower by Henry I, contrived to escape, 1101. During the wars between
+ Stephen and Matilda, the Earl of Essex was Constable of the Tower, and
+ obtained a grant even of the City of London from the Empress. When he
+ fell into Stephen's hands the Tower formed his ransom, and the citizens
+ regained their ancient liberty. When Richard I was absent on the
+ Crusade, his regent, Longchamp, resided in the Tower, of which he
+ greatly enlarged the precincts by trespasses on the land of the city and
+ of St. Katharine's Hospital. He surrendered the Tower to the citizens,
+ led by John, in 1191. The church of St. Peter was in existence before
+ 1210, and the whole Tower was held in pledge for the completion of Magna
+ Charta in 1215 and 1216. In 1240 Henry III had the chapel of St. John
+ decorated with painting and stained glass, and the royal apartments in
+ the Keep were whitewashed, as well as the whole exterior. In the reign
+ of Edward III it begins to assume its modern name, as "La Blanche Tour."
+ During the wars with France many illustrious prisoners were lodged here,
+ as David, King of Scots; John, King of France; Charles of Blois, and
+ John de Vienne, governor of Calais, and his twelve brave burgesses. In
+ the Tower Richard II signed his abdication, 1399. The Duke of Orleans,
+ taken at Agincourt, was lodged by Henry V in the White Tower. From that
+ time the Beauchamp Tower was more used as a prison, but it is probable
+ that some of the Kentish rebels, taken with Wyatt in 1554, slept in the
+ recesses of the crypt of the Chapel, long known as Queen Elizabeth's
+ Armoury. In 1663, and later years down to 1709, structural repairs
+ were carried out under the superintendence of Sir Christopher Wren,
+ who replaced the Norman window openings with others of a classical
+ character. Remains of four old windows are visible on the river side.
+ A few years ago some disfiguring annexes and sheds were removed, as
+ well as an external staircase of wood, which led up from the old Horse
+ Armoury and entered the crypt by a window.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The White Tower is somewhat irregular in plan, for though it looks so
+ square from the river its four sides are all of different lengths, and
+ three of its corners are not right angles. The side towards which we
+ approach is 107 feet from north to south. The south side measures
+ 118 feet. It has four turrets at the corners, three of them square,
+ the fourth, that on the north-east, being circular. From floor to
+ battlements it is 90 feet in height. The original entrance was probably
+ on the south side, and high above the ground, being reached as usual in
+ Norman castles by an external stair which could be easily removed in
+ time of danger. Another or the same entrance led from an upper storey
+ of the palace. The interior is of the plainest and sternest character.
+ Every consideration is postponed to that of obtaining the greatest
+ strength and security. The outer walls vary in thickness from 15 feet
+ in the lower to 11 in the upper storey. The whole building is crossed
+ by one wall, which rises from base to summit and divides it into a
+ large western and a smaller eastern portion. The eastern part is further
+ subdivided by a wall which cuts off St. John's Chapel, its crypt, and
+ its subcrypt, each roof of which is massively vaulted. There is no
+ vaulting but a wooden floor between the storeys of the other part.
+ There are several comparatively modern entrances.
+</p>
+<p>
+ A short external stair leads to a staircase in the thickness of the wall
+ on the south side, by which we approach the Chapel. A brass plate on the
+ right refers to some children's bones found in the reign of Charles II.
+ They were identified, somewhat conjecturally, with the remains of Edward
+ V and his brother who disappeared so mysteriously at the accession of
+ Richard III, and were removed to Westminster Abbey in 1678. Ascending
+ the stair we come to the passage which led from the palace to
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Chapel of St. John</i> (Pl. VIII).
+</h3>
+<p>
+ The chapel is the largest and most complete now remaining in any Norman
+ castle, and must have seen the devotions of William the Conqueror and
+ his family. It is 55 feet 6 inches long by 31 feet wide, and 32 feet
+ high, and is vaulted with a plain arch. There are four massive columns
+ on either side and four in the apse. The south aisle, as we have seen,
+ communicated with the palace, and an upper aisle, or gallery, similarly
+ opened into the
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>State Apartments</i>
+</h3>
+<p>
+ of the White Tower, which we reach by a circuitous route through a
+ passage round the walls, only wide enough for one person at a time, and
+ a circular, or newel, stair in the north-east turret, gaining at every
+ turn glimpses of the extensive stores of small arms. The second floor
+ is divided into two large apartments, not reckoning the chapel; in the
+ eastern wall of the smaller or Banqueting Chamber, is a fire-place, the
+ only one till recently discovered in any Norman Keep. A second and third
+ have of late years been found in the floor below, but the whole building
+ was designed for security, not for comfort and in spite of the use of
+ wooden partitions and tapestry must have been miserable as a place of
+ residence. On leaving St. John's Chapel we enter
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Armoury</i>.
+</h3>
+<p>
+ In connection with the Armouries, it should be noted that the present
+ collection of arms and armour had its origin in that formed at Greenwich
+ by King Henry VIII, who received many presents of this nature from the
+ Emperor Maximilian and others. He also obtained from the Emperor several
+ skilled armourers, who worked in his pay and wore his livery. English
+ iron in former days was so inferior, or the art of working it was so
+ little known, that even as far back as the days of Richard II German
+ and Italian armourers were the chief workmen in Europe. It should be
+ remembered that the earlier kind of armour chiefly consisted of quilted
+ garments, further fortified by small pieces of leather, horn, or metal.
+ So far from the invention of gunpowder having driven out armour, if we
+ may credit the story of the earliest employment of that explosive, it
+ was at a date when plate armour was hardly in use, certainly not in
+ large pieces. What actually did cause the disuse of armour was the
+ change in ideas as to the movement of troops and the large quantity of
+ armour which was made in the sixteenth century, and consequently the
+ inferior make. In England the disuse of armour seems to have begun
+ earlier than on the Continent, but at no time were the ordinary soldiers
+ covered with metal as seen in Armouries and other places. The weight,
+ and what was more important, the cost, prevented such a thing. It was
+ only the rich who could afford to pay for and had horses to carry
+ armour, who wore much of what we see now. Again, armour for war was much
+ lighter and less complete than that used for the tilt yard, where
+ protection to the wearer was more considered than his ability to hurt
+ his opponent. The greater substance of such armour and its frequent
+ enrichment with engraving and gilding no doubt led to the preservation
+ of this class of defence. Chain mail suffered extremely by rust and
+ neglect, and even plate armour was subject to the same deterioration. It
+ is consequently not to be wondered at that little or no armour of a date
+ previous to the fifteenth century is to be seen in this collection. On
+ Henry VIII's death the first inventory of the Royal collection was made,
+ and this includes the armour and arms at Greenwich, and arms and
+ artillery at the Tower of London which, from the time of Henry VIII, was
+ one of the sights for foreigners of distinction. In the troubles of the
+ Civil War the arms were drawn out, and there is no doubt much, both of
+ arms and armour, was used and lost. The Protector took one suit, and it
+ was not till 1660 that the armour, which had meanwhile been brought to
+ London, was collected, and, with the weapons still in the store, were
+ formed into a kind of museum. It is to that period that may be traced
+ most of the grotesque stories associated with the collection. At various
+ subsequent periods additions were made to the collection, and it was
+ arranged in such manner as suited the knowledge of the day. Series of
+ figures of kings of England and famous persons were made and added to or
+ changed on the death of the sovereign. In later times the whole has been
+ arranged by Sir Samuel Meyrick. Mr. Hewitt, and Mr. Planché, and in 1859
+ Mr. Hewitt drew up the first catalogue of the contents.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The mounted figures from 1826 till 1883 stood in a long gallery
+ adjoining the south side of the Tower, but at the latter date this was
+ pulled down, and the figures removed to the top floor. Within the last
+ few years the floor below has been used for the later arms, but the
+ lighting of the rooms and their shape, with various other causes,
+ prevent any strictly chronological arrangements of the collection, many
+ objects of which also belong to long periods of time.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The arms and armour are now placed on the two upper floors of the White
+ Tower, the earlier weapons and all the armour, being on the top floor,
+ while the later weapons and the Indian arms and armour, with various
+ personal relics, are placed on what is the third stage or second floor.
+ To this the visitor ascends by a circular staircase in the south front
+ of the Tower. At the foot observe a brass plate recording the finding in
+ 1674 of the supposed remains of the "Princes in the Tower," Edward V and
+ his brother Richard Duke of York. The visitor then enters the Chapel of
+ St. John, and on leaving passes into the smaller of the two rooms on
+ this floor.
+</p>
+<p>
+ At the end of the room is a Persian horse armour of brass scales
+ connected by chain mail. Near this is the quilted armour of the Burmese
+ General Maha Bundoola, killed in 1824. At the other end of the room is a
+ large bell from Burmah, presented by the late General Sir William Gomme,
+ G.C.B., and near it are two figures with Japanese armour, one of them
+ presented to Charles II when prince by the Mogul. It is interesting as
+ being one of the earliest examples of Eastern armour which has an
+ authentic record of its presence in this country, and it also exhibits
+ the persistence in early forms so common in the East. The cases on
+ either hand contain weapons, helmets, and armour from most parts of our
+ Indian Empire, as well as weapons from Cabul, Persia, Africa, America,
+ and the South Seas. Some of these were presented by the Honourable East
+ India Company, some were acquired by purchase after the Great Exhibition
+ of 1851, and others have been added at various times. In the centre of
+ the room are models showing the Tower buildings in the years 1842 and
+ 1866.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The Large Room is now entered, and on the left is a case containing
+ firearms, hand grenades, and a series of the <i>rifled</i> arms in use
+ in the British Army since 1801. These include the two Baker rifles of
+ 1801 and 1807; the Brunswick rifle, 1836; the Minie rifle, 1851; the
+ Enfield rifle musket, 1855; the Snider, 1865; the Martini-Henry, 1871;
+ and the Lee-Metford magazine rifle. On the right, between two grotesque
+ figures, called Gin and Beer, from the entrance to the Buttery of the
+ old Palace of Greenwich, is a case containing executioners' swords
+ (foreign), thumb-screws, the Scavenger's Daughter for confining the
+ neck, hands, and feet, bilboes for ship use, and thumb-screws. Observe
+ also the so-called "Collar taken from the Spanish Armada," which however
+ was here in 1547, and has been in later times filled with lead to make
+ it more terrible. It was only a collar for detention of ordinary
+ prisoners. A conjectural model of the rack is also shown, but the only
+ pictorial authority for this instrument (at no time a legal punishment)
+ is a woodcut in Foxe's Martyrs, the illustrations for which were drawn
+ from German sources.
+</p>
+<p>
+ On the left hand are cases of European firearms of the first half of the
+ present century, and two cannon made for the Duke of Gloucester, the son
+ of Queen Anne. In the S.E. corner, on a platform, are several early
+ cannon, including one, and part of another, from the wreck of the
+ <i>Mary Rose</i>, sunk in action with the French off Spithead in 1545.
+ These display the early mode of construction of such weapons, namely;
+ bars of iron longitudinally welded together and encircled by hoops of
+ the same metal. On the window side in the recesses are wall pieces,
+ which belonged to the Honourable East India Company. The figure of Queen
+ Elizabeth is supposed to represent her as on her way to St. Paul's
+ Cathedral after the destruction of the Spanish Armada. Near the lift are
+ partizans carried by the Yeomen of the Guard, and round the pillars are
+ the sergeants' halberds used in the Army till about 1830. Observe the
+ kettledrums captured at the battle of Blenheim, 1704.
