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15 <Metadata name="Author">Marilee Mongello</Metadata>
16 <Metadata name="Title">Tudor Monarchs - Henry VII, one</Metadata>
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32
33
34
35&lt;center&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;blink&gt;&lt;font size=5&gt;NOTE&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/blink&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;5&quot;&gt; &lt;/font&gt;
36&lt;p&gt;I am redesigning the Henry VII pages as of &lt;b&gt;March 2004&lt;/b&gt;.
37
38&lt;br&gt;Until the new design is posted, you can read the old (and lengthy) biography here.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;You can also view portraits of Henry VII at the
39&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.marileecody.com%2fimages.html&quot;&gt;Tudor
40
41England: Images&lt;/a&gt; site.&lt;/p&gt;
42&lt;p&gt;Sorry for any inconvenience. &lt;i&gt;-Marilee&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
43&lt;/center&gt;
44
45&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;6&quot;&gt;King Henry VII &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;
46
47&lt;br&gt;
48
49&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
50
51&lt;blockquote&gt;If Henry VII's reign was to usher in '&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;smooth-faced
52
53peace,&lt;/font&gt; w&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;ith smiling plenty, and fair prosperous
54
55days', few could have predicted it in 1485.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/font&gt;The Battle of
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57Bosworth Field on 22 August 1485 was the last armed confrontation between
58
59Lancastrians and Yorkists, those two factions that had fought for decades
60
61in The Wars of the Roses.&amp;nbsp; The Lancastrians triumphed under the leadership
62
63of a 28-year-old exile named Henry Tudor.&amp;nbsp; After winning the throne
64
65of England, he wed Elizabeth of York, the eldest daughter of the dead Yorkist
66
67king Edward IV.&amp;nbsp; Thus, the two warring houses were joined in marriage.
68
69&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The union was both symbolic and necessary.&amp;nbsp;
70
71Despite his victory at Bosworth, the exiled nobleman who took the name
72
73Henry VII needed the support of those sympathetic to the defeated Yorkist
74
75cause.&amp;nbsp; He also needed the legitimacy of his wife's claim to the throne.&amp;nbsp;
76
77He had spent years in exile and campaigned tirelessly to win support for
78
79his claim to the English throne.&amp;nbsp; It had not been an easy task.&amp;nbsp;
80
81In fact, it was only when Richard duke of York usurped the throne from
82
83his young nephew Edward (son and heir of Edward IV) that Henry Tudor became
84
85a viable candidate for king.
86
87&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Henry Tudor's claim to the throne was never based
88
89on ancestry alone.&amp;nbsp; He knew, none better, that such a claim would
90
91be flimsy at best.&amp;nbsp; His royal blood came from women - his mother,
92
93Margaret Beaufort, was the granddaughter of John Beaufort (died 1410),
94
95the eldest of the bastard sons of John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster.&amp;nbsp;
96
97Gaunt's eldest legitimate son was the first Lancastrian king of England.&amp;nbsp;
98
99The Beauforts were so named because Margaret's grandfather had been born
100
101in Beaufort Castle in Champagne; his mother was Gaunt's mistress and later
102
103became his third wife.&amp;nbsp; After the marriage, their children were declared
104
105legitimate by an act of Parliament in 1397 (during Richard II's reign).&amp;nbsp;
106
107When their fellow kinsman Henry IV Bolingbroke came to the throne, he confirmed
108
109this act of legitimacy but added a stipulation that the Beauforts should
110
111never succeed to the English throne (1407).&amp;nbsp; Certainly no act of government
112
113could alter the fact that the Beauforts had been born illegitimate; and
114
115Henry IV's declaration regarding the succession is equally ambivalent -
116
117after all, what practical effect could it guarantee?&amp;nbsp; The end result
118
119was that the Beauforts occupied an odd position in the English nobility
120
121and, taken together as a group, posed a unique threat to the security of
122
123the throne.
124
125&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Margaret Beaufort's father John succeeded to the
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127earldom of Somerset in 1418 and, after a life of military embarrassment
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129(including seventeen years in a French prison), he married Margaret Beauchamp,
130
131daughter of Sir John Beauchamp of Blestoe.&amp;nbsp; A year after their marriage,
132
133John was created duke of Somerset.&amp;nbsp; Margaret, his only child, was
134
135born on 31 May 1443; she never knew her father.&amp;nbsp; John had led yet
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137another disastrous military expedition to France and ended up dying in
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139Dorset a few days before her first birthday.&amp;nbsp; It was rumored that
140
141he committed suicide.&amp;nbsp; Her mother, meanwhile, married again - this
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143time to Lionel, Lord Welles, and survived another four decades.&amp;nbsp; Margaret,
144
145however, was the sole heir to the dukedom of Somerset and its vast holdings.
146
147&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Since she was a great heiress, she was betrothed
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149while still a child to John de la Pole, the son and heir of Henry VI's
150
151chief minister, the marquess of Suffolk.&amp;nbsp; A conspiracy followed which
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153alleged that Suffolk was planning to place Margaret and his son on the
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155throne if Henry VI died childless; there is no proof but it indicates how
156
157important Margaret's royal blood was, even tainted with her grandfather's
158
159illegitimacy.&amp;nbsp; Suffolk was murdered in May 1450 and in early 1453,
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161the marriage between Margaret and John de la Pole was annulled.&amp;nbsp; A
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163child of ten, she was a pawn once more.&amp;nbsp; Henry VI wanted to wed her
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165to his half-brother Edmund Tudor so, at the age of twelve, she was married
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167again.&amp;nbsp; Her new husband was the earl of Richmond.&amp;nbsp; His ancestry
168
169was even more colorful than her own.
170
171&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Edmund Tudor was the eldest son of a princess of
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173France and Queen of England and her Welsh attendant.&amp;nbsp; Catherine of
174
175Valois was the youngest daughter of Charles VI of France and Queen Isabelle.&amp;nbsp;
176
177At the age of eighteen, Catherine had wed that great warrior-king Henry
178
179V.&amp;nbsp; He was fifteen years her senior and, even in life, recognized
180
181as one of England's greatest kings.&amp;nbsp; His triumph at Agincourt in 1415
182
183inspired one of Shakespeare's greatest plays, &lt;i&gt;Henry V&lt;/i&gt;, and led Charles
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185VI to sue for peace.&amp;nbsp; Charles promised that, upon his death, Henry
186
187would inherit the French throne; to show his good faith and secure Henry's
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189claim, he was wed to Catherine.&amp;nbsp; She was, by all accounts, quite beautiful
190
191and vivacious.&amp;nbsp; They were married in May 1420 and, in December, made
192
193a triumphal entry into Paris.&amp;nbsp; From there, they sailed to Dover and
194
195Catherine was crowned at Westminster Abbey in February 1421.&amp;nbsp; She
196
197joined Henry on his public progress through England for a few months but,
198
199in June 1421, a year after their marriage, Henry departed again for France.&amp;nbsp;
200
201He left knowing his wife was pregnant and, on 6 December 1421, she gave
202
203birth to their son, the future Henry VI, at Windsor.&amp;nbsp; Henry V would
204
205never see his son.&amp;nbsp; Catherine traveled to France without the child
206
207to visit Henry but he then left to besiege Meaux and Catherine went to
208
209her parents north of Paris.&amp;nbsp; During the siege, Henry contracted dysentery
210
211and died at the chateaux of Vincennes on 31 August 1422.&amp;nbsp; The glorious
212
213king of England and heir to the French throne had fallen victim to the
214
215scourge of armies everywhere.
216
217&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; His great achievements were not forgotten but, immediately
218
219after his death, confusion swept through England.&amp;nbsp; Henry V had died,
220
221leaving behind a twenty-year-old widow and an infant son.&amp;nbsp; On 21 October
222
2231422, her father suddenly died, after suffering years of intermittent insanity.&amp;nbsp;
224
225The infant Henry VI was now king of both England and France.&amp;nbsp; Catherine,
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227quite naturally, remained at her son's side, accompanying him to the various
228
229public and ceremonial appearances he made as a child.&amp;nbsp; However, her
230
231presence was a novel problem in 15th century England - a Dowager Queen
232
233who was remaining in England until her son's majority and would, in all
234
235likelihood, wish to marry again.&amp;nbsp; She was, after all, still young
236
237and beautiful and contemporaries noted her energy and flirtatiousness.&amp;nbsp;
238
239For the protector of the realm (Humphrey, duke of Gloucester) and the royal
240
241council, Catherine's remarriage was a very real concern.&amp;nbsp; Whomever
242
243she wed would become step-father to the king; understandably, they viewed
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245such a man as a threat to their own positions of authority.&amp;nbsp; Since
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247they were unable to agree on whom would be allowed to court the queen,
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249they passed a law in 1427 stating that no dowager queen could marry without
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251the king's permission; furthermore, permission could only be granted once
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253the king reached the age of discretion.&amp;nbsp; Since Henry VI was only six
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255years old in 1427, the council felt that they had effectively delayed any
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257remarriage for some years - at least until the king could no longer be
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259influenced by a step-father.&amp;nbsp; (In fairness to the council, there was
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261no precedent for the problem Catherine of Valois presented; neither of
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263the two queens of England who had outlived their spouses and married a
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265second time - King John and Richard II's wives - had remained in England.&amp;nbsp;
266
267Also, no dowager queen since the twelfth century had married one of her
268
269husband's subjects.)
270
271&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The council was also careful to keep Catherine under
272
273watch.&amp;nbsp; From 1427 until about 1430 she and her entourage lived in
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275Henry VI's household.&amp;nbsp; In April 1430 she traveled with her son to
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277Paris for his coronation as king of France.&amp;nbsp; Her activities were thus
278
279restricted and watched.&amp;nbsp; However, the council was not completely successful
280
281at isolating the eligible dowager queen and, around 1431, Catherine met
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283a Welshman named Owen ap Maredudd ap Tudur.&amp;nbsp; Their love affair and
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285marriage resulted in four children, the eldest of whom was Henry VII's
286
287father.&amp;nbsp; So, once again, Henry Tudor inherited royal blood from a
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289female.
290
291&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The origin of Catherine and Owen's romance is obscure.&amp;nbsp;
292
293Later chroniclers attributed it to drunkenness (at a ball, Owen was so
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295drunk that he stumbled and fell into the queen's lap) or voyeurism (the
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297queen saw Owen bathing in a stream and was attracted to him; she secretly
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299traded places with her maid and arranged to meet him in disguise; Owen
300
301was too passionate and attempted to kiss her; she pulled away and received
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303a scratch on her cheek; the next evening, as he was serving her dinner,
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305he saw the wound and was ashamed of his behavior; she forgave him, they
306
307fell in love and married.)&amp;nbsp; Whatever the case, they were attracted
308
309to one another, fell in love, and married.&amp;nbsp; The legitimacy of the
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311union was never questioned (not even by Richard III when Henry Tudor positioned
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313himself as claimant).&amp;nbsp; Certainly the council was unhappy with her
314
315choice for the Welsh were regarded by many as barbarians but, in her choice,
316
317she showed good sense.&amp;nbsp; The 1427 statute had stipulated that any man
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319who married the queen without the king's permission would be subject to
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321fines, imprisonment, and forfeiture of lands.&amp;nbsp; By marrying a man who
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323was simply a member of her household (perhaps the manager of some lands),
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325Catherine effectively protected Owen from retribution.&amp;nbsp; (No one knows
326
327the true nature of Owen's work in the queen's household but he probably
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329functioned as a steward.)
