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Tower of London

10 stories from this place.

The Cabinet June 27, 2026 · Tower of London

The English King Whose Six Marriages Between 1509 and 1547 Produced Three Surviving Children, Two Beheaded Wives, and the English Reformation

Henry VIII married six times between 1509 and 1547. Two of his wives — Anne Boleyn (1536) and Catherine Howard (1542) — were beheaded at the Tower of London. Two were set aside by annulment (Catherine of Aragon, Anne of Cleves). One died of childbirth complications (Jane Seymour). One outlived him (Catherine Parr). The pursuit of his desired succession produced the foundational break with the papacy that became the English Reformation.

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The Coroner’s Report June 27, 2026 · Tower of London

The 16-Year-Old Protestant Cousin of Edward VI Who Was Queen of England for Nine Days in July 1553 Before Being Replaced and Eventually Beheaded

Lady Jane Grey was proclaimed Queen of England on 10 July 1553 under the terms of Edward VI's deathbed Devise. The proclamation was a failed attempt to keep the English Crown Protestant against the legitimate claim of the Catholic Mary Tudor. Jane was deposed on 19 July 1553 after Mary's army marched on London. She was executed for treason at the Tower of London on 12 February 1554. She was 17 or 18.

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The Cabinet June 27, 2026 · Smithfield, London

The English Peasants' Revolt of 1381 That Briefly Captured London, Beheaded the Archbishop of Canterbury, and Was Ended When the Lord Mayor Stabbed Wat Tyler in Front of the King

The Peasants' Revolt began in Essex on 30 May 1381 in response to the third Poll Tax in four years. About 60,000 rebels marched on London by mid-June. They beheaded the Archbishop of Canterbury Simon Sudbury on Tower Hill. The Lord Mayor William Walworth stabbed the rebel leader Wat Tyler in the throat at Smithfield on 15 June while Tyler was negotiating face-to-face with the 14-year-old King Richard II.

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The Footnote June 25, 2026 · Newgate Street, City of London

The Demolished London Church Where Four Medieval English Queens Were Buried Under Whose Bones Modern Newgate Street Now Runs

The Franciscan Greyfriars Church on Newgate Street was the burial site of four major English royal women — Isabella of France, Margaret of France, Eleanor of Provence's heart, and Joan of the Tower. The church was dissolved in 1538, destroyed in the 1666 Great Fire, and the modern street pattern was laid out over the unrecovered burials.

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The Cabinet June 24, 2026 · Old London Bridge, Stone Gate

The Heads on the Stone Gate of London Bridge Were Replaced So Often That a Specific Court Officer Was Paid to Manage the Rotation

From 1305 to 1660 — three and a half centuries — the southern gatehouse of [Old London Bridge](/articles/old-london-bridge) carried the displayed heads of traitors executed by the English crown. The first head was William Wallace's; the last was probably Oliver Cromwell's. The boiled heads were dipped in tar before mounting and were managed by an officer of the City of London known as the Keeper of the Heads.

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The Cabinet June 24, 2026 · Syon House, Middlesex

The English Mathematician Who Made Galileo's Telescopic Discoveries Months Earlier and Published None of Them

Thomas Harriot observed the Moon through a telescope in July 1609, sunspots in late 1610, and the moons of Jupiter probably in early 1610. Each of these observations was made independently of Galileo, in some cases earlier. Harriot published nothing. He died in 1621 with about 5,000 pages of unpublished astronomical manuscripts.

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