+</p>
+<p>
+ On the left hand observe the beheading axe, which has been here since
+ 1687, also the block on which Lord Lovat, in 1747, lost his head at one
+ stroke for the share he took in the attempt of the Pretender in 1745.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Beyond this, against the wall, is a model by John Bell of a monument for
+ the Great Duke of Wellington. It was presented by the late Sir Daniel
+ Lysons, Constable of the Tower, 1890-1898. Still on the left hand, in a
+ glass case, is the soldier's cloak on which General Wolfe expired in the
+ moment of victory, at Quebec, 1759.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Beyond, in another case, is the uniform worn as Constable of the Tower
+ by the Great Duke of Wellington from 1826 until his death, in 1852.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Near this is a portion of the wooden pump of the <i>Mary Rose</i>, sunk
+ in action off the Isle of Wight in 1545.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In a case at the end of the room is a mass of fused gun flints, a relic
+ of the fire which in 1841 destroyed the Great Store in the Tower and
+ many thousand stand of arms, cannon, &amp;c.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The staircase in the S.W. corner is now ascended leading to the great
+ upper chamber, generally known as the Council Chamber, 95 feet by 40
+ feet, and, like the smaller room, 21 feet high. Round this top floor
+ runs a passage cut in the thickness of the walls, with numerous openings
+ inwards opposite the windows, and widening somewhat when forming as it
+ does the triforium of St. John's Chapel. At the entrance are cases
+ containing velvet-covered brigandines and canvas-covered jacks, garments
+ which were much used in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, as giving
+ protection by means of numerous small plates of metal disposed between
+ the thicknesses of the material covering and lining them, and also great
+ flexibility. In the cases on the right hand are specimens of chain mail
+ in form of hoods, coats, sleeves, &amp;c, mostly, if not all, of Eastern
+ origin. Observe also some bronze swords and other very early weapons.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Round the walls of the two rooms are arranged the various staff weapons
+ used in England and the continent. In the first enclosure on the left
+ are cases in which are ancient bronze tools, weapons, and ornaments from
+ various localities, stone implements and weapons, and a suit of bronze
+ armour from Cumæ, an ancient Greek settlement near Naples. In the centre
+ of the enclosure are grouped many varieties of staff weapons of the
+ fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries. Among them are boar
+ spears for the chase and for war, halberds, partizans, bills, glaives,
+ holy water sprinkles (a staff with a ball with spikes at its extremity),
+ and the 18 foot pikes of the Civil War period.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The first case on the left contains a fine archer's salade with its
+ original lining, from the de Cosson collection. A Venetian salade, with
+ the stamp of the maker of the Missaglia family, a heavy salade for
+ jousting, a combed morion and the tilting helmet of Sir Henry Lee, K.G.,
+ Master of the Armouries to Queen Elizabeth and James I. In the lower
+ case are finely engraved and parcel gilt chamfrons for horses' heads, a
+ gilt vamplate for the tilting lance belonging to Lord Chancellor Hatton,
+ an officer's gorget of the time of Queen Anne, and various pieces of
+ rich armour.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the window recess behind are shields and horns. In the next enclosure
+ are three foot figures of the end of the fifteenth century and
+ commencement of the sixteenth century; the first holds a long-handled
+ axe as used for encounters on foot in <i>champ clos</i>. The second
+ holds a two-handled sword. The third suit is enriched with engraving,
+ and was formerly parcel gilt, but the helmet does not belong to the
+ suit.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the centre of the room is an equestrian figure (III), the man wearing
+ a fine early sixteenth-century suit of armour, bearing the Nuremberg
+ stamp, and the horse protected by a barb richly repoussé, engraved, and
+ formerly silvered. The designs on this display the Burgundian cross
+ ragulé and the flint and steel. The steel or briquet is to be seen also
+ in the hinges and in the metal coverings for the reins. It will be
+ remembered that this design forms the <i>motif</i> of the collar of the
+ Golden Fleece.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The next equestrian figure (IV) shows the fluted, or as it was called
+ crested, armour, of about 1500. The horse armour is also fluted. On the
+ right, in the centre of the room, are two armours which belonged to
+ Henry VIII. Of these the first (XXVIII) is that formerly described as
+ "rough from the hammer," though it has been milled or <i>glazed</i> and
+ no hammer marks are visible. It is a complete suit for fighting on foot
+ in the lists, and comfort and ability to move about, have been
+ sacrificed to perfect protection. The suit weighs about 93 lbs., and is
+ composed of no less than 235 separate pieces of metal. Some details of
+ construction point to a Spanish influence in the style. The second
+ figure (XXIX), which wants the leg armour, is of the kind known as a
+ tonlet, and has a skirt of horizontal lames engraved. The helmet bears
+ the well-known stamp of the Missaglia family of armourers, and is very
+ curious and massive. This armour is also for fighting on foot in
+ <i>champ clos</i> or the lists.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The next suit (VI) on the left is one of Henry VIII, and has been parcel
+ gilt; the weight of the man's armour is 81 lbs. The two foot figures are
+ those of a horseman and an officer of foot, both of Henry's time. The
+ first bears on it Nuremberg marks; the second has an engraving of the
+ Crucifixion on the left breast. The next equestrian figure (VII), also
+ of Henry VIII, much resembles the last, and has at its feet extra pieces
+ for the tilt yard. Other extra pieces which might be worn with these two
+ suits are in the Royal Armoury at Windsor Castle.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The suit (V) on the equestrian figure in the middle of the room is one
+ of the finest in existence. It was made by Conrad Seusenhofer, one of a
+ family of Augsburg armourers, and given in 1514 to Henry VIII by the
+ Emperor Maximilian. The man's armour is engraved with roses,
+ pomegranates, portcullises, and other badges of Henry VIII and his first
+ queen Katharine of Arragon, and has on the metal skirt which imitates
+ the cloth <i>bases</i> of the time the letters H and K. The horse
+ armour, probably made afterwards in England by one of Henry's German
+ armourers, is also covered with engraving, and has panels on which are
+ depicted scenes from the life and death of St. George and St. Barbara,
+ both military saints. The whole armour was formerly washed with silver,
+ of which some traces still remain.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the enclosure on the left is a mounted figure (XI) of about 1550, and
+ in front are a pistol shield, one of 80 made for Henry VIII, and a
+ helmet with grotesque mask formerly attributed to Will Somers, the
+ king's jester, but since identified as a present from the Emperor
+ Maximilian. In the next cases are portions of armour of Henry VIII; also
+ of a puffed and engraved suit of the same time, and of a richly worked
+ russet and gilt suit of George Earl of Cumberland, who in Elizabeth's
+ time fitted out at his own cost eleven expeditions against Spain. In the
+ archway are some combined weapons having gun barrels in the staff and
+ pole-axe heads; also the three-barrelled weapon formerly called Henry
+ VIII's walking staff. In the corner of the room are an old German
+ tilting saddle, which protected the legs of the rider, who stood up in
+ his stirrups, a large tilting lance shown as far back as the days of
+ Elizabeth as that of Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. At the end of the
+ room are five suits of the second third of the sixteenth century. The
+ centre one, which is damascened, has in front of it an extra gorget, and
+ a placcate to strengthen the breast. The next figure (XXX) is a large
+ suit of armour 6 feet 10-1/2 inches in height of the time of Henry VIII,
+ though formerly incorrectly called that of John of Gaunt, of whom, of
+ course, no armour exists. This suit weighs about 66 lbs.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Descending the room in the first enclosure is the armour (IX) of the
+ Earl of Worcester, who died 1589. This suit is very massive, the breast
+ and back plates together weighing 40 lbs. 3 oz. In the same enclosure
+ are two figures made up of Maximilian armour, and a bowman and a
+ musketeer of the Earl of Worcester's time. In the archways will be seen
+ early forms of guns and pistols of various types and swords and other
+ weapons.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The next mounted figure (VIII) (formerly called Sir Henry Lee) is of the
+ middle of the sixteenth century, and the two foot figures are made up of
+ early sixteenth-century armour.
+</p>
+<p>
+ At the side is a cuir bouilli crupper as worn by the English heavy
+ cavalry in the sixteenth century.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The next enclosure contains an equestrian figure (X) of Robert Dudley
+ Earl of Leicester, the favourite of Elizabeth. This fine suit bears all
+ over it the badge of the Ragged Staff, and is engraved with the badges
+ and collars of the Garter and of the Order of St. Michael of France. The
+ suit was made between 1566 and 1588, and is of very great interest as
+ one of the very few known which also possesses the extra pieces for the
+ tilt yard, viz.: the Grandguard and the Passguard, ornamented like the
+ suit, which with them weighs about 83-1/2 lbs. It will be seen that the
+ extra pieces are for the left side, and the helmet has no air holes on
+ that side, as the tilters passed left arm to left arm on either side of
+ the tilt or barrier. The two foot figures are of about the same date.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The next mounted figure (XII) is one still showing the gilt enrichment
+ so many of these suits for the tilt yard originally had. It was
+ attributed to Robert Earl of Essex, another favourite of his Queen, but
+ has now been identified as the armour made by Jacobe Topf, for Sir John
+ Smith, cousin german to Edward VI, and a great military writer of the
+ sixteenth century. Many other pieces of this suit are in the Royal
+ collection in Windsor Castle. The two foot figures came from the Great
+ Armoury at Malta. Beyond the passage are a mounted figure showing how
+ the lance was held when jousting at the tilt or barrier in the sixteenth
+ century and later, and inferior suits for horsemen, and some other suits
+ from Malta.
+</p>
+<p>
+ On leaving the large room, in the case in the archway will be seen axes,
+ horsemen's hammers and maces, all designed for breaking and rending
+ armour. Observe also various forms of the bayonet, from the early plug
+ bayonet to the later socketed type of that weapon.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The first case on the right contains crossbows of various types. This
+ weapon, at no time our national arm, was used for the defence of
+ fortresses, and later on for sport. The heavy kind were bent by means of
+ arrangements of pulleys, the windlass, or a kind of lifting jack called
+ the Cranequin or Cric. The lighter forms were bent by an attached lever
+ called the Goat's Foot. Specimens of these are in the case, as also two
+ bowstaves from the wreck of the <i>Mary Rose</i>, 1545, and some leaden
+ sling bullets from the battle field of Marathon. In the next case are
+ firearms of early types. Among these observe two guns which belonged to
+ Henry VIII, both of them breechloaders on a system resembling the modern
+ Snider rifle. Note also the German Reiter wheel-lock pistols, with ball
+ pommel; the William III match-lock, with plug bayonet stuck in the
+ muzzle; the bandoliers, each containing twelve charges of powder and a
+ bullet bag; the Vauban lock, combining the flint and match; also a still
+ earlier form of this lock of English make. Montecucuh says he had
+ similar locks made, having seen them used still earlier by the Turks.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The next case contains rapiers and swords and bucklers. Observe the
+ raised bars on the latter, to entangle and break the sword-point. The
+ mounted figure in brown armour shows the equipment of the cavalry in the
+ early part of the seventeenth century, the armour being browned or
+ blacked to prevent rust and to avoid detection at a distance.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The figure (XXIV) in the first enclosure is that of James II. It will be
+ seen that it only consists of a headpiece, breast and back plates, and a
+ long gauntlet to protect the bridle arm. All the pieces bear the King's
+ initials, and the face guard is pierced with the design of the Royal
+ Arms. The next equestrian figure is a gilt suit of Charles I (XIX), said
+ to have been given to him by the City of London. It is the latest
+ complete suit in the collection, and was probably never worn by him. In
+ the centre of the room is a case containing gun locks, powder flasks,
+ and other pieces for the furnishing of a soldier's equipment. The cannon
+ were made for the instruction of Charles II when a prince. In the wall
+ case observe with other objects two swine feathers, or feather staffs,
+ having one long and two short blades which can be concealed in the
+ shaft, also a German Calendar sword with the saints' days marked in
+ gold, and other swords. Below are two <i>waistcoat</i> cuirasses opening
+ down the front.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the next enclosure on the right is a mounted figure (XVIII) of
+ Charles I when young. The armour is apparently of French make, and is
+ very interesting as being a double suit&mdash;that is, it represents the
+ equipment of the cuirassier or cavalryman of about 1610, and then by
+ removing the helmet and the armour for the arms and legs, and
+ substituting the pott and the short thigh defences (in the small glass
+ case) we have the equipment of the foot soldier as seen in the figures
+ of pikemen on the other side of the room. The small silvered cap and
+ breast and back in another glass case was made for Charles II when
+ prince.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In a table case are a gun and pistol dated respectively 1614 and 1619,
+ made for Charles I when Prince of Wales. The gun is not quite perfect,
+ but the two weapons are the earliest examples of <i>flint locks</i> in
+ the collection. Note also a fine wheel lock of about 1600. The gunner's
+ axe was used for laying cannon, and has on its shaft scales showing the
+ size of cannon balls of stone, iron, lead, and slag. It belonged to the
+ Duke of Brunswick Luneburg. The last enclosure contains a suit (XVII) of
+ richly decorated armour given to Henry Prince of Wales by the Prince de
+ Joinville. This suit, though rich, is of late and inelegant form, as may
+ be seen by observing the breast and the treatment of the feet. In the
+ suit of his brother Prince Charles also will be seen an instance of the
+ decay of the armourer's art, namely, the thigh-pieces, which are marked
+ as though of several pieces of metal whilst being of one rigid piece.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In a small case are unfinished portions of a helmet and gorget, and a
+ gilt and engraved vamplate belonging to a suit of Henry Prince of Wales.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The figures on the opposite side of the room are horsemen and pikemen of
+ the seventeenth century, after which time armour may be said to have
+ ceased to be worn, till at the coronation of George IV in 1820, when the
+ Household Cavalry appeared in cuirasses. In the table cases in this room
+ are odd portions of armour: gorgets, gauntlets, cuisshes, &amp;c., daggers,
+ knives, and swords, including good examples of the Cinquedea, or short
+ broad-bladed sword peculiar to Northern Italy.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In the series of wall cases at the end of both rooms will be found
+ several varieties of helmets, including salades, close helmets, tilting
+ helmets; also morions and cabassets and breasts and backs. Among these
+ observe the fine painted archers' salade, with vizor; two fine Venetian
+ salades, like the ancient Greek helmets, and bearing armourers' stamps;
+ sixteenth-century tilting helmets, with side doors for air; spider
+ helmets, &amp;c. Those on the upper shelves are either false or imitations
+ of real examples. In the case by the door is a helmet made for and worn
+ by the late Emperor Napoleon III (when prince) at the Eglinton
+ Tournament, in 1839.
