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Rhianna inside the fortress.
The Bell Tower stands in the south-west corner of
the Inner Ward. It was built in the 13th century and is so called
because of the belfry on top. In the past, when the bell was rung
in alarm, drawbridges were raised, portcullises were dropped, and
gates shut. The bell is still rung in the evening to warn visitors
on the wharf it is time to leave.
Among the most famous prisoners confined to the Bell
Tower was Sir Thomas More imprisoned there in 1534. More, at one
time close friends with Henry VIII, refused to acknowledge the validity
of the king's divorce from Queen Catherine of Aragon (thereby refusing
to accept the Act of Succession) and to acknowledge him as supreme
head of the Church. Catherine, it should be noted, was the daugther
of Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain, known for financing the expeditions
of Christopher Columbus. More was executed July 1535 and buried
in St Peters Chapel.
Henry VIII's penchant for imprisoning family was not
lost on his children apparently. This involved two of his daughters
(by two different mothers), both of whom would one day rule. Princess
Elizabeth, later Elizabeth I, was also imprisoned in the Bell Tower
-- sent there in 1554 by her half-sister Mary I on suspicion of
being concerned in plots against the throne.
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