330
331&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In 1432 Owen was made an English citizen and in March
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3331434 Catherine gifted him with some lands of his own in Flintshire.&amp;nbsp;
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335They lived together in the countryside, away from court intrigues, for
336
337some years.&amp;nbsp; During this time, he began to follow the English use
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339of surnames and became known, however inaccurately, as Owen Tudor.&amp;nbsp;
340
341The couple had four children - three sons and a daughter, though the daughter
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343died young.&amp;nbsp; Their sons were named Edmund, Jasper, and Owen.&amp;nbsp;
344
345The latter became a Benedictine monk while his two older brothers struggled
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347to survive in an increasingly hostile England.&amp;nbsp; On 3 January 1437
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349Catherine had died of an unspecified illness which had plagued her for
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351some time.&amp;nbsp; With her death, Owen lacked protection from the king's
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353council.&amp;nbsp; They were now determined to finally prosecute him for breaking
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355the 1427 law.&amp;nbsp; Owen appeared before the council and acquitted himself
356
357of all charges but, after his release, was arrested.&amp;nbsp; He managed to
358
359escape Newgate Prison but was recaptured and sent to Windsor Castle in
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361July 1438.
362
363&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Eventually Owen would be released and pardoned (1440)
364
365and taken into his step-son Henry VI's household.&amp;nbsp; In the years following
366
367Catherine's death and Owen's imprisonment, Edmund and Jasper Tudor were
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369cared for by the abbess Katherine de la Pole, the earl of Suffolk's sister.&amp;nbsp;
370
371Around 1442, their half-brother Henry VI began to take an interest in their
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373upbringing and they were brought to London.&amp;nbsp; In 1452, it was decided
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375that the two brothers, now teenagers, should be ennobled.&amp;nbsp; Henry VI
376
377decided this out of both affection and politics.&amp;nbsp; He knew he had to
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379recognize his half-brothers in some public manner, making them an official
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381part of the royal family; he also cared for them deeply.&amp;nbsp; So on 23
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383November 1452, Edmund was created earl of Richmond and Jasper was created
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385earl of Pembroke.&amp;nbsp; They were now the premier earls of England and
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387had precedence over all other laymen except dukes.&amp;nbsp; They were also
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389gifted with estates and rich gifts.&amp;nbsp; On their behalf, the Commons
390
391petitioned Henry VI to recognize them as his 'uterine' brothers (born of
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393the same mother); this he did, and more.&amp;nbsp; Since no earl, especially
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395the brother of the king, could be penniless, Henry continued to grant his
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397brothers numerous lands and annuities.&amp;nbsp; And, as mentioned before,
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399he also arranged a rich marriage for Edmund to Margaret Beaufort.
400
401&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The importance of their Welsh blood should not be
402
403underestimated.&amp;nbsp; Both Edmund and Jasper strove to maintain the king's
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405authority in both south and west Wales and their Welsh ancestry (discussed
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407in the Welsh Connection section) made them popular in much of Wales.&amp;nbsp;
408
409Welsh support would later prove critical to Henry VII during the battle
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411at Bosworth.&lt;/blockquote&gt;
412
413
414
415&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
416
417&lt;blockquote&gt;Henry's youth was spent in the shadow of Henry VI's disgrace.&amp;nbsp;
418
419When Edward IV came to the throne, he was determined to avenge his late
420
421father, the duke of York.&amp;nbsp; Henry VI was increasingly deranged, perhaps
422
423having inherited his French grandfather's mental illness.&amp;nbsp; As a result
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425of his dementia, his queen Margaret of Anjou, increasingly dominated the
426
427Lancastrian party.&amp;nbsp; She was determined to protect her son's inheritance
428
429and, to that end, dedicated her life to a dangerous and complex problem.&amp;nbsp;
430
431The Lancastrian and Yorkist forces met definitively at the Battle of Tewkesbury
432
433in summer 1471.&amp;nbsp; Edward, Margaret and Henry's son, was killed in battle
434
435and Henry VI was captured and taken to the Tower of London where he was
436
437killed.
438
439&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The Lancastrian cause seemed dead.&amp;nbsp; Edward IV
440
441was, unlike Henry, a capable and strong king.&amp;nbsp; Soon after becoming
442
443king he married an unknown widow named Elizabeth Woodville.&amp;nbsp; Understandably,
444
445she was anxious to promote the interests of her own family which created
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447conflict with the old nobility.&amp;nbsp; Edward and Elizabeth had many children,
448
449including two sons.&amp;nbsp; (Their eldest daughter, also named Elizabeth,
450
451would become Henry Tudor's wife.&amp;nbsp; She was known as Elizabeth of York.)&amp;nbsp;
452
453By all accounts, the marriage was happy despite the conflict between the
454
455Woodvilles and Edward's noble Yorkist supporters.&amp;nbsp; The succession
456
457was secure and with support from his brother, Richard duke of Gloucester,
458
459Edward's rule was successful.&amp;nbsp; However, Edward died in 1483 and Richard
460
461usurped the throne from his two young nephews.&amp;nbsp; This changed the course
462
463of English history.
464
465&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Had Richard not betrayed his nephews, there is every
466
467possibility the Yorkist dynasty would have survived.&amp;nbsp; But Richard's
468
469own future would have been quite difficult; he was despised by Elizabeth
470
471Woodville, and - as Edward IV's only brother - he would become the focus
472
473of Woodville discontent.&amp;nbsp; That would not have lasted for long and
474
475Edward V would have followed his mother's wishes.&amp;nbsp; The boy had, after
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477all, been raised and tutored by his Woodville relations and hardly knew
478
479Richard.
480
481&lt;p&gt;(NOTE: &lt;b&gt;The story of Richard III's claiming of the throne is told
482
483in great detail &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2fplant%2fkings%2frichard3.html&quot;&gt;at
484
485his site&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/b&gt;&amp;nbsp; Please read those pages to gain a better understanding
486
487of the events of 1483-1485.&amp;nbsp; I have not included the information here
488
489since this page is about Henry VII.)
490
491&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Ricahrd was an able administrator but faced quite
492
493a few obstacles during his brief reign.&amp;nbsp; If Edward IV had died with
494
495no rightful heir, Richard's ascension would have been viewed much differently.&amp;nbsp;
496
497Then, he would have been the rightful king.&amp;nbsp; And since he wed Anne
498
499Neville of Warwick, daughter of the 'Kingmaker', he would have had crucial
500
501support.&amp;nbsp; But Richard's only son and wife died with months of one
502
503another in 1484.&amp;nbsp; He was grief-stricken and also struggling with the
504
505nobility, particularly the ambitious duke of Buckingham (a brash and arrogant
506
507man with his own share of Plantagenet blood.)
508
509&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, over in France, Henry Tudor was positioning
510
511himself as heir to his murdered uncle Henry VI.&amp;nbsp; With the support
512
513of exiled Lancastrians and the French monarchy, Henry planned to mount
514
515an invasion of England.
516
517&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; What had prepared Henry for this moment?&amp;nbsp; At
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519twenty-eight he was hardly an experienced soldier but he was used to a
520
521life of sudden change.&amp;nbsp; In the 1450s his father Edmund and uncle Jasper
522
523were Henry VI's closest relatives, part of a small group of influential
524
525advisors to the king.&amp;nbsp; Other than these half-brothers, Henry VI was
526
527bereft of close blood relatives; his uncles, the dukes of Bedford, Clarence
528
529and Gloucester, had all died without legitimate heirs and this left both
530
531an emotional and dynastic void at the court.&amp;nbsp; Also, Henry's government
532
533was reviled as inefficient and corrupt.&amp;nbsp; His two most prominent ministers
534
535were the dukes of Suffolk and Somerset and the English people reviled them.&amp;nbsp;
536
537Henry had also raised taxes and spent heavily to assert his right to the
538
539French throne.&amp;nbsp; Perhaps if he had been successful at it, the English
540
541people would not have grumbled about the taxes.&amp;nbsp; But he wasn't successful
542
543and, as the defeats multiplied, the people grew naturally resentful of
544
545the taxation and Henry's attempts to enforce it.&amp;nbsp; Also, many Englishmen
546
547(commoner and noble alike) were uncertain about the very survival of Henry's
548
549dynasty.&amp;nbsp; After eight years of marriage, he and Margaret of Anjou
550
551had no children.&amp;nbsp; Increasingly, eyes turned to Henry's cousin Richard,
552
553duke of York, for stability and reform.&amp;nbsp; Henry, perhaps feeling as
554
555if Richard were being positioned to either dominate his government or usurp
556
557the throne, turned to his small group of advisors for guidance.
558
559&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Since Edmund and Jasper were young, their role at
560
561court was peripheral.&amp;nbsp; Their upbringing had also been quite different
562
563from most young noblemen.&amp;nbsp; However, they were not fools and were careful
564
565to never alienate the powerful duke of York during Henry's reign.&amp;nbsp;
566
567In the summer of 1453, Henry VI suffered an intermittent bout of madness
568
569so severe that he recognized no one, never spoke and had to carried from
570
571place to place.&amp;nbsp; Immediate steps had to be taken to ensure the survival
572
573of the royal government.&amp;nbsp; The winter of 1453 and 1454 was occupied
574
575with the struggle between Queen Margaret and Richard to be declared regent.&amp;nbsp;
576
577For whatever reason, the Tudor brothers sided with the duke of York.&amp;nbsp;
578
579Finally, on 3 April 1454, Parliament decided to appoint Richard regent
580
581during the king's illness.
582
583&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; There are records showing the brothers attended council
584
585meetings and parliamentary sessions; they were also involved in the extensive
586
587reform of the king's household, of which they were members.&amp;nbsp; At that
588
589time, their relationship with the duke of York was not regarded as incompatible
590
591with their attachment to Henry VI and his Lancastrian dynasty.&amp;nbsp; At
592
593any rate, around Christmas 1454, Henry VI suddenly recovered and the duke
594
595of York was no longer in power.&amp;nbsp; Instead, Henry VI restored his old
596
597favorites to their former positions, notably the hated Somerset (who was
598
599the uncle of Edmund Tudor's wife.)&amp;nbsp; The duke of York and his allies
600
601left London in apparent disgust.&amp;nbsp; The Tudor brothers, and most of
602
603the court, realized that a breach had been opened in the nobility.&amp;nbsp;
604
605Most were happy to see the king recover but they were not happy to see
606
607the capable York depart; further, the duke was hated by the queen after
608
609their struggle for the regency.&amp;nbsp; If the two groups clashed, which
610
611side would the Tudors choose?
612
613&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The 'Battle' of St Albans on 1 May 1455 revealed
614
615the extent of the problem.&amp;nbsp; The king had left London to visit Leicester,
616
617accompanied by his half-brother Jasper and the duke of Somerset.&amp;nbsp;
618
619They spent the evening at Watford and the next day rode on to St Albans;
620
621the duke of York and the earls of Warwick and Salisbury were waiting for
622
623them.&amp;nbsp; There was a skirmish, several of the king's servants (including
624
625Somerset) were killed, and the king himself suffered a wound on the neck.&amp;nbsp;
626
627There was also violent fighting in the streets of the town.&amp;nbsp; The Yorkist
628
629forces were successful in capturing the king and escorted him back to London.&amp;nbsp;
630
631On 26 May, Parliament was summoned to meet at Westminster in six weeks.&amp;nbsp;
632
633As peers of the realm, the Tudor brothers were required to attend.&amp;nbsp;
634
635All the lords gathered there swore allegiance to Henry VI but measures
636
637were undertaken to fix the kingdom's disastrous finances.&amp;nbsp; To that
638
639end, every grant Henry had made during his reign was revoked - with the
640
641notable exceptions of Edmund and Jasper's lands.&amp;nbsp; This exemption shows
642
643that York and his allies wanted Tudor support.&amp;nbsp; They were, after all,
644
645members of the royal family.
646
647&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
648
649&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The second session of Parliament was in November
650
6511455 and the brothers did not attend.&amp;nbsp; They were in Wales, ostensibly
652
653to keep the king's peace there.&amp;nbsp; They had been sent on such a mission
654
655before (their only real task given by the king), perhaps because their
656
657father had been a Welshman.&amp;nbsp; Eventually, the respect many Welsh felt
658
659for the Tudor brothers, particularly Jasper, would aid his nephew Henry
660
661Tudor; after all, Henry landed in Pembrokeshire in 1485.