+</p>
+<p>
+ On the walls are portions of horse armour, bucklers for foot soldiers,
+ and several shields simulating the embossed ornamentation of the
+ sixteenth century.
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Parade</i>.
+</h3>
+<p>
+ The Waterloo Barracks are opposite, built in 1845 on the site of
+ storehouses burnt in 1841. The building of similar character to the
+ right is the Officers' Quarters: between the two a glimpse is obtained
+ of the Martin or Brick Tower, whence Blood stole the crown in 1671.
+ Observe, on the left, the extensive collection of cannons of all ages
+ and countries, including triple guns taken from the French, of the time
+ of Louis XIV, and some curious and grotesque mortars from India.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Observe, on the right, almost adjoining the Barrack, the Chapel of St.
+ Peter "ad Vincula," so called from having been consecrated on that
+ well-known festival of the Latin Church, the 1st of August, probably in
+ the reign of Henry I (1100-1135). The old chapel was burnt in 1512, and
+ the present building erected only in time to receive the bodies of the
+ first victims of the tyranny of Henry VIII. It was considered a Royal
+ Chapel before 1550; the interior is not shown to the public. Here it is,
+ in the memorable words of Stow, writing in the reign of Queen Elizabeth,
+ that there lie before the high altar, "two dukes between two queens, to
+ wit, the Duke of Somerset and the Duke of Northumberland, between Queen
+ Anne and Queen Katharine, all four beheaded." Here also are buried Lady
+ Jane (Grey) and Lord Guildford Dudley, the Duke of Monmouth, and the
+ Scotch lords, Kilmarnock, Balmerino, and Lovat, beheaded for their share
+ in the rebellion of 1745. The last burial in the chapel was that of Sir
+ John Fox Burgoyne, Constable of the Tower, in 1871.
+</p>
+<a name="page32"><!-- placeholder --></a>
+<p>
+ The space in front of the chapel is called Tower Green, and was used as
+ a burial ground; in the middle is a small square plot, paved with
+ granite, showing the site on which stood at rare intervals the scaffold
+ on which private executions took place. It has been specially paved by
+ the orders of Her late Majesty. The following persons are known to have
+ been executed on this spot:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+ 1. Queen Anne Boleyn, second wife of Henry VIII, 19th May, 1536.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 2. Margaret Countess of Salisbury, the last of the old Angevin or
+ Plantagenet family, 27th May, 1541.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 3. Queen Katharine Howard, fifth wife of Henry VIII, 13th February,
+ 1542.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 4. Jane Viscountess Rochford, 13th February, 1542.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 5. Lady Jane (Grey), wife of Lord Guildford Dudley, 12th February, 1554.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 6. Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, 25th February, 1601.
+</p>
+<p>
+ They were all beheaded with an axe except Queen Anne Boleyn, whose head
+ was cut off with a sword by the executioner of St. Omer, brought over
+ for the purpose. The executioner of the Earl of Essex was not able to do
+ his work with less than three strokes, and was mobbed and beaten by the
+ populace on his way home. The bodies of all six were buried in the
+ Chapel of St. Peter.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Lord Hastings was also beheaded on Tower Green by order of the Duke of
+ Gloucester in 1483.
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>The Beauchamp Tower</i>
+</h3>
+<p>
+ is on the west side of Tower Green, facing the White Tower, and is on
+ the inner wall between the Bell Tower on the south and the Devereux
+ Tower on the north, being connected with both by a walk along the
+ parapet. Its present name probably refers to the residence in it as a
+ prisoner of Thomas, third Earl of Warwick, of the Beauchamp family, who
+ was attainted under Richard II in 1397, but restored to his honours and
+ liberty two years later under Henry IV. It is curious that the most
+ interesting associations of the place should be connected with his
+ successors in the earldom. Although built entirely for defensive
+ purposes, we find it thus early used as a prison, and during the two
+ following centuries it seems to have been regarded as one of the most
+ convenient places in which to lodge prisoners of rank, and in
+ consequence many of the most interesting mural inscriptions are to be
+ found in its chambers.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In plan the Beauchamp Tower is semicircular, and it projects eighteen
+ feet beyond the face of the wall. It consists of three storeys, of which
+ the middle one is on a level with the rampart, on which it formerly
+ opened. The whole building dates from the reign of Edward III. We enter
+ at the south-east corner and ascend by a circular staircase to the
+ middle chamber, which is spacious and has a large window, with a
+ fire-place. Here are to be found most of the inscriptions, some having
+ been brought from other chambers. A few are in the entrance passage and
+ on the stair. All are numbered and catalogued. The following&mdash;to which
+ the numbers are appended&mdash;will be found the most interesting:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+ 2. On the ground-floor, near the entrance, ROBART DVDLEY. This was the
+ fifth son of John, Duke of Northumberland, and next brother to Guildford
+ Dudley, the husband of Lady Jane Grey. When his father was brought to
+ the block in 1553 he and his brothers remained in prison here, Robert
+ being condemned to death in 1554. In the following year he was liberated
+ with his elder brother Ambrose, afterwards created Earl of Warwick, and
+ his younger brother Henry. In the first year of Queen Elizabeth he was
+ made Master of the House and elected a Knight of the Garter. In 1563 he
+ was created Earl of Leicester. He died at Cornbury, in Oxfordshire, in
+ 1588.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 8. On the left, at the entrance of the great chamber, is a carved cross,
+ with other religious emblems, with the name and arms of PEVEREL, and the
+ date 1570. It is supposed to have been cut by a Roman Catholic prisoner
+ confined during the reign of Queen Elizabeth.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 13. Over the fire-place this inscription in Latin:&mdash;"The more suffering
+ for Christ in this world the more glory with Christ in the next," &amp;c.
+ This is signed "Arundel, June 22, 1587." This was Philip Howard, son of
+ Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, beheaded in 1573. Philip inherited from his
+ maternal grandfather the earldom of Arundel in 1580. He was a staunch
+ Roman Catholic and was constantly under suspicion of the Government, by
+ which in 1584 he was confined in his own house for a short time. On his
+ liberation he determined to quit the country, but was committed to the
+ Tower in 1585, and died in custody ten years later, having refused
+ release on condition of forsaking his religion. His body was buried in
+ his father's grave in the Chapel of St. Peter, but was eventually
+ removed to Arundel. He left other inscriptions, one in the window (79),
+ and one on the staircase (91), dated 1587.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 14. On the right of the fire-place is an elaborate piece of sculpture
+ (Pl. XII), which will be examined with peculiar interest as a memorial
+ of the four brothers Dudley: Ambrose (created Earl of Warwick 1561),
+ Guildford (beheaded 1554), Robert (created Earl of Leicester 1563), and
+ Henry (killed at the siege of St. Quintin, 1558), carved by the eldest,
+ John (called Earl of Warwick), who died in 1554. Under a bear and a lion
+ supporting a ragged staff is the name "JOHN DVDLE," and surrounding them
+ is a wreath of roses (for Ambrose), oak leaves (for Robert,
+ <i>robur</i>, an oak), gillyflowers (for Guildford), and honeysuckle
+ (for Henry). Below are four lines, one of them incomplete, alluding to
+ the device and its meaning. It is on record that the Lieutenant of the
+ Tower was allowed 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a day each for the diet of these
+ captive brothers.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 33. This is one of several inscriptions relating to the Poole or Pole
+ family (see also Nos. 45, 47, 52, 56, 57). They were the sons of the
+ Countess of Salisbury, by Sir Richard Pole, K.G. No. 45 contains the
+ name of "GEFFRYE POOLE 1562." He was the second son and gave evidence
+ against his elder brother, Lord Montagu, who was beheaded in 1539.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 48. "IANE." This interesting inscription, repeated also in the window
+ (85), has always been supposed to refer to the Lady Jane Grey, daughter
+ of the Duke of Suffolk, and wife of Guildford Dudley, fourth son of the
+ Duke of Northumberland. A second repetition in another part of the room
+ was unfortunately obliterated in the last century when a new window was
+ made to fit this chamber for a mess-room. It is sometimes, but
+ erroneously, supposed that the name was carved by this Queen of ten days
+ herself, but it is improbable that she was ever imprisoned in the
+ Beauchamp Tower. She is known to have lived in the house of Partridge,
+ the Gaoler. It is much more probable that the two inscriptions were
+ placed on the wall either by Lord Guildford Dudley, her husband, or by
+ his brother, whose large device has been described above.
