Tower of London in popular culture

The Tower of London, seen from the River Thames, with a view of the water gate called "Traitors' Gate"
William Harrison Ainsworth's novel The Tower of London was particularly influential in shaping the public's view of the Tower of London.

The Tower of London has been represented in popular culture in many ways. As a result of 16th and 19th century writers, the Tower has a reputation as a grim fortress, a place of torture and execution.[1]

One of the earliest traditions associated with the Tower was that it was built by Julius Caesar; the story was a popular amongst writers and antiquaries. The earliest recorded attribution of the Tower to the Roman ruler dates to the mid-14th century in a poem by Sir Thomas Gray.[2] The origin of the myth is uncertain, although it may be related to the fact that the Tower was built in the corner of London's Roman walls. Another possibility is that someone misread a passage from Gervase of Tilbury in which he says Caesar built a tower at Odnea in France. Gervase wrote Odnea as Dodres, which is close to the French for London, Londres.[3] Today, the story survives in William Shakespeare's Richard II and Richard III,[4] and as late as the 18th century some still regarded the Tower as built by Caesar.[5]

References

Notes
Bibliography
  • Bradley, Ian (1996), The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan, Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-816503-X 
  • Fischler, Alan (1996), "From Weydon-Priors to Tower Green: The Sources of the Yeomen of the Guard", ELH, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 63 (1): 203–225, doi:10.1353/elh.1996.0003, JSTOR 30030279  (subscription required)
  • Impey, Edward; Parnell, Geoffrey (2000), The Tower of London: The Official Illustrated History, Merrell Publishers in association with Historic Royal Palaces, ISBN 1-85894-106-7 
  • Nearing, Homer Jr. (April 1948), "Julius Caesar and the Tower of London", Modern Language Notes, Johns Hopkins University Press, 63 (4): 228–233, JSTOR 2908562 
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