662
663&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Wales was always a problem for Henry VI for a major
664
665rebellion had ended just 40 years before and occasional fighting was not
666
667uncommon.&amp;nbsp; Edmund Tudor, as the eldest brother, went there as a representative
668
669of the English king.&amp;nbsp; While the duke of York was regent, Edmund led
670
671a raid to reassert the duke's authority on his lands, centered on the castle
672
673Carmarthen.&amp;nbsp; He fought - and won - the castle back from a Welsh rebel
674
675who had seized it.&amp;nbsp; While the duke was regent, this success was acceptable;
676
677Edmund held the castle for Richard and his authority as regent.&amp;nbsp; But
678
679after Richard left London in some disgrace, his English supporters in and
680
681near Wales were worried.&amp;nbsp; What if Edmund Tudor attempted to return
682
683Carmarthen and its lands to Henry VI rather than the duke?&amp;nbsp; Edmund
684
685was no longer a representative of the duke as regent; he was now a representative
686
687of the king.&amp;nbsp; Determined&amp;nbsp; to reassert Richard's authority in
688
689West Wales, they led a raid on Carmarthen and imprisoned Edmund sometime
690
691in September 1456.&amp;nbsp; Edmund was released soon after but had already
692
693developed a fatal illness.&amp;nbsp; He died on 1 November 1456 at Carmarthen
694
695and was given a fine burial at the nearby Greyfriars Church.&amp;nbsp; No one
696
697was ever accused of directly causing his death and it is possible that
698
699he always suffered from ill health; government records show he was absent
700
701from meetings far more than Jasper.&amp;nbsp; Then again, Edmund was also a
702
703husband and on, 28 January 1457, a father; sadly, he died before his son
704
705was born.&amp;nbsp; This son would be called Henry and would become the first
706
707Tudor king of England.&lt;/blockquote&gt;
708
709
710
711&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
712
713&lt;blockquote&gt;
714
715&lt;ul&gt;
716
717&lt;ul&gt;
718
719&lt;ul&gt;
720
721&lt;ul&gt;Kingdoms are but cares,
722
723&lt;br&gt;State is devoid of stay,
724
725&lt;br&gt;Riches are ready snares,
726
727&lt;br&gt;And hasten to decay.
728
729&lt;br&gt;Pleasure is a privy prick
730
731&lt;br&gt;Which vice doth still provoke;
732
733&lt;br&gt;Pomp, imprompt; and fame, a flame;
734
735&lt;br&gt;Power, a smoldering smoke,
736
737&lt;br&gt;Who meaneth to remove the rock
738
739&lt;br&gt;Out of the slimy mud,
740
741&lt;br&gt;Shall mire himself, and hardly 'scape
742
743&lt;br&gt;The swelling of the flood.
744
745&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;- Henry VI, written while he was&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;
746
747&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;a prisoner in the Tower of London&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/ul&gt;
748
749&lt;/ul&gt;
750
751&lt;/ul&gt;
752
753&lt;/ul&gt;
754
755&lt;/blockquote&gt;
756
757
758
759&lt;p&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;NOTE: This is a terribly convoluted tale.&amp;nbsp; I
760
761have tried to whittle it down to the bare essentials while still conveying
762
763the most important information.&amp;nbsp; For a more detailed description of
764
765all the battles and plots, find a good book - like 'The Making of the Tudor
766
767Dynasty' - and devote your weekend to reading it.&amp;nbsp; If you're wondering
768
769why all this stuff about Jasper Tudor is important...&amp;nbsp; well, it consumed
770
771the early years of Henry Tudor's life.&amp;nbsp; Even if he wasn't directly
772
773involved, they were his relatives and their success - or failure - had
774
775a direct impact on his life.&lt;/font&gt;
776
777&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;&lt;b&gt;Also, the state of the monarchy pre-Henry VII:&amp;nbsp;&lt;/b&gt;
778
779Edward IV, the first Yorkist king, was the only English king since Henry
780
781II to die solvent.&amp;nbsp; Having repossessed the lands of the exiled Lancastrian
782
783nobility and seeking support from the middle-class, he was able to run
784
785England effectively and efficiently.&amp;nbsp; Whatever his faults as a man
786
787(unfaithful and increasingly debauched), he was a good king.&lt;/font&gt;
788
789&lt;blockquote&gt;&amp;nbsp;
790
791&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=+1&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt; Since Henry VII spent most
792
793of his formative years away from this court, he could claim no special
794
795understanding of English politics; indeed, if his early life taught him
796
797anything it was the tenuousness of a title.&amp;nbsp; His uncle Jasper's life
798
799was the ultimate lesson.&amp;nbsp; On 3 February 1461 Edward, earl of March
800
801and son of the duke of York, triumphed over the Lancastrian forces at Mortimer's
802
803Cross in Herefordshire.&amp;nbsp; It was a terrible blow for Henry VI and Jasper,
804
805particularly since Jasper and the earl of Wiltshire had shared command
806
807over the defeated army.&amp;nbsp; His father, Owen Tudor, was executed after
808
809the battle.&amp;nbsp; Jasper had choice but to flee in disguise, seeking refuge
810
811at his lordship of Pembroke.&amp;nbsp; While he tried to solicit Welsh allies,
812
813Margaret of Anjou and her son Prince Edward had gathered a large army of
814
815northerners.&amp;nbsp; They reached St Albans in Hertfordshire on 17 February
816
817and soundly defeated the Yorkist forces led by the ill-prepared earl of
818
819Warwick.&amp;nbsp; This victory enabled Margaret to free her husband, prisoner
820
821of the Yorkists since the previous summer (the skirmish at St Albans).&amp;nbsp;
822
823Her plan was to march straight to London while Jasper Tudor led forces
824
825from South Wales.&amp;nbsp; But Jasper was unable to raise enough troops in
826
827time and Margaret's northern soldiers made the fatal mistake of pillaging
828
829the English countryside.&amp;nbsp; The Londoners were understandably terrified
830
831of the advancing northerners and refused to allow Margaret's men into London.&amp;nbsp;
832
833They did, however, open their gates to the future Edward IV and the earl
834
835of Warwick.&amp;nbsp; Henry VI and his family fled to Scotland and Jasper Tudor
836
837was left in Wales.
838
839&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Jasper's lands were seized and he was hunted mercilessly
840
841by Edward IV's ally William Herbert.&amp;nbsp; There is no record of his whereabouts
842
843but he did successfully elude capture, eventually escaping to Scotland.&amp;nbsp;
844
845His nephew, four-year-old Henry, was left behind at Pembroke Castle, seat
846
847of Jasper's power in Pembrokeshire.&amp;nbsp; Since William Herbert was awarded
848
849Jasper's lands by Edward IV, Henry was in his custody.&amp;nbsp; Because the
850
851young earl of Richmond was a member of the Lancastrian royal family, Herbert
852
853paid 1000 pds for his wardship; furthermore, he was given control over
854
855the boy's future marriage.&amp;nbsp; Herbert was never cruel to the boy; in
856
857fact, he and his wife, Anne Devereux, had a large family of their own and
858
859Henry was part of it.&amp;nbsp; Anne was particularly kind to the boy and,
860
861when he triumphed in 1485, Henry Tudor sent for her to come to London.&amp;nbsp;
862
863At their home, he was known as the earl of Richmond though his inheritance
864
865had been given to Edward IV's brother George, duke of Clarence.&amp;nbsp; His
866
867education was good - two Oxford scholars named Scot and Haseley who were
868
869also remembered when he became king.
870
871&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; But Henry rarely saw his mother.&amp;nbsp; A few months
872
873after his birth in 1457, she married a man named Henry Stafford.&amp;nbsp;
874
875They lived in Lincolnshire and, later, Surrey, long distances from Pembrokeshire.&amp;nbsp;
876
877Also, the fall of Pembroke Castle and Herbert's purchase of her son's wardship
878
879were obstacles.&amp;nbsp; But Margaret's husband made peace with the new king
880
881around 1461 and, while her son was not allowed to return to her guardianship,
882
883she was allowed to visit and write to him.
884
885&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Of course, the exiled Lancastrian nobility (Henry's
886
887family) were involved in countless plots to return to power.&amp;nbsp; Captured
888
889spies exaggerated reports of their strength; one told Edward IV that the
890
891kings of France, Denmark, Portugal, and Aragon were planning a Lancastrian-led
892
893invasion.&amp;nbsp; Certainly any monarch would be uneasy after such reports.&amp;nbsp;
894
895Edward IV captured the earl of Oxford and his son, believed to be Lancastrian
896
897sympathizers, and executed them for treason.&amp;nbsp; Though the plot was
898
899not as grand as the spy alleged, it had involved French support and Jasper
900
901Tudor made his way to the continent.&amp;nbsp; Eventually, a convoluted agreement
902
903was made with Louis XI the French king.&amp;nbsp; This second plan failed around
904
905Christmas 1462.&amp;nbsp; In 1464, Louis XI decided to switch loyalties to
906
907Edward IV and urged the other Lancastrian ally, Francis II duke of Brittany,
908
909to do the same.
910
911&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; It is difficult not to admire the tenacity the Lancastrian
912
913exiles maintained during these years of planning and defeat.&amp;nbsp; Jasper
914
915increasingly began to see Wales as the perfect place for invasion since
916
917it was always hostile to the English monarchy.&amp;nbsp; The Welsh were understandably
918
919sympathetic to any cause which involved this high-ranking Welshman.&amp;nbsp;
920
921To many, Jasper was a national hero - a Welshman who had succeeded at the
922
923English court and could be counted upon to support their rights.&amp;nbsp;
924
925In the spring of 1468, they had cause to rejoice because Jasper was coming
926
927to Wales.&amp;nbsp; Edward IV had just made a treaty with independent French
928
929nobles which angered Louis XI of France.&amp;nbsp; Accordingly, he decided
930
931to once again lend his support to the Lancastrian struggle.&amp;nbsp; But,
932
933once again, the support was not as much as necessary.&amp;nbsp; Jasper arrived
934
935in Wales and, though he gathered 2000 men, he was eventually routed at
936
937Harlech Castle.&amp;nbsp; Jasper once again escaped, some say by impersonating
938
939a peasant.&amp;nbsp; Once again, he was in France, still exiled and still defeated.&amp;nbsp;
940
941One can only imagine his frustration.
942
943&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; But Jasper's invasion, however slight, did create
944
945a breach in the Yorkist party.&amp;nbsp; Edward IV's supporter, the earl of
946
947Warwick who had marched with him to London in 1461, was becoming dissatisfied
948
949with the king.&amp;nbsp; Called the 'kingmaker' because of his ability, Warwick
950
951wanted more power than Edward was willing to give.&amp;nbsp; In early 1469,
952
953the two former allies were not speaking and Warwick raised an army.&amp;nbsp;
954
955He was victorious over William Herbert's army at Edgecote.&amp;nbsp; (Herbert
956
957was Henry VII's guardian and Edward IV's ally.)&amp;nbsp; Warwick realized
958
959he could not claim the throne for himself; instead, he had to switch sides
960
961and support Henry VI.&amp;nbsp; So, with Edward IV's brother George duke of
962
963Clarence, unhappy with his brother as well, Warwick went to France.&amp;nbsp;
964
965There, Louis XI attempted to reconcile Warwick with his former enemies.