+</p>
+<p>
+ 66. In the window is the rebus, or monogram, of Thomas Abel: upon a bell
+ is the letter A. This was Dr. Abel, a faithful servant to Queen
+ Katharine of Arragon, first wife of King Henry VIII. He acted as her
+ chaplain during the progress of the divorce, and by his determined
+ advocacy offended the King. For denying the supremacy he was condemned
+ and executed in 1540.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The visitor who has time to spare will find many other records of this
+ kind in the Beauchamp Tower, the oldest of all being the name of "Thomas
+ Talbot 1462" (89), supposed to have been concerned in the Wars of the
+ Roses. Emerging again upon Tower Green we see on the right the
+</p>
+<h3>
+ <i>Lieutenant's Lodgings</i> (Pl. VI),
+</h3>
+<p>
+ now called the King's House. The Hall door, where a sentry stands, is
+ the same through which Lord Nithisdale escaped in female dress, the
+ night before he was to have been beheaded, 1716. Some parts of the house
+ are of great antiquity, among them the rooms in the Bell Tower, those on
+ the upper storey which open on the leads and the rampart known as The
+ Prisoners' Walk, and the Council Room, a handsome apartment containing a
+ curious monument of the Gunpowder Plot. In this room Guy Fawkes and his
+ associates were examined, 1605. The interior of the King's House is not
+ shown to the public. Next to it is the house of the Gentleman Gaoler, or
+ Chief Warder. It was in this house that Lady Jane Grey lived when a
+ prisoner, and from its windows saw her husband go forth from the
+ adjoining Beauchamp Tower to his execution on Tower Hill, and his
+ headless body brought to the chapel "in a carre," while the scaffold was
+ being prepared for her own death on the Green in front, which took place
+ on the same day, Monday, 12th February, 1554.
+</p>
+<hr>
+<p>
+ NOTE.&mdash;Visitors who wish to know more about the Tower are referred to
+ the works of Bayley, of Brayley and Britton, of Doyne C. Bell, of G.T.
+ Clark, and of Hepworth Dixon.
+</p>
+<h3>
+ THE END.
+</h3>
+
+
+<div style="height: 4em;"><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+<h4>
+ DRILL AND TRAINING (Number of days in each year).
+</h4>
+<table width="100%" summary="Drill and Training" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0">
+<tr><td colspan="6" style="border-bottom: solid thick;">&nbsp;</td>
+<tr><td rowspan="2" style="border-bottom: solid thin;">ARM OF THE SERVICE</td>
+<td colspan="4" style="border-bottom: solid thin; border-left: solid thin;">In first year.</td>
+<td style="border-bottom: solid thin; border-left: solid thin;">In<br> subsequent<br> years.</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td style="border-bottom: solid thin; border-left: solid thin;">Recruit<br> Drill. </td>
+<td style="border-bottom: solid thin; border-left: solid thin;"> Musketry<br> or Gunnery<br> Drill. </td>
+<td style="border-bottom: solid thin; border-left: solid thin;"> Usual<br> Annual<br> Training </td>
+<td style="border-bottom: solid thin; border-left: solid thin;"> Total<br> during<br> the year. </td>
+<td style="border-bottom: solid thin; border-left: solid thin;"> Usual<br> Annual<br> Training</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: left;">Artillery<br>Infantry<br>Medical </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 49 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 14 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 27 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 90 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 27</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: left;"> Engineers</td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;">&nbsp;</td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;">&nbsp;</td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;">&nbsp;</td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;">&nbsp;</td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: left;"> &nbsp;&nbsp;Fortress </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 63 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 14 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 41 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 118 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 41</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: left;">&nbsp;&nbsp;Submarine Miners </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 63 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 14 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 55 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 132 </td>
+<td style="border-left: solid thin;"> 55</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="6" style="border-top: solid thick;">&nbsp;</td>
+</table>
+
+<h4>
+ <b>BOUNTY, PAY, EXTRA DUTY PAY, AND ENGINEER PAY, &amp;c.</b>
+</h4>
+<p>
+ During the first year of service the rate of Bounty of a Militiaman
+ varies from <b>10s.</b> to <b>£2.</b>
+</p>
+<p>
+ A Training Bounty of <b>£1 10s.</b> is issued on the completion of each
+ Annual Training. Ex-Army N.C.O.'s, who are appointed Sergeants, receive
+ a training bounty of <b>£3</b>. Non-training bounty of <b>£3</b> is
+ issued in sums of <b>£1</b> on each of the following dates&mdash;1st October,
+ 1st December, and 1st February, to men who have completed two trainings
+ or the equivalent thereof. A Special bounty of <b>£1</b> is also given
+ on the completion of an authorised course of instruction other than
+ during the 28 days immediately preceding the training of the unit.
+</p>
+<p>
+ During Drill and training, N.C.O.'s and men receive Army rates of pay of
+ their rank, also rations; and provided they are 19 years of age and have
+ attended one training, or the equivalent thereof, messing allowance at
+ <b>3d.</b> a day.
+</p>
+<p>
+ In addition to the ordinary pay, extra-duty pay varying from 2<i>d.</i>
+ to 6<i>d.</i> per day will be issued during the annual training to non
+ commissioned officers and men of the Militia for the performance of
+ certain specified duties.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Engineer Pay varying from <b>4d.</b> to <b>2s.</b> a day, will also be
+ allowed to non commissioned officers and men of the Militia Engineers
+ according to their qualifications.
+</p>
+<p>
+ Corps pay, varying from <b>4d.</b> to <b>1s.</b> a day, is granted to
+ N.C.O.'s and men of the Royal Army Medical Corps, who are reported as
+ duly qualified.
+</p>
+<h4>
+ <b>GENERAL ADVANTAGES OF THE MILITIA.</b>
+</h4>
+<p>
+ A Pamphlet containing detailed information as to the Conditions of
+ Service in the Militia and in the Reserve Division of the Militia can be
+ obtained free of charge at any Post Office in the United Kingdom, from
+ any Sergeant Instructor of Volunteers, or other Recruiter.
+</p>
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-01.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-01.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate I. Middle Tower."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-02.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-02.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate II. Legge's Mount. Devereux Tower. Beauchamp Tower.
+Yeoman Gaoler's House. Site of Drawbridge. Gateway of Byward Tower."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-03.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-03.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate III. Bloody Tower and Gateway. Wakefield Tower."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-04.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-04.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate IV. St. Thomas's Tower and Traitors' Gate."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-05.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-05.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate V. Cradle Tower and Wall of Outer Ward. Lanthorn
+Tower Restored. Curtain Wall of Inner Ward."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-06.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-06.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate VI. Tower Green. Queen's House. Yeoman Gaoler's Lodgings."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-07.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-07.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate VII. White Tower from the North-west."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-08.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-08.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate VIII. St. John's Chapel--Interior."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-09.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-09.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate IX. Middle Tower and Gate. Byward Tower. Bell
+Tower. Queen's House."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-10.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-10.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate X. Lieutenant's Lodging or Queen's House. Bloody
+Tower. Constable's Garden. St. Thomas's Tower and Traitors' Gate."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-11.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-11.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate XI. New Lanthorn Tower. Old Armoury. Salt Tower.
+Cradle Tower. Well Tower. Irongate Tower."></a>
+</p>
+
+<hr>
+
+<p class="figure">
+<a href="images/plate-12.jpg">
+<img src="images/plate-12.jpg" width="100%"
+alt="Plate XII."></a>
+</p>
+
+<div style="height: 6em;"><br><br><br><br><br><br></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Authorised Guide to the Tower of London
+by W. J. Loftie
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWER OF LONDON ***
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Authorised Guide to the Tower of London, by W. J. Loftie
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Authorised Guide to the Tower of London
+
+Author: W. J. Loftie
+
+Release Date: September 11, 2004 [EBook #13436]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWER OF LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Audrey Longhurst, David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORISED GUIDE TO THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+
+
+BY W.J. LOFTIE, B.A., F.S.A.
+
+REVISED EDITION.
+
+WITH TWELVE VIEWS AND TWO PLANS, AND A DESCRIPTION OF THE ARMOURY,
+BY THE VISCOUNT DILLON, P.S.A.
+
+(_Curator of the Tower Armouries._)
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+LONDON:
+
+PRINTED FOR HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE,
+BY HARRISON AND SONS, ST. MARTIN'S LANE,
+PRINTERS IN ORDINARY TO HIS MAJESTY.
+_AND SOLD AT THE TOWER_.
+
+1904
+
+_Reprinted_ 1907.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRICE ONE PENNY.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: PLAN OF THE TOWER.]
+
+
+
+
+THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL SKETCH.
+
+The Tower of London was founded in 1078, by William the Conqueror, for
+the purpose of protecting and controlling the city. To make room for his
+chief buildings he removed two bastions of the old wall of London, and
+encroached slightly upon the civic boundaries. Part therefore of the
+Tower is in London, and part in Middlesex, but it forms, with its
+surrounding fortifications, a precinct in itself which belongs neither
+to the city nor the county. It covers an area of 18 acres within the
+Garden rails.
+
+The present buildings are partly of the Norman period; but architecture
+of almost all the styles which have flourished in England may be found
+within the walls. It is well to remember that though the Tower is no
+longer a place of great military strength it has in time past been a
+fortress, a palace, and a prison, and to view it rightly we must regard
+it in this threefold aspect.
+
+It was first built as a fortress, and has a central Keep, called the
+"White Tower." The Inner Ward is defended by a wall, flanked by thirteen
+towers, the entrance to it being on the south side under the Bloody
+Tower. The Outer Ward is defended by a second wall, flanked by six
+towers on the river face (_see_ Pl. IX, X and XI), and by three
+semicircular bastions on the north face. A Ditch or "Moat," now dry,
+encircles the whole, crossed at the south-western angle by a stone
+bridge, leading to the "Byward Tower" from the "Middle Tower," a gateway
+which had formerly an outwork, called the "Lion Tower."
+
+The Tower was occupied as a palace by all our Kings and Queens down to
+Charles II. It was the custom for each monarch to lodge in the Tower
+before his coronation, and to ride in procession to Westminster through
+the city. The Palace buildings stood eastward of the "Bloody Tower."
+
+The security of the walls made it convenient as a State prison, the
+first known prisoner being Ralf Flambard, Bishop of Durham, who had been
+active under William Rufus in pushing on the buildings. From that time
+the Tower was seldom without some captive, English or foreign, of rank
+and importance.
+
+In the Tudor period the "Green" within the Tower was used on very rare
+occasions for executions.[1] Condemned prisoners were usually beheaded
+on
+
+[Footnote 1: See page 32.]
+
+_Tower Hill_.
+
+Emerging from the Mark Lane railway station, the visitor obtains an
+excellent view of the great fortress. Within the railed space of Trinity
+Square, the first permanent scaffold on Tower Hill was set up in the
+reign of Edward III, but the first execution recorded here was that of
+Sir Simon Burley in 1388. Here also were beheaded, among others, Dudley,
+the minister of Henry VII (1510), his son the Duke of Northumberland
+(1553), his grandson, Lord Guildford Dudley (1554), Cromwell, Earl of
+Essex (1540), More and Fisher (1535), Surrey (1547), and his son,
+Norfolk (1572), Strafford (1641), and Archbishop Laud (1645), and the
+Scotch lords in 1716, 1746, and 1747, the last being Simon, Lord Lovat.
+
+The Tower moat is immediately before us. It is drained and used as a
+parade ground. Beyond it, as we approach the entrance, we have a good
+view of the fortifications. On the extreme left are the Brass Mount and
+North Bastions. In the middle is Legge's Mount. To the right is the
+entrance gateway. The highest building behind is the White Tower, easily
+distinguished by its four turrets. In front of it are the Devereux,
+Beauchamp, and Bell Towers, the residences of the Lieutenant of the
+Tower and of the Yeoman Gaoler being in the gabled and red tiled houses
+between the last two. From one of these windows Lady Jane Grey saw her
+husband's headless body brought in from Tower Hill, by the route we now
+traverse; and the leads are still called Queen Elizabeth's Walk, as she
+used them during her captivity in 1554.
+
+
+_The Lion Tower_
+
+stood where the Ticket Office and Refreshment Room are now. Here the
+visitor obtains a pass which admits him to see the Regalia, or Crown
+Jewels, and another for the Armoury. In the Middle Ages and down to 1834
+the Royal Menagerie was lodged in a number of small buildings near the
+Lion Tower, whence its name was derived and the saying arose, "seeing
+the lions," for a visit to the Tower. Where the wooden gate now stands,
+there was a small work called the Conning Gate. It marked the boundaries
+of Middlesex and the Tower Precinct. Here prisoners were handed over to
+the Sheriff.
