"Contrary to what many believe, actually surprisingly few prisoners were executed inside the walls of the Tower of London. Most prisoners sentenced to death were given public executions at various sites across London - including Tower Hill. Private executions inside the walls here were reserved for only the most sensitive, high profile cases involving prominent figures in society such as nobility and royalty."
Actual figure is nearer 7, yes seven!
More detailed information can be found by downloading the official 'Executions at the Tower of London' factsheet. Only a couple of pages long and very interesting.
ten
The Tower of London is comprised of one tower. The Tower of London has had many different uses over the years. The most notable use was as a prison and a place of executions.
The Tower of London.
Tower Hill, London, Stratford in East London,
The Tower of London is admired worldwide for its architecture. The tower, however, has somewhat of a bad reputation due to the torture and executions which used to be frequently staged there.
Not what you think, while executions were held at the Tower of London, Mary Queen of Scots was executed in the now defunct Fotheringay ( sometimes spelled Fotheringhay) Castle in Scotland. There were, of course political executions in the Tower of London, but this was not one of them. I believe Anne Boleyn ( mother of Elizabeth I) was executed by Axe in the Tower ( actually a prison complex) . There was a rather morbid Cockney folk song about this. now we do not have a similar ballad about Jayne Mansfield, but that was an accident.
Margaret Pole, the Countess of Salisbury, was executed on May 27, 1541, at the Tower of London. She was killed on Tower Green, a site within the Tower complex that was often used for executions. Her execution was particularly brutal; she was beheaded by an inexperienced executioner, resulting in a prolonged and painful death.
The 'Bloody Tower' is one of the many named towers within the Tower of London.
The first execution at the Tower of London is believed to have occurred in 1100, when the nobleman and former king, William II, was killed. However, the first notable execution of a high-profile prisoner took place in 1483, when the Duke of Clarence, George Plantagenet, was executed. The Tower later became infamous for hosting many executions, particularly during the Tudor period.
The tower of London is a home to many people and a palace for the queen
He could always claim "treason". Even if the prisoner had only made him angry, it was a crime against the "state" or treason. His wive's executions were carried out under this charge.
The Tower of London is on the North bank of the River Thames, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.