966
967&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Margaret of Anjou didn't want Warwick for an ally.&amp;nbsp;
968
969She didn't trust him; he had, after all, had a major role in arresting
970
971and deposing her husband in 1461.&amp;nbsp; But Margaret's desire to reassert
972
973Lancastrian authority was great and she reluctantly agreed to his help.&amp;nbsp;
974
975Another invasion was planned.&amp;nbsp; Warwick and Jasper would go through
976
977Wales and Margaret and Prince Edward follow when it was safe.&amp;nbsp; Henry
978
979Tudor was now thirteen years old, certainly old enough to understand the
980
981danger he was in after the Battle at Edgecote.&amp;nbsp; Since his guardian
982
983had been killed by Warwick, he was under the sole protection of Anne Devereux.&amp;nbsp;
984
985She took him and her Herbert children to her family's home in Herefordshire.&amp;nbsp;
986
987Henry's mother tried to regain custody of her son after Herbert's death;
988
989however, her attempts soon didn't matter.&amp;nbsp; For when Jasper and Warwick's
990
991army arrived in England, Edward IV was not in London and was unable to
992
993reach London before the Lancastrian forces.&amp;nbsp; Therefore, Edward fled
994
995to Holland on 2 October 1470.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, a relative of Anne Devereux's
996
997had taken Henry Tudor to Hereford and given him to Jasper when he arrived
998
999at the city.&amp;nbsp; The reunion of uncle and nephew was undoubtedly emotional
1000
1001for Jasper, an exile from his country for years.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, Warwick
1002
1003entered London and freed Henry VI from the Tower.
1004
1005&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; It was also a reunion for Henry and his mother.&amp;nbsp;
1006
1007Within a few days, he and Jasper had joined Margaret and her husband.&amp;nbsp;
1008
1009They entered London together and spent about six weeks there.&amp;nbsp; On
1010
101112 November, Henry left his mother again to leave with Jasper.&amp;nbsp; Henry
1012
1013VI's restoration immeasurably increased Jasper Tudor's wealth and prestige
1014
1015(he was rewarded with lands, monies, grants); but Henry Tudor was not made
1016
1017the earl of Richmond.&amp;nbsp; His father's title had been given to Edward
1018
1019IV's brother George duke of Clarence and Clarence would not give it back.&amp;nbsp;
1020
1021Since he was an ally of Warwick's, there was nothing Jasper or Margaret
1022
1023could do for the boy.&amp;nbsp; Jasper, having spent ten years in exile and
1024
1025with little money or prestige, kept his nephew with him and enjoyed his
1026
1027success.&amp;nbsp; Alas, it did not last.&amp;nbsp; Once again, Edward IV and the
1028
1029Lancastrians met on the battlefield - this time at a town called Tewkesbury.
1030
1031&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; On 12 March 1471, Edward returned from Europe and
1032
1033landed in Yorkshire.&amp;nbsp; He marched south to London, reaching there on
1034
103511 April; on 14 April, he fought Warwick at the Battle of Barnet.&amp;nbsp;
1036
1037Edward won and promptly killed Warwick.&amp;nbsp; He also regained custody
1038
1039of Henry VI.&amp;nbsp; The situation was once again dire; Jasper Tudor promptly
1040
1041began to raise an army to fight Edward.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, Margaret of Anjou
1042
1043and Prince Edward arrived in England as planned so many months ago.&amp;nbsp;
1044
1045She knew nothing of Warwick's defeat and her husband's capture.&amp;nbsp; Upon
1046
1047hearing the news, she was devastated but unbowed.&amp;nbsp; She gathered an
1048
1049army in the West Country and marched north toward Wales; she was planning
1050
1051to meet and join forces with Jasper.&amp;nbsp; Edward IV was no fool and realized
1052
1053that he must make a quick, decisive strike.&amp;nbsp; He was determined to
1054
1055meet Margaret's army before she met up with Jasper.&amp;nbsp; Edward and Margaret
1056
1057met south of Tewkesbury on 4 May 1471.&amp;nbsp; Margaret was soundly defeated
1058
1059and her son killed during or after the battle.&amp;nbsp; Captured like her
1060
1061husband and with their only child killed, Margaret was taken to London.&amp;nbsp;
1062
1063Jasper Tudor, unable to reach her in time, was an exile once again - and,
1064
1065this time, so was his nephew.&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1066
1067
1068
1069&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
1070
1071&lt;br&gt;The defeat at Tewkesbury was devastating to the Lancastrian cause.&amp;nbsp;
1072
1073Only hours after Edward IV returned in triumph to London, Henry VI was
1074
1075dead in the Tower.&amp;nbsp; The circumstances of his death were mysterious
1076
1077but the execution of his supporter the duke of Somerset was an open warning.&amp;nbsp;
1078
1079Jasper Tudor had good reason to fear for both his and Henry's safety.&amp;nbsp;
1080
1081Margaret Beaufort and her husband almost immediately declared allegiance
1082
1083to Edward to protect themselves.&amp;nbsp; But her son, as one of the few surviving
1084
1085males with Lancastrian blood, was destined for France.&amp;nbsp; Jasper hoped
1086
1087that their old ally Louis XI would aid them once again.
1088
1089&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Before he arrived in France, however, he fought a
1090
1091battle in Wales at Chepstow.&amp;nbsp; Edward IV was still determined to capture
1092
1093him and sent Sir Roger Vaughan to do so.&amp;nbsp; Jasper Tudor managed to
1094
1095defeat Vaughan and executed him.&amp;nbsp; This ruthless act was uncharacteristic
1096
1097for Jasper but can be easily explained - Vaughan had killed his father,
1098
1099Owen Tudor, almost ten years before at the battle of Mortimer's Cross.&amp;nbsp;
1100
1101The satisfaction of this execution was Jasper's only comfort as he fought
1102
1103his way to the coast.&amp;nbsp; From there, he, his nephew, and a few servants
1104
1105made their way to France.&amp;nbsp; They ended up landing in Brittany, where
1106
1107the duke Francis II had long supported them.&amp;nbsp; Francis was desperate
1108
1109to preserve his duchy's independence from the French state and recognized
1110
1111Jasper and Henry as powerful diplomatic tools.&amp;nbsp; If Edward would aid
1112
1113him, then perhaps he would return the Tudors - that was Francis's official
1114
1115diplomatic message.&amp;nbsp; Edward made several attempts to gain custody
1116
1117of the Tudors but was unsuccessful.&amp;nbsp; His concern, however, was intermittent
1118
1119since they were not in England and he was more concerned with his own family
1120
1121and rule.
1122
1123&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; From 1471 to Edward's death twelve years later, Jasper
1124
1125and Henry remained in Brittany, staying at the castle of Suscinio, traditionally
1126
1127used as the duke's summer residence.&amp;nbsp; Louis XI of France, meanwhile,
1128
1129was engaged in more diplomatic rivalry.&amp;nbsp; Resenting Edward's relations
1130
1131with his enemies, he sought the release of Jasper and Henry into his custody.&amp;nbsp;
1132
1133He told the duke of Brittany that the Tudors had, after all, intended to
1134
1135go to France itself - their landing in Brittany had been a mistake of bad
1136
1137weather.&amp;nbsp; Also, Jasper had been given a pension by Louis during their
1138
1139earlier stay; consequently, he was a servant of the king and under his
1140
1141protection.&amp;nbsp; Both men wanted to use the Tudors as diplomatic pawns
1142
1143but Francis II was unwilling to give up his advantage.&amp;nbsp; The Tudors
1144
1145stayed in Brittany, under increasingly strict control.&amp;nbsp; There were
1146
1147reports that Edward IV wanted Henry killed and that Louis XI was going
1148
1149to kidnap them.
1150
1151&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Edward IV had to console himself with Francis II's promise
1152
1153that the Tudors were under protective custody.&amp;nbsp; In the mid-1470s he
1154
1155tried a new strategy, with the aid of Henry's mother.&amp;nbsp; She had extracted
1156
1157a promise from the king that some of her lands would pass to her son on
1158
1159her death.&amp;nbsp; Edward not only agreed but he also suggested an English
1160
1161bride - perhaps one of his own daughters - for the exiled earl.&amp;nbsp; Margaret
1162
1163Beaufort gave her full support to this plan.&amp;nbsp; She wanted her son in
1164
1165England above all else.&amp;nbsp; Whether Edward intended to keep his promise
1166
1167is unknown but it was certainly a good idea.&amp;nbsp; By marrying Henry into
1168
1169his family, he would neutralize this last Lancastrian threat.&amp;nbsp; And,
1170
1171for a while, it seemed he would be successful.&amp;nbsp; In late 1476, worn
1172
1173down by ill health and the English ambassadors, Francis II consented to
1174
1175send Henry to England.&amp;nbsp; Henry developed - or faked - an illness at
1176
1177the port and was able to elude being sent home.&amp;nbsp; It may be that he
1178
1179suspected duplicity on Edward's part or was counseled by his uncle.&amp;nbsp;
1180
1181(It seems evident that Henry, the first Tudor king, shared many qualities
1182
1183with his granddaughter, Elizabeth I, last of the Tudor monarchs - both
1184
1185were shaped by perilous upbringings into cautious, careful rulers.&amp;nbsp;
1186
1187In truth, they bore little resemblance to Henry VIII, Edward VI &amp;amp; Mary
1188
1189I.&amp;nbsp; They were also far more concerned with domestic policy than foreign
1190
1191entanglements.)
1192
1193&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Since Henry had, by now, grown into a handsome and
1194
1195affable teenager, he was always welcome at the ducal court.&amp;nbsp; After
1196
1197avoiding being sent to England, he simply returned to the duke's custody.&amp;nbsp;
1198
1199There, he continued to be treated fairly - indeed, even generously.&amp;nbsp;
1200
1201Every now and again, Edward IV and Margaret Beaufort tried to lure him
1202
1203to England (for different reasons, of course.)&amp;nbsp; Margaret had asked
1204
1205Edward to let Henry stand as heir to her estates and he agreed (in 1472)
1206
1207but by 1482, Edward IV decided this - if Henry returned to England and
1208
1209gained Edward's favor, he would receive Margaret's lands plus other estates.&amp;nbsp;
1210
1211But if he stayed in France, he would get nothing.&amp;nbsp; Nothing had been
1212
1213decided when Edward died unexpectedly on 9 April 1483.&amp;nbsp; By this time,
1214
1215Duke Francis was facing instability in his own lands.&amp;nbsp; Naturally enough,
1216
1217this made Henry and Jasper's position more tenuous.&amp;nbsp; Still, they received
1218
1219as much support from the duke as he could provide, including generous gifts
1220
1221of money.
1222
1223&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; It may be that, upon Edward's death, Henry seriously thought
1224
1225of returning home.&amp;nbsp; The events which followed the king's demise certainly
1226
1227set him upon that course.&amp;nbsp; As recounted earlier, Richard duke of Gloucester,
1228
1229seized the throne from his nephew, Edward V, his brother's 12-year-old
1230
1231heir.&amp;nbsp; Richard officially seized the throne on 26 June.&amp;nbsp; There
1232
1233was no immediate effect on Henry and Jasper Tudor.&amp;nbsp; But their protectors,
1234
1235the French king Louis XI and Duke Francis II, immediately recognized the
1236
1237possibilities - after all, Richard III's claim was tenuous and he would
1238
1239need to work out some arrangement regarding other claimants.&amp;nbsp; Jasper
1240
1241and Henry Tudor would bear even greater pressure on Richard than they had
1242
1243on Edward.&amp;nbsp; At first, Richard simply tried to establish friendly relations
1244
1245with the king and duke, without explicitly mentioning the Tudors.&amp;nbsp;
1246
1247His more immediate concern was the closing of French ports to English exiles
1248
1249(notably former Queen Elizabeth Woodville's brother and a large section
1250
1251of the English fleet.)&amp;nbsp; In England, Margaret still wanted her son
1252
1253to return - though to his rightful position as earl of Richmond, not as
1254
1255king of England.&amp;nbsp; But events soon changed, with the same rapidity
1256
1257of Richard's usurpation, and Henry Tudor dreamed of more than an earldom.