+
+
+_The Middle Tower_ (Pl. I)
+
+was originally built by Henry III, but has been entirely refaced.
+Through its archway we reach the stone bridge, which had formerly in the
+centre a drawbridge of wood. We next reach
+
+
+_The Byward Tower_ (Pl. II),
+
+the great Gatehouse of the Outer Ward. It is in part the work of Henry
+III, and in part that of Richard II. Observe the vaulting and the dark
+recesses on the southern side. We pass on the left
+
+
+_The Bell Tower_ (Pl. IX),
+
+which may safely be attributed to the reign of King John. Here Fisher,
+Bishop of Rochester, was imprisoned by Henry VIII, and the Princess
+Elizabeth by her sister, Queen Mary. The "Curtain Wall," of great
+antiquity, is pierced by the windows of the Lieutenant's Lodgings, now
+called "The King's House," and one of these windows lights the Council
+Chamber, where Guy Fawkes and his fellow conspirators were tried and
+condemned, 1605.
+
+
+_The Traitors' Gate_ (Pl. IV),
+
+with St. Thomas's Tower, is now on our right. Observe the masonry which
+supports the wide span of the arch. This gate, when the Thames was more
+of a highway than it is at present, was often used as an entrance to the
+Tower. St. Thomas' Tower was built by Henry III, and contains a small
+chapel or oratory dedicated to St. Thomas of Canterbury. In later times
+it was found convenient as a landing place for prisoners who had been
+tried at Westminster; and here successively Edward Duke of Buckingham
+(1521), Sir Thomas More, Queen Anne Boleyn, Cromwell Earl of Essex,
+Queen Katharine Howard (1542) Seymour Duke of Somerset (1551), Lady Jane
+Grey, the Princess (afterwards Queen) Elizabeth, Devereux Earl of Essex
+(1601), and James Duke of Monmouth, passed under the arch on their way
+to a prison or the scaffold. Opposite is
+
+
+_The Bloody Tower_ (Pl. VIII),
+
+which is believed to derive its name from the suicide in it of Henry
+Percy, eighth Earl of Northumberland, in 1585. Under this Tower we enter
+the Inner Ward. It dates from the reigns of Edward III and Richard II,
+and was called by its present name as early as 1597, being popularly
+believed to be the scene of the murder of Edward V and his brother the
+Duke of York, as well as of Henry VI. It was originally known as the
+Garden Tower, as its upper storey opens on that part of the parade
+ground which was formerly the Constable's Garden. Here Sir Walter
+Raleigh was allowed to walk during his long imprisonment, and could
+sometimes converse over the wall with the passers-by. Observe the
+grooves for working the massive portcullis, which was raised by chains
+and a windlass. These still exist on the upper floor. Immediately
+adjoining the gateway on the east is the
+
+
+_Wakefield Tower_ (Pl. III).
+
+Its lower storey is the oldest building next to the Keep; it was, with
+the Lanthorn (rebuilt on the old foundation in 1884-5) and Cold Harbour
+Towers, part of the original Norman plan. The upper storey was rebuilt
+by Henry III, who made it the entrance to his palace on the east. The
+Great Hall, memorable as the scene of Anne Boleyn's trial, adjoined it,
+but was pulled down during the Commonwealth. In 1360 the records of the
+kingdom, which had previously been kept in the White Tower, were removed
+here, and this is called in ancient surveys sometimes the Record, and
+sometimes the Hall Tower. The present name is said to be derived from
+the imprisonment of Yorkists after the Lancastrian victory at Wakefield
+in 1460. It is used now for the safe keeping and exhibition of
+
+
+_The Crown Jewels_.
+
+The visitor who has obtained a ticket passes up a short stair and finds
+himself in a well-lighted circular apartment in the Wakefield Tower.
+The deep window recess opposite the door was fitted up as a small chapel,
+with Aumbry, Piscina, and Sedilia. Tradition says that Henry VI used it
+for his devotions when a prisoner in the Tower, and was here murdered.
+In the centre, in a large double case, are arranged the splendid objects
+which form the English Regalia. The following are the most remarkable:--
+
+The King's Crown. It occupies the highest place in the case. It was
+constructed in 1838 for her late Majesty's coronation, the principal
+jewels being taken from older crowns and the royal collection. Among
+them, observe the large ruby given to the Black Prince in Spain in 1367.
+Henry V wore it in his helmet at Agincourt. With seventy-five large
+brilliants it forms a Maltese cross on the front of the diadem.
+Immediately below it is a splendid sapphire, purchased by George IV.
+Seven other sapphires and eight emeralds, all of large size, with many
+hundred diamonds, decorate the band and arches, and the cross on the
+summit is formed of a rose cut sapphire and four very fine brilliants.
+The whole contains 2818 diamonds, 297 pearls, and many other jewels, and
+weighs thirty-nine ounces and five pennyweights. The Crown was enlarged
+for His Majesty Edward VII.
+
+The Crown made for the coronation of Mary of Modena, the second wife of
+James II. This is probably one of the oldest of the crowns, and contains
+some fine jewels.
+
+The Crown made for Queen Mary II, for her coronation with William III.
+
+St. Edward's Crown, which appears to be the model by which all the later
+crowns have been fashioned. It was made for the coronation of Charles
+II.
+
+The Prince of Wales's coronet, with a single arch.
+
+The Orb, of gold, with a cross and bands of jewels.
+
+St. Edward's Staff, a sceptre of gold, 4 feet 7 inches in length,
+surmounted by an orb which is supposed to contain a fragment of the true
+cross.
+
+The Royal Sceptre.
+
+The Sceptre of Equity, surmounted by a dove.
+
+Small sceptres, one of ivory.
+
+Besides these magnificent regal emblems, which chiefly date from the
+Restoration, when the places of the ancient objects, destroyed during
+the Commonwealth, were supplied as nearly as possible, observe, also--
+
+The Anointing Spoon, the sole relic of the ancient regalia, of silver
+gilt.
+
+The Eagle, for the anointing oil.
+
+The Golden Salt-cellar, a model of the White Tower.
+
+The Baptismal Font, used at the christening of the Sovereign's children,
+of silver, double gilt.
+
+The Sacramental Plate used at the coronation.
+
+A large silver-gilt wine-fountain, of good workmanship, presented to
+Charles II by the Corporation of Plymouth.
+
+In a case in the large recess, _Curtana_, the Sword of Mercy,
+pointless, the blade 40 inches long.
+
+Two Swords of Justice, Ecclesiastical and Civil.
+
+Also the State Sword offered at the coronation of His Majesty Edward
+VII, with richly jewelled hilt and scabbard.
+
+In the central case is a model of the Koh-i-noor in its original
+setting.
+
+In the cases in the recesses are also exhibited the insignia of the
+British and Indian orders of Knighthood, their collars, stars, and
+badges, and the Victoria Cross.
+
+Leaving the Wakefield Tower, we descend the slope and turn to the left
+near the site of what was the Cold Harbour Tower, a name the exact
+meaning of which is unknown. The original Jewel House was behind it to
+the east, forming with the south side of the White Tower, and portions
+of the palace, a small courtyard, in which some remains of the ancient
+buildings may still be traced. On a raised platform is the gun-carriage
+and limber on which the body of Her Majesty the late Queen Victoria
+was conveyed on the occasion of her funeral, 2nd February, 1901, from
+Windsor Railway Station to St. George's Chapel. This was placed here by
+order of the Houses of Parliament. We now reach a doorway made in the
+south wall of the
+
+
+_White Tower_ (Pl. VII),
+
+or Keep, the oldest part of the whole fortress.
+
+[Illustration: WHITE TOWER. Plan of Middle Floor.]
+
+The Conqueror, before he entered London, formed a camp, eastward of
+the city, and probably on part of the ground now occupied by the Tower.
+Immediately after his coronation he commenced the works here. At first,
+no doubt, they consisted of a ditch and palisade, and were formed partly
+on the lower bastions of the old City Wall, first built by the Romans,
+and rebuilt in 885 by King Alfred. The work of building the Keep was
+entrusted to Gundulf, a monk of Bec, in Normandy, who was shortly
+afterwards made Bishop of Rochester, and who probably commenced
+operations in 1078. In 1097, under William Rufus, the works were still
+going on and the inner ward was enclosed. A great storm in 1091 damaged
+the outworks. Ralf Flambard, Bishop of Durham, being imprisoned in the
+Tower by Henry I, contrived to escape, 1101. During the wars between
+Stephen and Matilda, the Earl of Essex was Constable of the Tower, and
+obtained a grant even of the City of London from the Empress. When he
+fell into Stephen's hands the Tower formed his ransom, and the citizens
+regained their ancient liberty. When Richard I was absent on the
+Crusade, his regent, Longchamp, resided in the Tower, of which he
+greatly enlarged the precincts by trespasses on the land of the city and
+of St. Katharine's Hospital. He surrendered the Tower to the citizens,
+led by John, in 1191. The church of St. Peter was in existence before
+1210, and the whole Tower was held in pledge for the completion of Magna
+Charta in 1215 and 1216. In 1240 Henry III had the chapel of St. John
+decorated with painting and stained glass, and the royal apartments in
+the Keep were whitewashed, as well as the whole exterior. In the reign
+of Edward III it begins to assume its modern name, as "La Blanche Tour."
+During the wars with France many illustrious prisoners were lodged here,
+as David, King of Scots; John, King of France; Charles of Blois, and
+John de Vienne, governor of Calais, and his twelve brave burgesses. In
+the Tower Richard II signed his abdication, 1399. The Duke of Orleans,
+taken at Agincourt, was lodged by Henry V in the White Tower. From that
+time the Beauchamp Tower was more used as a prison, but it is probable
+that some of the Kentish rebels, taken with Wyatt in 1554, slept in the
+recesses of the crypt of the Chapel, long known as Queen Elizabeth's
+Armoury. In 1663, and later years down to 1709, structural repairs
+were carried out under the superintendence of Sir Christopher Wren,
+who replaced the Norman window openings with others of a classical
+character. Remains of four old windows are visible on the river side.
+A few years ago some disfiguring annexes and sheds were removed, as
+well as an external staircase of wood, which led up from the old Horse
+Armoury and entered the crypt by a window.
+
+The White Tower is somewhat irregular in plan, for though it looks so
+square from the river its four sides are all of different lengths, and
+three of its corners are not right angles. The side towards which we
+approach is 107 feet from north to south. The south side measures
+118 feet. It has four turrets at the corners, three of them square,
+the fourth, that on the north-east, being circular. From floor to
+battlements it is 90 feet in height. The original entrance was probably
+on the south side, and high above the ground, being reached as usual in
+Norman castles by an external stair which could be easily removed in
+time of danger. Another or the same entrance led from an upper storey
+of the palace. The interior is of the plainest and sternest character.
+Every consideration is postponed to that of obtaining the greatest
+strength and security. The outer walls vary in thickness from 15 feet
+in the lower to 11 in the upper storey. The whole building is crossed
+by one wall, which rises from base to summit and divides it into a
+large western and a smaller eastern portion. The eastern part is further
+subdivided by a wall which cuts off St. John's Chapel, its crypt, and
+its subcrypt, each roof of which is massively vaulted. There is no
+vaulting but a wooden floor between the storeys of the other part.
+There are several comparatively modern entrances.
+
+A short external stair leads to a staircase in the thickness of the wall
+on the south side, by which we approach the Chapel. A brass plate on the
+right refers to some children's bones found in the reign of Charles II.
+They were identified, somewhat conjecturally, with the remains of Edward
+V and his brother who disappeared so mysteriously at the accession of
+Richard III, and were removed to Westminster Abbey in 1678. Ascending
+the stair we come to the passage which led from the palace to
+
+
+_The Chapel of St. John_ (Pl. VIII).
