'As soon as he had swallowed two or three mouthfuls of the fish, he began shouting wildly..."it is trying to choke me!" After crying out in pain many times...he fell to the ground and died a wretched death.' A fifteenth century account of the demise of William Usshborne who had confiscated Westminster Abbey land to build the Jewel Tower in 1365. For 650 years, the Jewel Tower has stood beside the heart of government in England. Built in 1365 within the private palace of King Edward III (reigned 1327-77), the tower began as a secure repository for the most valuable possessions of the royal household. Inside it, clerks stored the king's goods, sent them for repair, and dispatched them to other castles and manors. As royal residence moved away from Westminster in the 16th century, the tower became a Parliamentary record office, preserving the records of the House of Lords. The building was repaired and protected against fire in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, although much of th medieval fabric remained intact. In 1834, the tower and its contents survived the fire that destroyed much of the historic Palace of Westminster and the records of the House of Commons.
In 1869, with the construction of a record store inside the new Houses of Parliament, the Jewel Tower attained a third function, as a testing facility for the Board of Trade Standards Department, determining the definitive value of weights and measures for Britain and its empire. Since 1987, the Jewel Tower has formed part of the Westminster World Heritage Site.
- ISBN10 1848022395
- ISBN13 9781848022393
- Publish Date 25 July 2013
- Publish Status Out of Stock
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint English Heritage
- Format Paperback
- Pages 40
- Language English