1258
1259&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Richard III's usurpation was bad enough to most Englishmen,
1260
1261and especially the nobility.&amp;nbsp; But in 1483, Edward IV's two sons -
1262
1263held in the Tower - mysteriously died.&amp;nbsp; It was whispered that Richard
1264
1265had them murdered and secretly buried.&amp;nbsp; Thus was born the legend of
1266
1267the 'Princes of the Tower'.&amp;nbsp; (What happened remains a matter of conjecture;
1268
1269mystery novelist and playwright, Josephine Tey, wrote&lt;i&gt; The Daughter of
1270
1271Time&lt;/i&gt;, a book which convincingly argues for Richard's innocence.&amp;nbsp;
1272
1273In that case, Henry VII executed the boys - who would be his brothers-in-law
1274
1275- in order to secure his throne.&amp;nbsp; Morre recently, the lawyer Bertram
1276
1277Fields examines the case in &lt;i&gt;Royal Blood&lt;/i&gt;.)&amp;nbsp; The deaths of Edward
1278
1279V and his brother, Richard duke of York, angered the populace and encouraged
1280
1281the image of Richard III as a deceitful murderer.&amp;nbsp; Since Richard never
1282
1283officially responded to the rumors, they were believed to be true.&amp;nbsp;
1284
1285Soon enough, the duke of Buckingham, Henry Stafford, created more chaos.&amp;nbsp;
1286
1287He led a rebellion against Richard III in October and was captured and
1288
1289executed in November.
1290
1291&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; First of all, it is important to remember that Buckingham,
1292
1293Richard III and Henry Tudor were the &lt;i&gt;only&lt;/i&gt; surviving male heirsto
1294
1295the house of Plantagenet.&amp;nbsp; The reasons why Buckingham led a rebellion
1296
1297against Richard are not clear but several possibilities can be considered
1298
1299- first, he had as legitimate a claim to tthe throne as Richard and, gauging
1300
1301popular dissatisfaction with the new king, Buckingham felt he should take
1302
1303his chances and set himself up as the rival claimant (particularly since
1304
1305Edward V and Richard of York were supposedly murdered); second, as a rival
1306
1307claimant, Buckingham undoubtedly felt uneasy about his own safety (particularly
1308
1309when it was rumored Richard had murdered his two nephews; if he had, it
1310
1311was possible he would decide to murder Buckingham as well.)&amp;nbsp; These
1312
1313two reasons alone are sufficient to explain Buckingham's motivations.&amp;nbsp;
1314
1315Later historians, especially Polydore Vergil (Henry VII's official historian)
1316
1317would later claim Buckingham really intended to defeat Richard and place
1318
1319Henry Tudor on the throne.&amp;nbsp; But it hardly seems likely; indeed, Buckingham
1320
1321could legitimately believe he had a more solid claim than Henry.
1322
1323&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; There had been uprisings against Richard III just
1324
1325days after his coronation which highlighted popular dissatisfaction.&amp;nbsp;
1326
1327Meanwhile, Margaret Beaufort had become friends with Edward IV's widow,
1328
1329Elizabeth Woodville (or Wydeville).&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth heard the rumors of
1330
1331her sons' deaths in the Tower; she had no way of gauging their truth.&amp;nbsp;
1332
1333But she was eager to reassert her family's claim to the throne.&amp;nbsp; With
1334
1335her sons supposedly dead, that left her five daughters - in particular,
1336
1337her eldest Elizabeth of York - to claim the throne.&amp;nbsp; They could do
1338
1339so only through marriage to a male claimant (such as Henry Tudor.)&amp;nbsp;
1340
1341So the plan to wed Elizabeth and Henry began in earnest.&amp;nbsp; Both women
1342
1343knew that such a marriage would imply that Henry Tudor wanted to replace
1344
1345Richard on the throne.&amp;nbsp; Margaret quickly sent Christopher Urswick,
1346
1347a young priest from her household, to Brittany.&amp;nbsp; her son, so long
1348
1349an exile and dependent on others, was to plan a return to England - to
1350
1351claim two great positions, husband &lt;i&gt;and&lt;/i&gt; king.&amp;nbsp; Margaret also
1352
1353sent a large sum of money to her son, raised from loans in London.&amp;nbsp;
1354
1355She advised him to come to Wales as soon as possible (since he would receive
1356
1357support in Wales, particularly from the duke of Buckingham.)
1358
1359&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; This, of course, lends credence to the idea that
1360
1361Buckingham wanted to support Henry's claim.&amp;nbsp; But, again, that is conjecture.&amp;nbsp;
1362
1363Buckingham did write a letter to Henry on 24 September 1483 which stated
1364
1365he would support the rebellion against Richard, &lt;i&gt;even though &lt;/i&gt;he and
1366
1367Henry's interests may not be perfectly compatible.&amp;nbsp; What is certain
1368
1369is that Buckingham suspected his own life was forfeit with Richard III;
1370
1371he and Henry Tudor could sort out things once Richard was defeated.&amp;nbsp;
1372
1373He told Henry the rebellion would begin on 18 October, thus giving Henry
1374
1375three weeks notice.&amp;nbsp; He did not mention acknowledging Henry as king
1376
1377- he also did not mention marriage to Elizzabeth of York.&amp;nbsp; Henry received
1378
1379Margaret and Buckingham's letters and talked with the duke of Brittany.&amp;nbsp;
1380
1381He needed further financial support but also relied on Francis's advice.&amp;nbsp;
1382
1383The duke promised support; another vital link was established.
1384
1385&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Richard III had not suspected Buckingham of treachery
1386
1387- at first.&amp;nbsp; Thus, he had no large arrmy assembled to fight the duke.&amp;nbsp;
1388
1389But such a massively-planned uprising could not remain secret forever and
1390
1391Richard was informed on 11 October that a vast rebellion would occur in
1392
1393a week.&amp;nbsp; He had heard vague descriptions of a plan a few weeks before
1394
1395and had summoned Buckingham to him.&amp;nbsp; The duke feigned a stomach ache;
1396
1397a more tersely-worded summons soon followed.&amp;nbsp; The duke again refused
1398
1399the summons.&amp;nbsp; By then, the rebellion was a week away and Richard had
1400
1401been informed of Buckingham's involvement and the extent of the rebellion.&amp;nbsp;
1402
1403Richard hurriedly assembled his army; and though he had been betrayed by
1404
1405Buckingham, his former friend, he was not bitter - he specifically ordered
1406
1407his troops to not 'rob, spoil or hurt' any of Buckingham's followers.&amp;nbsp;
1408
1409Richard was prepared to be merciful.
1410
1411&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Buckingham's rebellion began - and failed, largely
1412
1413because his Welsh tenants decided they liked him less than Richard III.&amp;nbsp;
1414
1415Robbed of this crucial support, he fled to a friend's home but the friend,
1416
1417Ralph Bannaster, turned him in and, on 31 October, Buckingham was taken
1418
1419to Sir James Tyrell and Christopher Wellesbourne, staunch supporters of
1420
1421Richard III.&amp;nbsp; Once Buckingham had been captured, the other rebellions
1422
1423collapsed.&amp;nbsp; Many of the rebels fled to Brittany, to join Henry Tudor,
1424
1425now their last hope.&amp;nbsp; Richard III attempted to prevent this mass exodus
1426
1427of rebels but failed.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, at Plymouth Harbor, Henry heard
1428
1429the news of Buckingham's execution on 2 November 1483.&amp;nbsp; (He had been
1430
1431delayed on his way to England because of a storm.)&amp;nbsp; His other rival
1432
1433for the throne had been killed (Buckingham's son and heir was just six
1434
1435years old) but Buckingham's failure was hardly encouraging.&amp;nbsp; He returned
1436
1437to Brittany, once more an exile after twelve years abroad.&amp;nbsp; His position
1438
1439was perhaps more untenable than before - the uprising had been soundly
1440
1441defeated and Richard III was once again making friendly overtures to duke
1442
1443Francis.
1444
1445&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Henry's only hope lay with the English exiles now
1446
1447joining him in Brittany.&amp;nbsp; There were roughly 500 men, among them the
1448
1449marquess of Dorset.&amp;nbsp; These exiles told him he must reassemble his
1450
1451allies and attack again, before Richard III became more firmly entrenched
1452
1453as king - and before the duke ended his hospitality.&amp;nbsp; In December,
1454
1455Henry gave a speech at Rennes Cathedral meant to boost morale and inspire
1456
1457his supporters.&amp;nbsp; He promised to marry Elizabeth of York, thus joining
1458
1459the houses of York and Lancaster together.&amp;nbsp; The assembled men swore
1460
1461oaths of loyalty to him.&amp;nbsp; Their next task was more difficult - persuading
1462
1463the duke of Brittany to lend them more money to assemble yet another fleet.&amp;nbsp;
1464
1465Again, Henry promised to repay the money.&amp;nbsp; He was fortunate that Richard
1466
1467III had decided to retaliate against Breton and French ships because of
1468
1469their assistance to Henry and Buckingham.&amp;nbsp; The duke was angered and
1470
1471agreed to loan Henry more money.&amp;nbsp; So another flotilla was assembled
1472
1473and final preparations made in mid-spring 1484.&amp;nbsp; But, for some unknown
1474
1475reason, the exiles did not sail for England.
1476
1477&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Instead, they remained at Vannes in Brittany.&amp;nbsp;
1478
1479By this time, Henry fully realized the enormous stakes of the enterprise.&amp;nbsp;
1480
1481He was particularly moved by the loyalty of the other exiles.&amp;nbsp; Many
1482
1483were separated from their families and all were wanted men - and they suffered
1484
1485these injuries to support him.&amp;nbsp; He owed them a great debt and it is
1486
1487to his credit that, immediately after Bosworth, he rewarded them.&amp;nbsp;
1488
1489Elizabeth Woodville's son by her first husband, the marquess of Dorset,
1490
1491was in Brittany as were her three brothers, Lionel, Edward and Richard.&amp;nbsp;
1492
1493They were joined by many loyal servants.&amp;nbsp; All of the exiles were undoubtedly
1494
1495horrified by the supposed murders of Edward V and Richard of York.&amp;nbsp;
1496
1497While these men schemed with Henry Tudor, the object of their schemes -
1498
1499Richard III - attempted to nullify their threat.&amp;nbsp; He tried various
1500
1501tactics, mixing friendly overtures with veiled threats.&amp;nbsp; He knew Margaret
1502
1503Beaufort had sent messages to her son and plotted in the rebellion but
1504
1505he couldn't risk alienating her husband, Lord Stanley.&amp;nbsp; So he told
1506
1507Stanley to watch his wife carefully, dismiss the servants who had relayed
1508
1509messages, and prevent any contact with Henry and other rebels.&amp;nbsp; He
1510
1511also gave Stanley possession of Margaret's property for the course of Stanley's
1512
1513life; after his death, the lands would pass to the crown.&amp;nbsp; Still,
1514
1515Margaret had every reason to be grateful for her life.
1516
1517&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In March of 1484, Richard attempted a reconciliation
1518
1519with his former sister-in-law, Elizabeth Woodville.&amp;nbsp; She and her five
1520
1521daughters had sought sanctuary in Westminster.&amp;nbsp; Richard gathered the
1522
1523lord mayor of London, all leading aristocrats and various aldermen to his
1524
1525palace.&amp;nbsp; He announced that - if Elizabeth and her children left sanctuary
1526
1527- he would protect them; they would be reccognized as his kin and given
1528
1529a pension and dowries.&amp;nbsp; Most importantly, he publicly promised they
1530
1531would not be sent to any prisons, including the Tower of London (the site
1532
1533of their brothers' deaths.)