+
+The chapel is the largest and most complete now remaining in any Norman
+castle, and must have seen the devotions of William the Conqueror and
+his family. It is 55 feet 6 inches long by 31 feet wide, and 32 feet
+high, and is vaulted with a plain arch. There are four massive columns
+on either side and four in the apse. The south aisle, as we have seen,
+communicated with the palace, and an upper aisle, or gallery, similarly
+opened into the
+
+_State Apartments_
+
+of the White Tower, which we reach by a circuitous route through a
+passage round the walls, only wide enough for one person at a time, and
+a circular, or newel, stair in the north-east turret, gaining at every
+turn glimpses of the extensive stores of small arms. The second floor
+is divided into two large apartments, not reckoning the chapel; in the
+eastern wall of the smaller or Banqueting Chamber, is a fire-place, the
+only one till recently discovered in any Norman Keep. A second and third
+have of late years been found in the floor below, but the whole building
+was designed for security, not for comfort and in spite of the use of
+wooden partitions and tapestry must have been miserable as a place of
+residence. On leaving St. John's Chapel we enter
+
+
+_The Armoury_.
+
+In connection with the Armouries, it should be noted that the present
+collection of arms and armour had its origin in that formed at Greenwich
+by King Henry VIII, who received many presents of this nature from the
+Emperor Maximilian and others. He also obtained from the Emperor several
+skilled armourers, who worked in his pay and wore his livery. English
+iron in former days was so inferior, or the art of working it was so
+little known, that even as far back as the days of Richard II German
+and Italian armourers were the chief workmen in Europe. It should be
+remembered that the earlier kind of armour chiefly consisted of quilted
+garments, further fortified by small pieces of leather, horn, or metal.
+So far from the invention of gunpowder having driven out armour, if we
+may credit the story of the earliest employment of that explosive, it
+was at a date when plate armour was hardly in use, certainly not in
+large pieces. What actually did cause the disuse of armour was the
+change in ideas as to the movement of troops and the large quantity of
+armour which was made in the sixteenth century, and consequently the
+inferior make. In England the disuse of armour seems to have begun
+earlier than on the Continent, but at no time were the ordinary soldiers
+covered with metal as seen in Armouries and other places. The weight,
+and what was more important, the cost, prevented such a thing. It was
+only the rich who could afford to pay for and had horses to carry
+armour, who wore much of what we see now. Again, armour for war was
+much lighter and less complete than that used for the tilt yard, where
+protection to the wearer was more considered than his ability to hurt
+his opponent. The greater substance of such armour and its frequent
+enrichment with engraving and gilding no doubt led to the preservation
+of this class of defence. Chain mail suffered extremely by rust and
+neglect, and even plate armour was subject to the same deterioration.
+It is consequently not to be wondered at that little or no armour of a
+date previous to the fifteenth century is to be seen in this collection.
+On Henry VIII's death the first inventory of the Royal collection was
+made, and this includes the armour and arms at Greenwich, and arms and
+artillery at the Tower of London which, from the time of Henry VIII, was
+one of the sights for foreigners of distinction. In the troubles of the
+Civil War the arms were drawn out, and there is no doubt much, both of
+arms and armour, was used and lost. The Protector took one suit, and it
+was not till 1660 that the armour, which had meanwhile been brought to
+London, was collected, and, with the weapons still in the store, were
+formed into a kind of museum. It is to that period that may be traced
+most of the grotesque stories associated with the collection. At various
+subsequent periods additions were made to the collection, and it was
+arranged in such manner as suited the knowledge of the day. Series of
+figures of kings of England and famous persons were made and added to or
+changed on the death of the sovereign. In later times the whole has been
+arranged by Sir Samuel Meyrick. Mr. Hewitt, and Mr. Planche, and in 1859
+Mr. Hewitt drew up the first catalogue of the contents.
+
+The mounted figures from 1826 till 1883 stood in a long gallery
+adjoining the south side of the Tower, but at the latter date this was
+pulled down, and the figures removed to the top floor. Within the last
+few years the floor below has been used for the later arms, but the
+lighting of the rooms and their shape, with various other causes,
+prevent any strictly chronological arrangements of the collection,
+many objects of which also belong to long periods of time.
+
+The arms and armour are now placed on the two upper floors of the White
+Tower, the earlier weapons and all the armour, being on the top floor,
+while the later weapons and the Indian arms and armour, with various
+personal relics, are placed on what is the third stage or second floor.
+To this the visitor ascends by a circular staircase in the south front
+of the Tower. At the foot observe a brass plate recording the finding in
+1674 of the supposed remains of the "Princes in the Tower," Edward V and
+his brother Richard Duke of York. The visitor then enters the Chapel of
+St. John, and on leaving passes into the smaller of the two rooms on
+this floor.
+
+At the end of the room is a Persian horse armour of brass scales
+connected by chain mail. Near this is the quilted armour of the Burmese
+General Maha Bundoola, killed in 1824. At the other end of the room is a
+large bell from Burmah, presented by the late General Sir William Gomme,
+G.C.B., and near it are two figures with Japanese armour, one of them
+presented to Charles II when prince by the Mogul. It is interesting as
+being one of the earliest examples of Eastern armour which has an
+authentic record of its presence in this country, and it also exhibits
+the persistence in early forms so common in the East. The cases on
+either hand contain weapons, helmets, and armour from most parts of our
+Indian Empire, as well as weapons from Cabul, Persia, Africa, America,
+and the South Seas. Some of these were presented by the Honourable East
+India Company, some were acquired by purchase after the Great Exhibition
+of 1851, and others have been added at various times. In the centre of
+the room are models showing the Tower buildings in the years 1842 and
+1866.
+
+The Large Room is now entered, and on the left is a case containing
+firearms, hand grenades, and a series of the _rifled_ arms in use
+in the British Army since 1801. These include the two Baker rifles of
+1801 and 1807; the Brunswick rifle, 1836; the Minie rifle, 1851; the
+Enfield rifle musket, 1855; the Snider, 1865; the Martini-Henry, 1871;
+and the Lee-Metford magazine rifle. On the right, between two grotesque
+figures, called Gin and Beer, from the entrance to the Buttery of the
+old Palace of Greenwich, is a case containing executioners' swords
+(foreign), thumb-screws, the Scavenger's Daughter for confining the
+neck, hands, and feet, bilboes for ship use, and thumb-screws. Observe
+also the so-called "Collar taken from the Spanish Armada," which however
+was here in 1547, and has been in later times filled with lead to make
+it more terrible. It was only a collar for detention of ordinary
+prisoners. A conjectural model of the rack is also shown, but the only
+pictorial authority for this instrument (at no time a legal punishment)
+is a woodcut in Foxe's Martyrs, the illustrations for which were drawn
+from German sources.
+
+On the left hand are cases of European firearms of the first half of
+the present century, and two cannon made for the Duke of Gloucester,
+the son of Queen Anne. In the S.E. corner, on a platform, are several
+early cannon, including one, and part of another, from the wreck of
+the _Mary Rose_, sunk in action with the French off Spithead in 1545.
+These display the early mode of construction of such weapons, namely;
+bars of iron longitudinally welded together and encircled by hoops of
+the same metal. On the window side in the recesses are wall pieces,
+which belonged to the Honourable East India Company. The figure of Queen
+Elizabeth is supposed to represent her as on her way to St. Paul's
+Cathedral after the destruction of the Spanish Armada. Near the lift are
+partizans carried by the Yeomen of the Guard, and round the pillars are
+the sergeants' halberds used in the Army till about 1830. Observe the
+kettledrums captured at the battle of Blenheim, 1704.
+
+On the left hand observe the beheading axe, which has been here since
+1687, also the block on which Lord Lovat, in 1747, lost his head at one
+stroke for the share he took in the attempt of the Pretender in 1745.
+
+Beyond this, against the wall, is a model by John Bell of a monument for
+the Great Duke of Wellington. It was presented by the late Sir Daniel
+Lysons, Constable of the Tower, 1890-1898. Still on the left hand, in a
+glass case, is the soldier's cloak on which General Wolfe expired in the
+moment of victory, at Quebec, 1759.
+
+Beyond, in another case, is the uniform worn as Constable of the Tower
+by the Great Duke of Wellington from 1826 until his death, in 1852.
+
+Near this is a portion of the wooden pump of the _Mary Rose_, sunk
+in action off the Isle of Wight in 1545.
+
+In a case at the end of the room is a mass of fused gun flints, a relic
+of the fire which in 1841 destroyed the Great Store in the Tower and
+many thousand stand of arms, cannon, &c.
+
+The staircase in the S.W. corner is now ascended leading to the great
+upper chamber, generally known as the Council Chamber, 95 feet by 40
+feet, and, like the smaller room, 21 feet high. Round this top floor
+runs a passage cut in the thickness of the walls, with numerous openings
+inwards opposite the windows, and widening somewhat when forming as
+it does the triforium of St. John's Chapel. At the entrance are cases
+containing velvet-covered brigandines and canvas-covered jacks, garments
+which were much used in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, as giving
+protection by means of numerous small plates of metal disposed between
+the thicknesses of the material covering and lining them, and also great
+flexibility. In the cases on the right hand are specimens of chain mail
+in form of hoods, coats, sleeves, &c, mostly, if not all, of Eastern
+origin. Observe also some bronze swords and other very early weapons.
+
+Round the walls of the two rooms are arranged the various staff weapons
+used in England and the continent. In the first enclosure on the left
+are cases in which are ancient bronze tools, weapons, and ornaments from
+various localities, stone implements and weapons, and a suit of bronze
+armour from Cumae, an ancient Greek settlement near Naples. In the centre
+of the enclosure are grouped many varieties of staff weapons of the
+fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries. Among them are boar
+spears for the chase and for war, halberds, partizans, bills, glaives,
+holy water sprinkles (a staff with a ball with spikes at its extremity),
+and the 18 foot pikes of the Civil War period.
+
+The first case on the left contains a fine archer's salade with its
+original lining, from the de Cosson collection. A Venetian salade, with
+the stamp of the maker of the Missaglia family, a heavy salade for
+jousting, a combed morion and the tilting helmet of Sir Henry Lee, K.G.,
+Master of the Armouries to Queen Elizabeth and James I. In the lower
+case are finely engraved and parcel gilt chamfrons for horses' heads, a
+gilt vamplate for the tilting lance belonging to Lord Chancellor Hatton,
+an officer's gorget of the time of Queen Anne, and various pieces of
+rich armour.
+
+In the window recess behind are shields and horns. In the next enclosure
+are three foot figures of the end of the fifteenth century and
+commencement of the sixteenth century; the first holds a long-handled
+axe as used for encounters on foot in _champ clos_. The second
+holds a two-handled sword. The third suit is enriched with engraving,
+and was formerly parcel gilt, but the helmet does not belong to the
+suit.
+
+In the centre of the room is an equestrian figure (III), the man wearing
+a fine early sixteenth-century suit of armour, bearing the Nuremberg
+stamp, and the horse protected by a barb richly repousse, engraved, and
+formerly silvered. The designs on this display the Burgundian cross
+ragule and the flint and steel. The steel or briquet is to be seen also
+in the hinges and in the metal coverings for the reins. It will be
+remembered that this design forms the _motif_ of the collar of the
+Golden Fleece.
+
+The next equestrian figure (IV) shows the fluted, or as it was called
+crested, armour, of about 1500. The horse armour is also fluted. On the
+right, in the centre of the room, are two armours which belonged to
+Henry VIII. Of these the first (XXVIII) is that formerly described as
+"rough from the hammer," though it has been milled or _glazed_ and
+no hammer marks are visible. It is a complete suit for fighting on
+foot in the lists, and comfort and ability to move about, have been
+sacrificed to perfect protection. The suit weighs about 93 lbs., and
+is composed of no less than 235 separate pieces of metal. Some details
+of construction point to a Spanish influence in the style. The second
+figure (XXIX), which wants the leg armour, is of the kind known as a
+tonlet, and has a skirt of horizontal lames engraved. The helmet bears
+the well-known stamp of the Missaglia family of armourers, and is very
+curious and massive. This armour is also for fighting on foot in
+_champ clos_ or the lists.
+
+The next suit (VI) on the left is one of Henry VIII, and has been parcel
+gilt; the weight of the man's armour is 81 lbs. The two foot figures are
+those of a horseman and an officer of foot, both of Henry's time. The
+first bears on it Nuremberg marks; the second has an engraving of the
+Crucifixion on the left breast. The next equestrian figure (VII), also
+of Henry VIII, much resembles the last, and has at its feet extra pieces
+for the tilt yard. Other extra pieces which might be worn with these two
+suits are in the Royal Armoury at Windsor Castle.
+
+The suit (V) on the equestrian figure in the middle of the room is
+one of the finest in existence. It was made by Conrad Seusenhofer,
+one of a family of Augsburg armourers, and given in 1514 to Henry VIII
+by the Emperor Maximilian. The man's armour is engraved with roses,
+pomegranates, portcullises, and other badges of Henry VIII and his
+first queen Katharine of Arragon, and has on the metal skirt which
+imitates the cloth _bases_ of the time the letters H and K. The horse
+armour, probably made afterwards in England by one of Henry's German
+armourers, is also covered with engraving, and has panels on which are
+depicted scenes from the life and death of St. George and St. Barbara,
+both military saints. The whole armour was formerly washed with silver,
+of which some traces still remain.
+
+In the enclosure on the left is a mounted figure (XI) of about 1550,
+and in front are a pistol shield, one of 80 made for Henry VIII, and
+a helmet with grotesque mask formerly attributed to Will Somers, the
+king's jester, but since identified as a present from the Emperor
+Maximilian. In the next cases are portions of armour of Henry VIII; also
+of a puffed and engraved suit of the same time, and of a richly worked
+russet and gilt suit of George Earl of Cumberland, who in Elizabeth's
+time fitted out at his own cost eleven expeditions against Spain. In the
+archway are some combined weapons having gun barrels in the staff and
+pole-axe heads; also the three-barrelled weapon formerly called Henry
+VIII's walking staff. In the corner of the room are an old German
+tilting saddle, which protected the legs of the rider, who stood up in
+his stirrups, a large tilting lance shown as far back as the days of
+Elizabeth as that of Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk. At the end of the
+room are five suits of the second third of the sixteenth century. The
+centre one, which is damascened, has in front of it an extra gorget, and
+a placcate to strengthen the breast. The next figure (XXX) is a large
+suit of armour 6 feet 10-1/2 inches in height of the time of Henry VIII,
+though formerly incorrectly called that of John of Gaunt, of whom, of
+course, no armour exists. This suit weighs about 66 lbs.
+
+Descending the room in the first enclosure is the armour (IX) of the
+Earl of Worcester, who died 1589. This suit is very massive, the breast
+and back plates together weighing 40 lbs. 3 oz. In the same enclosure
+are two figures made up of Maximilian armour, and a bowman and a
+musketeer of the Earl of Worcester's time. In the archways will be seen
+early forms of guns and pistols of various types and swords and other
+weapons.
+
+The next mounted figure (VIII) (formerly called Sir Henry Lee) is of the
+middle of the sixteenth century, and the two foot figures are made up of
+early sixteenth-century armour.
+
+At the side is a cuir bouilli crupper as worn by the English heavy
+cavalry in the sixteenth century.
+
+The next enclosure contains an equestrian figure (X) of Robert Dudley
+Earl of Leicester, the favourite of Elizabeth. This fine suit bears all
+over it the badge of the Ragged Staff, and is engraved with the badges
+and collars of the Garter and of the Order of St. Michael of France. The
+suit was made between 1566 and 1588, and is of very great interest as
+one of the very few known which also possesses the extra pieces for the
+tilt yard, viz.: the Grandguard and the Passguard, ornamented like the
+suit, which with them weighs about 83-1/2 lbs. It will be seen that the
+extra pieces are for the left side, and the helmet has no air holes on
+that side, as the tilters passed left arm to left arm on either side of
+the tilt or barrier. The two foot figures are of about the same date.
+
+The next mounted figure (XII) is one still showing the gilt enrichment
+so many of these suits for the tilt yard originally had. It was
+attributed to Robert Earl of Essex, another favourite of his Queen, but
+has now been identified as the armour made by Jacobe Topf, for Sir John
+Smith, cousin german to Edward VI, and a great military writer of the
+sixteenth century. Many other pieces of this suit are in the Royal
+collection in Windsor Castle. The two foot figures came from the Great
+Armoury at Malta. Beyond the passage are a mounted figure showing how
+the lance was held when jousting at the tilt or barrier in the sixteenth
+century and later, and inferior suits for horsemen, and some other suits
+from Malta.
+
+On leaving the large room, in the case in the archway will be seen axes,
+horsemen's hammers and maces, all designed for breaking and rending
+armour. Observe also various forms of the bayonet, from the early plug
+bayonet to the later socketed type of that weapon.
+
+The first case on the right contains crossbows of various types.
+This weapon, at no time our national arm, was used for the defence of
+fortresses, and later on for sport. The heavy kind were bent by means of
+arrangements of pulleys, the windlass, or a kind of lifting jack called
+the Cranequin or Cric. The lighter forms were bent by an attached lever
+called the Goat's Foot. Specimens of these are in the case, as also two
+bowstaves from the wreck of the _Mary Rose_, 1545, and some leaden
+sling bullets from the battle field of Marathon. In the next case are
+firearms of early types. Among these observe two guns which belonged to
+Henry VIII, both of them breechloaders on a system resembling the modern
+Snider rifle. Note also the German Reiter wheel-lock pistols, with ball
+pommel; the William III match-lock, with plug bayonet stuck in the
+muzzle; the bandoliers, each containing twelve charges of powder and a
+bullet bag; the Vauban lock, combining the flint and match; also a still
+earlier form of this lock of English make. Montecucuh says he had
+similar locks made, having seen them used still earlier by the Turks.
+
+The next case contains rapiers and swords and bucklers. Observe the
+raised bars on the latter, to entangle and break the sword-point. The
+mounted figure in brown armour shows the equipment of the cavalry in the
+early part of the seventeenth century, the armour being browned or
+blacked to prevent rust and to avoid detection at a distance.
+
+The figure (XXIV) in the first enclosure is that of James II. It will be
+seen that it only consists of a headpiece, breast and back plates, and a
+long gauntlet to protect the bridle arm. All the pieces bear the King's
+initials, and the face guard is pierced with the design of the Royal
+Arms. The next equestrian figure is a gilt suit of Charles I (XIX),
+said to have been given to him by the City of London. It is the latest
+complete suit in the collection, and was probably never worn by him. In
+the centre of the room is a case containing gun locks, powder flasks,
+and other pieces for the furnishing of a soldier's equipment. The cannon
+were made for the instruction of Charles II when a prince. In the wall
+case observe with other objects two swine feathers, or feather staffs,
+having one long and two short blades which can be concealed in the
+shaft, also a German Calendar sword with the saints' days marked in
+gold, and other swords. Below are two _waistcoat_ cuirasses opening
+down the front.
+
+In the next enclosure on the right is a mounted figure (XVIII) of
+Charles I when young. The armour is apparently of French make, and
+is very interesting as being a double suit--that is, it represents
+the equipment of the cuirassier or cavalryman of about 1610, and
+then by removing the helmet and the armour for the arms and legs, and
+substituting the pott and the short thigh defences (in the small glass
+case) we have the equipment of the foot soldier as seen in the figures
+of pikemen on the other side of the room. The small silvered cap and
+breast and back in another glass case was made for Charles II when
+prince.
+
+In a table case are a gun and pistol dated respectively 1614 and 1619,
+made for Charles I when Prince of Wales. The gun is not quite perfect,
+but the two weapons are the earliest examples of _flint locks_ in
+the collection. Note also a fine wheel lock of about 1600. The gunner's
+axe was used for laying cannon, and has on its shaft scales showing the
+size of cannon balls of stone, iron, lead, and slag. It belonged to the
+Duke of Brunswick Luneburg. The last enclosure contains a suit (XVII) of
+richly decorated armour given to Henry Prince of Wales by the Prince de
+Joinville. This suit, though rich, is of late and inelegant form, as may
+be seen by observing the breast and the treatment of the feet. In the
+suit of his brother Prince Charles also will be seen an instance of the
+decay of the armourer's art, namely, the thigh-pieces, which are marked
+as though of several pieces of metal whilst being of one rigid piece.
+
+In a small case are unfinished portions of a helmet and gorget, and a
+gilt and engraved vamplate belonging to a suit of Henry Prince of Wales.
+
+The figures on the opposite side of the room are horsemen and pikemen
+of the seventeenth century, after which time armour may be said to have
+ceased to be worn, till at the coronation of George IV in 1820, when the
+Household Cavalry appeared in cuirasses. In the table cases in this room
+are odd portions of armour: gorgets, gauntlets, cuisshes, &c., daggers,
+knives, and swords, including good examples of the Cinquedea, or short
+broad-bladed sword peculiar to Northern Italy.
+
+In the series of wall cases at the end of both rooms will be found
+several varieties of helmets, including salades, close helmets, tilting
+helmets; also morions and cabassets and breasts and backs. Among these
+observe the fine painted archers' salade, with vizor; two fine Venetian
+salades, like the ancient Greek helmets, and bearing armourers' stamps;
+sixteenth-century tilting helmets, with side doors for air; spider
+helmets, &c. Those on the upper shelves are either false or imitations
+of real examples. In the case by the door is a helmet made for and worn
+by the late Emperor Napoleon III (when prince) at the Eglinton
+Tournament, in 1839.
+
+On the walls are portions of horse armour, bucklers for foot soldiers,
+and several shields simulating the embossed ornamentation of the
+sixteenth century.
+
+
+_The Parade_.
+
+The Waterloo Barracks are opposite, built in 1845 on the site of
+storehouses burnt in 1841. The building of similar character to the
+right is the Officers' Quarters: between the two a glimpse is obtained
+of the Martin or Brick Tower, whence Blood stole the crown in 1671.
+Observe, on the left, the extensive collection of cannons of all ages
+and countries, including triple guns taken from the French, of the time
+of Louis XIV, and some curious and grotesque mortars from India.
+
+Observe, on the right, almost adjoining the Barrack, the Chapel of St.
+Peter "ad Vincula," so called from having been consecrated on that
+well-known festival of the Latin Church, the 1st of August, probably in
+the reign of Henry I (1100-1135). The old chapel was burnt in 1512, and
+the present building erected only in time to receive the bodies of the
+first victims of the tyranny of Henry VIII. It was considered a Royal
+Chapel before 1550; the interior is not shown to the public. Here it is,
+in the memorable words of Stow, writing in the reign of Queen Elizabeth,
+that there lie before the high altar, "two dukes between two queens, to
+wit, the Duke of Somerset and the Duke of Northumberland, between Queen
+Anne and Queen Katharine, all four beheaded." Here also are buried Lady
+Jane (Grey) and Lord Guildford Dudley, the Duke of Monmouth, and the
+Scotch lords, Kilmarnock, Balmerino, and Lovat, beheaded for their share
+in the rebellion of 1745. The last burial in the chapel was that of Sir
+John Fox Burgoyne, Constable of the Tower, in 1871.