1534
1535&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; He also attempted to win over the duke of Brittany
1536
1537again.&amp;nbsp; In this he was aided by the ailing duke's treasurer, Pierre
1538
1539Landais.&amp;nbsp; Landais believed Brittany's fate would be better served
1540
1541with an English alliance.&amp;nbsp; It could be, too, that he disliked the
1542
1543assembled rebels.&amp;nbsp; As a result, Henry asked the French king Charles
1544
1545VIII for asylum at his court.&amp;nbsp; Charles agreed and, soon enough, Henry
1546
1547left Brittany for Paris.&amp;nbsp; It was a dangerous decision and, as it was
1548
1549taken without Francis's permission, would have resulted in his arrest.&amp;nbsp;
1550
1551But he managed to arrive in Anjou with his pursuers just an hour behind.&amp;nbsp;
1552
1553(His uncle Jasper had left a few days earlier, ostensibly to visit Francis
1554
1555at Rennes.&amp;nbsp; Both he and Henry turned away at the last moment and headed
1556
1557toward Anjou.)&amp;nbsp; There were about 400 rebels left behind.&amp;nbsp; Duke
1558
1559Francis certainly had every right to send them back to England, to face
1560
1561certain death.&amp;nbsp; But he did not - sick as he was, he was determined
1562
1563to undo some of Landais's damage.&amp;nbsp; He allowed the rebels to join Henry
1564
1565in Paris. He also gave them a large gift of money (about 700 livres) to
1566
1567pay for their travel (this was in addition to their living allowance he
1568
1569was also paying!)&amp;nbsp; Henry Tudor was touched by his old protector's
1570
1571kindness and generosity.&amp;nbsp; He sent a letter of thanks, realizing that
1572
1573the treachery had been Landais's and not the duke's.
1574
1575&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Of course, the French royal family were very eager
1576
1577to use Henry as a diplomatic weapon against the English.&amp;nbsp; But the
1578
1579situation at the French court was confused and problematic; in the end,
1580
1581Henry relied upon the king's older sister, Anne of Beaujeu, for assistance.&amp;nbsp;
1582
1583Her role was of vital importance as Henry planned for the greatest battle
1584
1585of his life, Bosworth Field.
1586
1587&lt;br&gt;
1588
1589&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
1590
1591&lt;blockquote&gt;The French court which welcomed Henry Tudor was a curious place.&amp;nbsp;
1592
1593King Louis XI had died on 30 August 1483, leaving behind a thirteen-year-old
1594
1595heir who became Charles VIII.&amp;nbsp; As often happened when a minor succeeded
1596
1597to the throne, a power struggle ensued between the new king's relatives
1598
1599over the role of regent.&amp;nbsp; Charles's mother, Charlotte of Savoy, was
1600
1601not a serious contender; she had never been involved in politics and was
1602
1603seriously ill.&amp;nbsp; (She died on 1 December.)&amp;nbsp; So the struggle was
1604
1605between Charles's older sister, Anne, and his younger sister's husband,
1606
1607Louis duc d'Orleans.&amp;nbsp; Anne was twenty-two years old and married to
1608
1609Pierre, Lord Beaujeu, the heir of the duc d'Bourbon.&amp;nbsp; Anne triumphed
1610
1611over her brother-in-law Louis and her gained control of the government.
1612
1613&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Henry Tudor's former patron, Duke Francis II, soon
1614
1615became involved in this struggle - at least ostensibly.&amp;nbsp; His servant
1616
1617Pierre Landais (discussed on the previous page) was hated by the Orleans
1618
1619party who were seeking an alliance with his old enemies - namely, the noblemen
1620
1621of Brittany who had fled during Landais's ascendancy.&amp;nbsp; (Naturally
1622
1623enough, they had fled from Brittany to France, where they met with the
1624
1625Orleans party.)&amp;nbsp; On 7 April 1484 these new allies attempted to destroy
1626
1627Landais, breaking into the ducal palace at Nantes and then going to his
1628
1629country house.&amp;nbsp; They failed to find Landais, however, and were forced
1630
1631to flee in shambles.&amp;nbsp; They waited at the town of Ancenis, in Brittany
1632
1633but near the French border.&amp;nbsp; Landais remained in power and seemed
1634
1635to bear no ill will toward the Breton-Orleans conspirators.&amp;nbsp; In autumn,
1636
1637the Orleans party attempted - once again - to make peace between Francis
1638
1639II and his exiled noblemen.&amp;nbsp; This time, they didn't attempt to kidnap
1640
1641Landais as part of their plan!&amp;nbsp; Landais was a pragmatist and undoubtedly
1642
1643wanted to rid himself of the troublesome Breton-Orleans scheming.&amp;nbsp;
1644
1645So he supported their plan; in doing so, he knew he would anger the French
1646
1647monarchy.&amp;nbsp; Naturally, he turned to England's King Richard III for
1648
1649assistance, asking that Richard recognize the Orleans-Breton alliance;
1650
1651in return, Landais offered to send Henry Tudor to England.&amp;nbsp; (Landais
1652
1653would then have the support of Burgundy, Orleans, &lt;i&gt;and&lt;/i&gt; England against
1654
1655any French designs on Brittany.)
1656
1657&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Of course, Henry Tudor fled to France where he was
1658
1659welcomed with open arms.&amp;nbsp; With Henry Tudor gone, Brittany had no olive
1660
1661branch to offer England; this would weaken the Breton-English alliance.&amp;nbsp;
1662
1663It would also aid Anne of Beaujeu in her struggle against the Orleans party.&amp;nbsp;
1664
1665When Henry arrived in Anjou, he sent a messenger to Charles VIII, then
1666
1667at Montargis.&amp;nbsp; The king immediately sent an envoy to greet Henry and
1668
1669bring him to Chartres.&amp;nbsp; The envoy was given the generous sum of 20000
1670
1671francs for expenses on the week-long journey.&amp;nbsp; Charles was, of course,
1672
1673delighted to encourage Henry in his plan to overthrow Richard III - though
1674
1675less delighted to give him large sums of money on a continual basis, as
1676
1677Duke Francis had.&amp;nbsp; Also, Charles may have been unnerved by the large
1678
1679number of Henry's English followers who needed to be housed and fed while
1680
1681awaiting developments.&amp;nbsp; Charles did give Henry about 3000 francs to
1682
1683clothe his army and granted permission for Henry to assemble mercenaries
1684
1685for his army.&amp;nbsp; Henry traveled with the king north to Paris (the court
1686
1687spent autumn in the beautiful Loire valley); on 4 February 1485, they reached
1688
1689the French capital.&amp;nbsp; During this journey, Henry finally realized the
1690
1691necessity of immediate and decisive action.&amp;nbsp; He had spent nearly fourteen
1692
1693years as an exile in France and Landais's betrayal revealed the instability
1694
1695of his position.&amp;nbsp; What if Anne of Beaujeu fell from power?&amp;nbsp; Would
1696
1697he be a pawn for the Orleans cause?&amp;nbsp; Also, it is true that Henry was
1698
1699in his late twenties, strong and healthy and undoubtedly yearning to be
1700
1701his own man.&amp;nbsp; Why would he want to live in other people's homes, dependent
1702
1703on their good will and generosity?
1704
1705&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Richard III was certainly unhappy with events in
1706
1707France.&amp;nbsp; He sent word to Charles of his displeasure and also tried
1708
1709to rally English support against Henry.&amp;nbsp; Henry was sending letters
1710
1711to England during the winter of 1484-5 to inspire potential supporters
1712
1713(since many were dissatisfied with Richard's rule, for reasons outlined
1714
1715in previous pages.)&amp;nbsp; Richard was aware of these letters and ordered
1716
1717the mayors and sheriffs throughout England to arrest anyone receiving or
1718
1719distributing them.&amp;nbsp; (One of the letters has survived - click here
1720
1721to read it.)&amp;nbsp; An interesting note about these letters - Henry was
1722
1723styling himself King of England, a deliberate and flagrant disregard of
1724
1725Richard's position.
1726
1727&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; On 7 December 1484, Richard responded to the letters
1728
1729by sending out his own proclamations.&amp;nbsp; He condemned the exiles supporting
1730
1731Henry in France; he also mocked Henry's use of the royal title.&amp;nbsp; He
1732
1733also reiterated the ancient animosity between England and France, reminding
1734
1735the English people that - in exchange for Charles's support - Henry had
1736
1737supposedly promised to return the English possessions in France and relinquish
1738
1739the traditional English claim to the French throne.&amp;nbsp; These, of course,
1740
1741were matters near and dear to all English hearts.&amp;nbsp; From the 12th century
1742
1743onwards, the English claim to the French throne and territories was a patriotic
1744
1745dream shared by all Englishmen.&amp;nbsp; The great heroes of the past (most
1746
1747gloriously, Henry V) had led their countrymen to battle over those claims;
1748
1749thousands of Englishmen died in those battles.&amp;nbsp; By painting Henry
1750
1751as a traitor to one of the most precious English dreams (that of possessing
1752
1753France), Richard hoped to appeal to English patriotism.&amp;nbsp; He also reminded
1754
1755his subjects that Henry would be invading with mercenaries who would commit
1756
1757'the most cruel murders, slaughters, robberies and disinheritances that
1758
1759were ever seen in any Christian Realm.'&amp;nbsp; Once again, Richard appealed
1760
1761to a time-honored English abhorrence of invasion.&amp;nbsp; He also attended
1762
1763to more practical matters - ordering sheriffs to prepare troops for muster
1764
1765and raise cash for military payments.
1766
1767&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; I would like to emphasize - once again - the tenuousness
1768
1769of Henry Tudor's claim.&amp;nbsp; At this point, only he and Richard III were
1770
1771viable claimants to the English throne.&amp;nbsp; But Richard's position was
1772
1773stronger by far (and as will become clear later), the Battle of Bosworth
1774
1775ended in Henry's favor only because a key nobleman betrayed Richard.&amp;nbsp;
1776
1777This was hardly an auspicious beginning to Henry's rule.&amp;nbsp; Throughout
1778
1779these pages, I have tried to emphasize the general unpopularity of Richard's
1780
1781rule - &lt;i&gt;with regard to the disappearance of his nephews&lt;/i&gt;.&amp;nbsp; The
1782
1783disappearance sullied Richard's character and made those Englishmen who
1784
1785didn't support Henry Tudor less than thrilled about defending Richard III.&amp;nbsp;
1786
1787In other words, they would simply wait out the conflict without openly
1788
1789supporting either party.&amp;nbsp; And that is exactly what most of the country
1790
1791did.&amp;nbsp; Personally, I do not believe Richard III murdered his nephews
1792
1793but, of course, the mystery will always remain open to interpretation.&amp;nbsp;
1794
1795It is true that Richard III has received a 'raw deal' from historians.&amp;nbsp;
1796
1797Can we blame this on Shakespeare?&amp;nbsp; :-)&amp;nbsp; Hey, it is a great play
1798
1799but written during the reign of Henry Tudor's granddaughter.&amp;nbsp; It isn't
1800
1801likely the playwright wanted to offend the monarch (witness the ending
1802
1803to All Is True for proof of that - a sympathetic introduction to Katharine
1804
1805of Aragon which ends with Elizabeth's triumphant birth.)&amp;nbsp; Richard
1806
1807was a capable and intelligent man and - whatever the truth about his nephews
1808
1809- had far more experience in government thhan Henry Tudor.&amp;nbsp; He also
1810
1811reacted to betrayal with an appealing mixture of punishment and forgiveness;
1812
1813he was far more conciliatory than, say, Henry VIII.&amp;nbsp; (During this
1814
1815time, an embarrassing episode occurred which may have furthered Richard's
1816
1817resolve to shore up his support against Henry:&amp;nbsp; John de Vere, the
1818
1819Lancastrian earl of Oxford, was imprisoned at Calais in France; he escaped,
1820
1821along with two English soldiers, to join Henry Tudor in Paris.&amp;nbsp; Understandably,
1822
1823this embarrassed Richard; he issued pardons to the English soldiers at
1824
1825Calais, including de Vere's supporters, but they still rebelled.&amp;nbsp;
1826
1827In the end, Henry's morale went up and Richard's fell drastically.&amp;nbsp;
1828
1829The Oxford episode indicated the lack of loyalty to Richard's regime.&amp;nbsp;
1830
1831This was coupled with the disloyalty of Sir William Stanley, advising Henry
1832
1833from England.)