+
+The space in front of the chapel is called Tower Green, and was used as
+a burial ground; in the middle is a small square plot, paved with
+granite, showing the site on which stood at rare intervals the scaffold
+on which private executions took place. It has been specially paved by
+the orders of Her late Majesty. The following persons are known to have
+been executed on this spot:--
+
+1. Queen Anne Boleyn, second wife of Henry VIII, 19th May, 1536.
+
+2. Margaret Countess of Salisbury, the last of the old Angevin or
+Plantagenet family, 27th May, 1541.
+
+3. Queen Katharine Howard, fifth wife of Henry VIII, 13th February,
+1542.
+
+4. Jane Viscountess Rochford, 13th February, 1542.
+
+5. Lady Jane (Grey), wife of Lord Guildford Dudley, 12th February, 1554.
+
+6. Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, 25th February, 1601.
+
+They were all beheaded with an axe except Queen Anne Boleyn, whose head
+was cut off with a sword by the executioner of St. Omer, brought over
+for the purpose. The executioner of the Earl of Essex was not able to do
+his work with less than three strokes, and was mobbed and beaten by the
+populace on his way home. The bodies of all six were buried in the
+Chapel of St. Peter.
+
+Lord Hastings was also beheaded on Tower Green by order of the Duke of
+Gloucester in 1483.
+
+
+_The Beauchamp Tower_
+
+is on the west side of Tower Green, facing the White Tower, and is on
+the inner wall between the Bell Tower on the south and the Devereux
+Tower on the north, being connected with both by a walk along the
+parapet. Its present name probably refers to the residence in it as a
+prisoner of Thomas, third Earl of Warwick, of the Beauchamp family, who
+was attainted under Richard II in 1397, but restored to his honours and
+liberty two years later under Henry IV. It is curious that the most
+interesting associations of the place should be connected with his
+successors in the earldom. Although built entirely for defensive
+purposes, we find it thus early used as a prison, and during the two
+following centuries it seems to have been regarded as one of the
+most convenient places in which to lodge prisoners of rank, and in
+consequence many of the most interesting mural inscriptions are to
+be found in its chambers.
+
+In plan the Beauchamp Tower is semicircular, and it projects eighteen
+feet beyond the face of the wall. It consists of three storeys, of which
+the middle one is on a level with the rampart, on which it formerly
+opened. The whole building dates from the reign of Edward III. We enter
+at the south-east corner and ascend by a circular staircase to the
+middle chamber, which is spacious and has a large window, with a
+fire-place. Here are to be found most of the inscriptions, some having
+been brought from other chambers. A few are in the entrance passage and
+on the stair. All are numbered and catalogued. The following--to which
+the numbers are appended--will be found the most interesting:--
+
+2. On the ground-floor, near the entrance, ROBART DVDLEY. This was the
+fifth son of John, Duke of Northumberland, and next brother to Guildford
+Dudley, the husband of Lady Jane Grey. When his father was brought to
+the block in 1553 he and his brothers remained in prison here, Robert
+being condemned to death in 1554. In the following year he was liberated
+with his elder brother Ambrose, afterwards created Earl of Warwick, and
+his younger brother Henry. In the first year of Queen Elizabeth he was
+made Master of the House and elected a Knight of the Garter. In 1563 he
+was created Earl of Leicester. He died at Cornbury, in Oxfordshire, in
+1588.
+
+8. On the left, at the entrance of the great chamber, is a carved cross,
+with other religious emblems, with the name and arms of PEVEREL, and the
+date 1570. It is supposed to have been cut by a Roman Catholic prisoner
+confined during the reign of Queen Elizabeth.
+
+13. Over the fire-place this inscription in Latin:--"The more suffering
+for Christ in this world the more glory with Christ in the next," &c.
+This is signed "Arundel, June 22, 1587." This was Philip Howard, son of
+Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, beheaded in 1573. Philip inherited from his
+maternal grandfather the earldom of Arundel in 1580. He was a staunch
+Roman Catholic and was constantly under suspicion of the Government, by
+which in 1584 he was confined in his own house for a short time. On his
+liberation he determined to quit the country, but was committed to the
+Tower in 1585, and died in custody ten years later, having refused
+release on condition of forsaking his religion. His body was buried in
+his father's grave in the Chapel of St. Peter, but was eventually
+removed to Arundel. He left other inscriptions, one in the window (79),
+and one on the staircase (91), dated 1587.
+
+14. On the right of the fire-place is an elaborate piece of sculpture
+(Pl. XII), which will be examined with peculiar interest as a memorial
+of the four brothers Dudley: Ambrose (created Earl of Warwick 1561),
+Guildford (beheaded 1554), Robert (created Earl of Leicester 1563), and
+Henry (killed at the siege of St. Quintin, 1558), carved by the eldest,
+John (called Earl of Warwick), who died in 1554. Under a bear and a lion
+supporting a ragged staff is the name "JOHN DVDLE," and surrounding
+them is a wreath of roses (for Ambrose), oak leaves (for Robert,
+_robur_, an oak), gillyflowers (for Guildford), and honeysuckle
+(for Henry). Below are four lines, one of them incomplete, alluding
+to the device and its meaning. It is on record that the Lieutenant
+of the Tower was allowed 6_s._ 8_d._ a day each for the diet of these
+captive brothers.
+
+33. This is one of several inscriptions relating to the Poole or Pole
+family (see also Nos. 45, 47, 52, 56, 57). They were the sons of the
+Countess of Salisbury, by Sir Richard Pole, K.G. No. 45 contains the
+name of "GEFFRYE POOLE 1562." He was the second son and gave evidence
+against his elder brother, Lord Montagu, who was beheaded in 1539.
+
+48. "IANE." This interesting inscription, repeated also in the window
+(85), has always been supposed to refer to the Lady Jane Grey, daughter
+of the Duke of Suffolk, and wife of Guildford Dudley, fourth son of the
+Duke of Northumberland. A second repetition in another part of the room
+was unfortunately obliterated in the last century when a new window
+was made to fit this chamber for a mess-room. It is sometimes, but
+erroneously, supposed that the name was carved by this Queen of ten
+days herself, but it is improbable that she was ever imprisoned in the
+Beauchamp Tower. She is known to have lived in the house of Partridge,
+the Gaoler. It is much more probable that the two inscriptions were
+placed on the wall either by Lord Guildford Dudley, her husband, or
+by his brother, whose large device has been described above.
+
+66. In the window is the rebus, or monogram, of Thomas Abel: upon
+a bell is the letter A. This was Dr. Abel, a faithful servant to Queen
+Katharine of Arragon, first wife of King Henry VIII. He acted as her
+chaplain during the progress of the divorce, and by his determined
+advocacy offended the King. For denying the supremacy he was condemned
+and executed in 1540.
+
+The visitor who has time to spare will find many other records of this
+kind in the Beauchamp Tower, the oldest of all being the name of "Thomas
+Talbot 1462" (89), supposed to have been concerned in the Wars of the
+Roses. Emerging again upon Tower Green we see on the right the
+
+
+_Lieutenant's Lodgings_ (Pl. VI),
+
+now called the King's House. The Hall door, where a sentry stands, is
+the same through which Lord Nithisdale escaped in female dress, the
+night before he was to have been beheaded, 1716. Some parts of the house
+are of great antiquity, among them the rooms in the Bell Tower, those on
+the upper storey which open on the leads and the rampart known as The
+Prisoners' Walk, and the Council Room, a handsome apartment containing a
+curious monument of the Gunpowder Plot. In this room Guy Fawkes and his
+associates were examined, 1605. The interior of the King's House is not
+shown to the public. Next to it is the house of the Gentleman Gaoler,
+or Chief Warder. It was in this house that Lady Jane Grey lived when
+a prisoner, and from its windows saw her husband go forth from the
+adjoining Beauchamp Tower to his execution on Tower Hill, and his
+headless body brought to the chapel "in a carre," while the scaffold was
+being prepared for her own death on the Green in front, which took place
+on the same day, Monday, 12th February, 1554.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTE.--Visitors who wish to know more about the Tower are referred to
+the works of Bayley, of Brayley and Britton, of Doyne C. Bell, of G.T.
+Clark, and of Hepworth Dixon.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+DRILL AND TRAINING (Number of days in each year).
+
+---------------+----------------------------------------+-----------
+ | | In
+ | In first year. | subsequent
+ | | years.
+ ARM OF THE +---------+----------+----------+--------+-----------
+ SERVICE | | Musketry | | Total |
+ | Recruit | or | Usual | during | Usual
+ | Drill. | Gunnery | Annual | the | Annual
+ | | Drill. | Training | year. | Training
+---------------+---------+----------+----------+--------+-----------
+Artillery } | | | | |
+Infantry } | 49 | 14 | 27 | 90 | 27
+Medical } | | | | |
+ | | | | |
+Engineers | | | | |
+ { Fortress | 63 | 14 | 41 | 118 | 41
+ { Submarine | | | | |
+ { Miners | 63 | 14 | 55 | 132 | 55
+---------------+---------+----------+----------+--------+-----------
+
+
+BOUNTY, PAY, EXTRA DUTY PAY, AND ENGINEER PAY, &c.
+
+During the first year of service the rate of Bounty of a Militiaman
+varies from 10s. to L2.
+
+A Training Bounty of L1 10s. is issued on the completion of each Annual
+Training. Ex-Army N.C.O.'s, who are appointed Sergeants, receive a
+training bounty of L3. Non-training bounty of L3 is issued in sums of
+L1 on each of the following dates--1st October, 1st December, and 1st
+February, to men who have completed two trainings or the equivalent
+thereof. A Special bounty of L1 is also given on the completion of
+an authorised course of instruction other than during the 28 days
+immediately preceding the training of the unit.
+
+During Drill and training, N.C.O.'s and men receive Army rates of pay of
+their rank, also rations; and provided they are 19 years of age and have
+attended one training, or the equivalent thereof, messing allowance at
+3d. a day.
+
+In addition to the ordinary pay, extra-duty pay varying from 2_d._
+to 6_d._ per day will be issued during the annual training to non
+commissioned officers and men of the Militia for the performance of
+certain specified duties.
+
+Engineer Pay varying from 4d. to 2s. a day, will also be
+allowed to non commissioned officers and men of the Militia Engineers
+according to their qualifications.
+
+Corps pay, varying from 4d. to 1s. a day, is granted to
+N.C.O.'s and men of the Royal Army Medical Corps, who are reported as
+duly qualified.
+
+
+GENERAL ADVANTAGES OF THE MILITIA.
+
+A Pamphlet containing detailed information as to the Conditions of
+Service in the Militia and in the Reserve Division of the Militia can be
+obtained free of charge at any Post Office in the United Kingdom, from
+any Sergeant Instructor of Volunteers, or other Recruiter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[Illustration: PLATE I. MIDDLE TOWER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE II. Legge's Mount. Devereux Tower. Beauchamp Tower.
+Yeoman Gaoler's House. Site of Drawbridge. Gateway of Byward Tower.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE III. Bloody Tower and Gateway. Wakefield Tower.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE IV. ST. THOMAS'S TOWER AND TRAITORS' GATE.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE V. Cradle Tower and Wall of Outer Ward. Lanthorn
+Tower restored. Curtain Wall of Inner Ward.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VI. Tower Green. Queen's House. Yeoman Gaoler's
+Lodgings.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VII. WHITE TOWER FROM THE NORTH-WEST.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE VIII. ST. JOHN'S CHAPEL--INTERIOR.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE IX. Middle Tower and Gate. Byward Tower. Bell
+Tower. Queen's House.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE X. Lieutenant's Lodging or Queen's House. Bloody
+Tower. Constable's Garden. St. Thomas's Tower and Traitors' Gate.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XI. New Lanthorn Tower. Old Armoury. Salt Tower.
+Cradle Tower. Well Tower. Irongate Tower.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PLATE XII.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Authorised Guide to the Tower of London
+by W. J. Loftie
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWER OF LONDON ***
+
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