1834
1835&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Of course, these domestic actions were accompanied
1836
1837by foreign policy initiatives designed to find Richard prominent allies.&amp;nbsp;
1838
1839In this, he was successful as well.&amp;nbsp; Henry Tudor's old ally, Duke
1840
1841Francis of Brittany, entered into a seven-year truce with England on 2
1842
1843March 1485.&amp;nbsp; One of the specific points of the truce was that neither
1844
1845side would support rebellion against the other, thus allying Richard and
1846
1847Duke Francis against the French throne.&amp;nbsp; Not surprisingly, Charles
1848
1849VIII began to fear an English-Breton invasion of France. So he encouraged
1850
1851Henry Tudor to hasten his plans to invade England.&amp;nbsp; In March 1485,
1852
1853Richard's queen, Anne Neville, died and this personal heartbreak had to
1854
1855be shoved aside in the face of Henry Tudor's rebellion.&amp;nbsp; It was soon
1856
1857rumored that Richard would marry Elizabeth of York or her sister Cecily,
1858
1859thus regaining the support of Henry's Yorkist allies.&amp;nbsp; Henry, whom
1860
1861Elizabeth Woodville and Margaret Beaufort intended to wed Elizabeth, was
1862
1863upset but could do little.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, Richard kept a shrewd eye on
1864
1865Lord Stanley (I'll let you alert readers figure out the Tudor-Stanley connection
1866
1867from the earlier pages - here's a clue: who was Margaret Beaufort married
1868
1869to?)&amp;nbsp; Around July 1485, Stanley asked permission to visit relative
1870
1871in Lancashire.&amp;nbsp; The king was no fool; he allowed Stanley to leave
1872
1873London but kept his son and heir, George, Lord Strange, as hostage.&amp;nbsp;
1874
1875Essentially, Strange remained in Richard's household in order to assure
1876
1877his father's good behavior.
1878
1879&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Charles VIII was, of course, still encouraging Henry's
1880
1881planned invasion but still hedging about financial support.&amp;nbsp; When
1882
1883news came that Richard might marry Elizabeth of York, Henry became frantic.&amp;nbsp;
1884
1885He cast about for another prominent Yorkist bride, with little success.&amp;nbsp;
1886
1887More importantly, (with the support of Philippe de Commynes, an influential
1888
1889diplomat) Henry pressed Charles to request money from the French parliament.&amp;nbsp;
1890
1891The French king did so on 4 May 1485 and was successful; he returned with
1892
1893Henry to Paris about a month later.&amp;nbsp; Already, plans to assemble an
1894
1895invasion fleet were being approved.&amp;nbsp; At Harfleur, near the mouth of
1896
1897the River Seine, Henry spent about 50000 livres to assemble 4000 men.&amp;nbsp;
1898
1899Of these, 1500 were discharged soldiers from a base at Pont de l'Arche.&amp;nbsp;
1900
1901The French soldiers were commanded by a nobleman from Savoy called Philibert
1902
1903de Chandee, who later became a good friend of Henry Tudor's.&amp;nbsp; There
1904
1905were also Henry's 400 English supporters who had shared his exile.&amp;nbsp;
1906
1907Henry placed these men under the command of Richard Guildford.&amp;nbsp; (It
1908
1909was later rumored that about 1000 Scots joined Henry's force; whether that
1910
1911number is correct or not, some Scots did fight on Henry's side.)
1912
1913&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Henry's great enterprise was about to begin.&amp;nbsp;
1914
1915On 1 August 1485, Henry and his followers left Honfleur and sailed down
1916
1917the Seine into the Channel.&amp;nbsp; On 7 August, they sailed into Milford
1918
1919Sound near sunset.&amp;nbsp; They actually landed at Mill Bay, inside the Sound.&amp;nbsp;
1920
1921This was the land of Pembrokeshire where Henry had been imprisoned as a
1922
1923young man.&amp;nbsp; Upon landing, Henry knelt down and whispered, 'Judge me,
1924
1925Lord, and fight my cause.'&amp;nbsp; He kissed the English soil, crossed himself,
1926
1927and told his men to follow him - in the name of God and St George.&amp;nbsp;
1928
1929It was no coincidence that he landed in Wales, his father's native land;
1930
1931it was there that he hoped to gain crucial support for his cause.
1932
1933&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1934
1935
1936
1937&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
1938
1939&lt;blockquote&gt;(&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;NOTE:&amp;nbsp; Historical sources regarding
1940
1941the actual battle at Bosworth are scanty at best.&amp;nbsp; No one who actually
1942
1943fought at the battle recorded the battle; typically, the chroniclers from
1944
1945London recorded great events but they were far from the action in 1485.&amp;nbsp;
1946
1947Also, the supporters of Richard III didn't want to remember their defeat
1948
1949- and unlikely to write about in the chargged political climate.&amp;nbsp; Henry's
1950
1951supporters were concerned with more immediate matters after the battle
1952
1953- namely, beginning the rule of a very ineexperienced monarch who had not
1954
1955been to England in fifteen years.&amp;nbsp; And there is another very important
1956
1957fact - medieval battles are incredibly confusing to describe (just as they
1958
1959were confusing to fight.)&amp;nbsp; Imagine a Revolutionary War battle - the
1960
1961British soldiers in matching red coats, marching in perfect cadence to
1962
1963a fixed point, they shoot, reload and aim with some degree of consistency.&amp;nbsp;
1964
1965Medieval warfare did not proceed along those lines.&amp;nbsp; In general, it
1966
1967was chaotic and confusing to the participants - and the chroniclers.&amp;nbsp;
1968
1969So if the following account confuses you a little, you're in good company.&amp;nbsp;
1970
1971I have tried to be as clear as possible, to the extent of omitting stuff
1972
1973which is particularly confusing (including Henry's mysterious 'disappearance'
1974
1975the night before the battle; that will eventually be included in the Primary
1976
1977Sources section, directly from Polydore Vergil's work.&lt;/font&gt;
1978
1979&lt;br&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;The most prominent chronicler of the Battle was
1980
1981Polydore Vergil, Henry VII's official court historian.&amp;nbsp; Of course,
1982
1983his version is the official Tudor account but we must rely upon it.&amp;nbsp;
1984
1985In most respects, Vergil had little reason to alter anything since the
1986
1987Tudor claimant was victorious.)&lt;/font&gt;
1988
1989&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
1990
1991&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;Henry's force marched to the nearest inhabited
1992
1993area, a settlement called Dale.&amp;nbsp; There they spent the night; the next
1994
1995day (8 August) they left Dale to a castle called Haverfordwest, about 12
1996
1997miles to the north-east.&amp;nbsp; The townsmen actually welcomed the invaders,
1998
1999an indication of their nebulous loyalty to Richard III.&amp;nbsp; Of course,
2000
2001news of Henry's arrival on English soil was only just spreading along the
2002
2003coast.&amp;nbsp; In this northern part of Pembrokeshire, there were fewer castles
2004
2005and - again - it was Jasper Tudor's former home.&amp;nbsp; Also, Richard III
2006
2007had extensive control over south Wales, which shows that Henry's Welsh
2008
2009support was as nebulous as Richard's English support.&amp;nbsp; Richard's control
2010
2011over much of Wales also meant that Henry was forced to march north into
2012
2013the center of Wales.&amp;nbsp; And, of course, it must be recalled that the
2014
2015Stanleys (his mother's in-laws) controlled much of north Wales and Cheshire.&amp;nbsp;
2016
2017Sir William Stanley was Richard III's chief lieutenant in Anglesey, Caernarfonshire,
2018
2019and Merioneth, cities which made up the northern part of royal holdings
2020
2021in Wales.&amp;nbsp; (Remember that Sir William was the younger brother of Henry's
2022
2023stepfather.)&amp;nbsp; Henry may have been in touch with the Stanleys immediately
2024
2025upon landing in Wales.&amp;nbsp; Oddly enough, a letter Henry sent to another
2026
2027supporter, John ap Maredudd ab Ieuan ap Mareddud, has survived; it was
2028
2029written about 8 August, immediately after the landing, and designed to
2030
2031gain Welsh support.&amp;nbsp; The letter to ap Mareddud can be read by clicking
2032
2033here.&amp;nbsp; What did ap Mareddud do?&amp;nbsp; We don't know - though it is
2034
2035true that Henry did have some significant Welsh support.&amp;nbsp; Of course,
2036
2037it was nowhere near as great as many later remembered.&amp;nbsp; And it is
2038
2039false to state that
2040
2041&lt;i&gt;every&lt;/i&gt; Welshman welcomed the return of Owen Tudor's
2042
2043descendants.&amp;nbsp; Certainly the Tudor dynasty in no way favored Wales
2044
2045or its native population - so any support from the Welsh was not rewarded.&amp;nbsp;
2046
2047In 1536, in particular, the Welsh had good cause to resent any support
2048
2049they had given.&amp;nbsp; After Bosworth, certain laudatory poems and songs
2050
2051were written - but as these were dedicated to an actual king than a pretender
2052
2053to the throne, they were naturally fawning.&lt;/font&gt;
2054
2055&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In reality, Henry did not receive
2056
2057a rapturous welcome.&amp;nbsp; On 8 August, at Haverfordwest, he received a
2058
2059crushing blow - John Savage, nephew of Henry's stepfather, and the powerful
2060
2061Welsh lord, Rhys ap Thomas, were not planning to support his cause.&amp;nbsp;
2062
2063Of course, they had promised otherwise while he was in France but Richard
2064
2065III suspected both men of disloyalty - and before Henry landed, he made
2066
2067certain they understood the penalty of treason.&amp;nbsp; With this crushing
2068
2069news, even the professed loyalty of Pembroke was small consolation.&amp;nbsp;
2070
2071Henry's march from Havefordwest northeast to Cardigan and there to Machynlleth
2072
2073(about 100 miles from the Dale settlement) is not documented.&amp;nbsp; He
2074
2075arrived at Machynlleth on 14 August and wrote a letter to Sir Roger Kynaston,
2076
2077the guardian of the Grey estates; to pass safely to Shrewsbury, Henry needed
2078
2079- at the very least - Kynaston's inaction..&amp;nbsp; The guardian didn't need
2080
2081to declare for him but he could at least not impede his progress. Click
2082
2083here to read the letter to Kynaston.&amp;nbsp; Whatever Kynaston's decision,
2084
2085Henry did pass safely through to Shrewsbury.&amp;nbsp; To get to this point,
2086
2087his force had marched through the mountains of Wales but they had the continual
2088
2089arrival of good news to cheer them on the lonely journey - supporters were
2090
2091marching to join them, bringing along much-needed supplies.&amp;nbsp; Among
2092
2093these supporters was Rhys ap Thomas, who finally decided to honor his previous
2094
2095promise.&amp;nbsp; Rhys later said he brought almost 2000 men with him; if
2096
2097true, his force made up a third of Henry's entire army.&amp;nbsp; They were
2098
2099in time to join Henry at Shrewsbury, the traditional gateway to the English
2100
2101midlands; they marched along the old Roman road even as supporters sent
2102
2103along money to pay the mercenary troops.&amp;nbsp; But at Shrewsbury, Henry's
2104
2105progress was no longer easy.&lt;/font&gt;
2106
2107&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Shrewsbury was an important
2108
2109town and had two bailiffs, Roger Knight and Thomas Mitton, both in power
2110
2111for about two decades.&amp;nbsp; They had prospered under Richard III, notably
2112
2113from the failure of Buckingham's rebellion (notably, Mitton received Buckingham's
2114
2115castle and Shrewsbury's tax bill was significantly reduced.)&amp;nbsp; And
2116
2117one must remember Richard III's admonitions to the English people, specifically
2118
2119warning them of the dangers of mercenary troops.&amp;nbsp; The people of Shrewsbury
2120
2121had no desire for foreign troops to plunder and pillage their town.&amp;nbsp;
2122
2123(Keep in mind that Henry's army was not primarily English.)&amp;nbsp; When
2124
2125Henry requested permission to march through the streets, Mitton made a
2126
2127familiar reply - &quot;over my belly.&quot;&amp;nbsp; Henry could not afford to go around
2128
2129the city so he retreated.&amp;nbsp; At a nearby village, he composed a letter
2130
2131to the bailiffs, promising that his men would simply march through Shrewsbury
2132
2133peacefully, without causing any damage or harm.&amp;nbsp; He respected the
2134
2135oath of loyalty to Richard III and did not expect any of the townspeople
2136
2137to break it.&amp;nbsp; The letter may not have swayed the bailiffs but the
2138
2139arrival of Rowland Warburton, a retainer of Sir William Stanley, arrived
2140
2141and persuaded the bailiffs to let Henry pass.&amp;nbsp; The Stanley support
2142
2143was impressive enough to sway even Mitton, who lay on the ground so Henry
2144
2145could step over his belly (thus keeping his former oath.)&lt;/font&gt;
2146
2147&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; What effect did this 'adventure'
2148
2149have on Henry?&amp;nbsp; He realized, once again, that his support was not
2150
2151widespread.&amp;nbsp; Indeed, in the end he relied upon the apathy of the English
2152
2153population - essentially their decision to not actively support Richard
2154
2155III.&amp;nbsp; Shrewsbury was the first English town he marched through, a
2156
2157test of how the average citizen would respond to his invasion.&amp;nbsp; Since
2158
2159they did not recognize his claim to the throne, Henry had little to celebrate.&lt;/font&gt;
2160
2161&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In a way, his march was as
2162
2163much a public relations enterprise as a military endeavor.&amp;nbsp; Everywhere
2164
2165he went, he attempted to drum up support - and he was often successful.&amp;nbsp;
2166
2167More men and prominent lords joined the cause, all for various reasons.&amp;nbsp;
2168
2169At Stafford, Henry met up with Sir William Stanley.&amp;nbsp; Stanley brought
2170
2171news that Richard III, informed of Henry's march, was camped at Nottingham.&amp;nbsp;
2172
2173From there, it was just a brief march south to block Henry's path to London.&amp;nbsp;
2174
2175In other words, Stanley was urging Henry to hurry if he wanted to reach
2176
2177the capital.&amp;nbsp; Henry marched to meet Richard, stopping for the night
2178
2179at Lichfield; as at Shrewsbury, he kept his army outside the walls so as
2180
2181not to offend the citizens.&lt;/font&gt;
2182
2183&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Now it gets a bit confusing:
2184
2185&lt;i&gt;Lord&lt;/i&gt;
2186
2187Stanley, whose son Lord Strange was Richard's 'hostage', was marching with
2188
2189about 5000 men toward Lichfield (presumably to meet up with Richard III
2190
2191at Nottingham.)&amp;nbsp; He did not dare meet with Henry Tudor, though he
2192
2193supported his claim.&amp;nbsp; Ostensibly, Lord Stanley was loyal to Richard.&amp;nbsp;
2194
2195So he avoided Henry's army though, supposedly, sent a message assuring
2196
2197him of eventual support.&amp;nbsp; Of course, promises can be easily broken
2198
2199and Henry was uneasy.&amp;nbsp; He knew Richard had scouts watching Stanley
2200
2201and held his son hostage.&amp;nbsp; Under such circumstances, Stanley's support
2202
2203was not completely assured.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, Lord Stanley's brother - Sir
2204
2205William - had met up with Henry's army at Lichfield on 20 August.&amp;nbsp;
2206
2207Lord Stanley had arrived near Atherstone, close to the actual battlefield.&amp;nbsp;
2208
2209On this Saturday (20 August, still!), Lord Stanley sent his brother a message
2210
2211that Richard was near and fighting could begin in just three hours.&amp;nbsp;
2212
2213This, of course, did not happen.&amp;nbsp; But the Stanleys apparently met
2214
2215together and decided on a course of action - namely, they would not publicly
2216
2217declare their support for either Richard or Henry.&amp;nbsp; On Sunday, they
2218
2219apparently decided upon their battle plans - namely, Lord Stanley's betrayal
2220
2221of Richard.&lt;/font&gt;
2222
2223&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Lord Stanley was, of course,
2224
2225Henry's stepfather but his waffling is understandable.&amp;nbsp; But it caused
2226
2227both Richard III and Henry a great deal of anxiety.&amp;nbsp; Henry secretly
2228
2229met with the Stanleys on 21 August but, after the meeting, was still unsure
2230
2231of their unqualified support.&amp;nbsp; Under such circumstances, Henry's nervousness
2232
2233was greater than the king's.&amp;nbsp; But Richard was far from secure himself.&amp;nbsp;
2234
2235He was at Nottingham when he heard of Henry's arrival in Pembrokeshire
2236
2237and, from there, his steady march through Wales to the midlands.&amp;nbsp;
2238
2239As mentioned earlier, Richard had made preparations for this moment in
2240
22411484.&amp;nbsp; So he ordered his nobles and gentry to assemble according to
2242
2243plan.&amp;nbsp; He was undoubtedly unnerved that Henry was receiving some measure
2244
2245of support and that his march was essentially unimpeded.&amp;nbsp; He called
2246
2247the dukes of Northumberland and Norfolk to him, as well as the lieutenant
2248
2249of the Tower of London (where most of the king's weaponry was stored.)&amp;nbsp;
2250
2251Because Sir William Stanley did not respond to summons, Richard declared
2252
2253him a traitor.&amp;nbsp; He also intimidated Lord Strange enough for the young
2254
2255man to confess to some sort of 'conspiracy' to betray the king.&amp;nbsp; This
2256
2257simply confirmed Richard's fears.&amp;nbsp; He realized as well that Henry
2258
2259was trying to reach London as quickly as possible.&amp;nbsp; So he gathered
2260
2261his own forces to prevent this; he was later called a coward for not confronting
2262
2263Henry sooner but consider this - Richard wanted to assemble as many supporters
2264
2265as possible while dragging out the ordeal for Henry's army.&amp;nbsp; The assembled
2266
2267mercenaries were tired, hungry, and - like Henry - knew the crucial Stanley
2268
2269support was not secure.&amp;nbsp; Richard's army was a bit larger than Henry's
2270
2271though exact figures do not exist.&amp;nbsp; They marched south in traditional
2272
2273square battle formation, Richard and his guard behind two groups of horsemen.&amp;nbsp;
2274
2275There were about 100 knights and noblemen who had responded to Richard's
2276
2277summons.&amp;nbsp; Most of these men were from the north, specifically Yorkshire
2278
2279and Lancashire.&amp;nbsp; Richard marched with these men as the King of England,
2280
2281wearing his crown and coat-of-arms.&amp;nbsp; It was imperative that every
2282
2283Englishman who watched the march be reminded the Richard was the king and
2284
2285Henry just a pretender.&amp;nbsp; He would be crushed just like the duke of
2286
2287Buckingham.&lt;/font&gt;
2288
2289&lt;p&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Finally, on 21 August (Sunday),
2290
2291both armies knew battle was near.&amp;nbsp; Richard knew Henry's camp was near
2292
2293Atherstone; he himself camped at the plain of Redmoor.&amp;nbsp; The next day
2294
2295the forces would meet on the battlefield, a place later called Bosworth
2296
2297Field.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2298
2299
2300
2301&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
2302
2303&lt;blockquote&gt;&amp;nbsp;
2304
2305&lt;br&gt;(I wanted to point out an interesting fact about Henry's tactics prior
2306
2307to Bosworth; by marching toward London, he essentially determined where
2308
2309the battle would be fought - &lt;i&gt;wherever he and Richard met up on the way
2310
2311to London&lt;/i&gt;.&amp;nbsp; So Bosworth Field was not chosen for any purpose other
2312
2313than the two armies met there.&amp;nbsp; Today, it is impossible to adequately
2314
2315understand the geography of the battlefield and Richard and Henry's camps
2316
2317prior to the battle; hundreds of years of building, etc. have altered the
2318
2319landscape.)
2320
2321&lt;br&gt;(Also: William Brandon, Henry's standard bearer, was slain at this
2322
2323battle.&amp;nbsp; His son, Charles, would become Henry VIII's best friend,
2324
2325husband to Princess Mary Tudor &amp;amp; grandfather of Lady Jane Grey.&amp;nbsp;
2326
2327His biography is available at Tudor Citizens.)
2328
2329&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
2330
2331&lt;p&gt;The actual battle supposedly took place on Redmoor plain, near Richard
2332
2333III's encampment.&amp;nbsp; Long after the battle, it came to be called the
2334
2335Battle of Bosworth Field because the town of Market Bosworth lay to the
2336
2337north of Redmoor plain.&amp;nbsp; Also, a Welsh chronicler asserted that the
2338
2339battle actually took place at the town.&amp;nbsp; In other words, there is
2340
2341some debate about where the battle took place - &lt;i&gt;though one can reasonably
2342
2343assert it occurred at Redmoor plain&lt;/i&gt;.
2344
2345&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Sunday 22 August began inauspiciously for Richard
2346
2347III and one of his most powerful allies, the duke of Norfolk.&amp;nbsp; Richard
2348
2349admitted he had slept little and suffered bad dreams; in the superstitious
2350
2351medieval world this did not bode well.&amp;nbsp; Also, the duke of Norfolk
2352
2353found a sign outside his quarters which read, 'Jack of Norfolk be not so
2354
2355bold, For Dykon thy master is bought and sold.'&amp;nbsp; After his sleepless
2356
2357night, Richard arose earlier than even his chaplain (so there was no morning
2358
2359mass) and had no breakfast.&amp;nbsp; He insisted on wearing his crown throughout
2360
2361the day, as he had insisted upon marching to Redmoor clad in his ceremonial
2362
2363robes and crown.&amp;nbsp; Henry Tudor had spent a sleepless night as well,
2364
2365and his morning began with disturbing news.&amp;nbsp; His stepfather, Lord
2366
2367Stanley, was still officially part of Richard's force.&amp;nbsp; In fact, Stanley's
2368
2369force waited between Henry and Richard's camps.&amp;nbsp; But when Henry pushed
2370
2371his stepfather to join him, Stanley still demurred (this on the day of
2372
2373the battle!)&amp;nbsp; One can imagine Henry's response.&amp;nbsp; Stanley sent
2374
2375Henry a brief message; he should prepare his army for battle and wait for
2376
2377Stanley to join him at the appropriate moment.&amp;nbsp; (Note: Richard's archers
2378
2379were under the command of the duke of Norfolk while Henry's archers were
2380
2381under the command of John de Vere, the earl of Oxford.&amp;nbsp; The actual
2382
2383make-up of each army is a matter of debate as well, as is their size.&amp;nbsp;
2384
2385They each had a number of infantry and cavalry, complemented with cannon
2386
2387and guns and - of course - the traditional bows and swords.&amp;nbsp; One chronicler
2388
2389estimated Richard's cannon at 140; Henry had cannon brought from France.&amp;nbsp;
2390
2391As to the actual numbers involved, chroniclers are always prone to exaggeration
2392
2393and this time was no exception.&amp;nbsp; We know Henry landed in Wales with
2394
2395about 4000 and was joined by a large number of reinforcements; Richard's
2396
2397force must have been equal - at least.&amp;nbsp; Sir William Stanley led about
2398
23993000 troops.)
2400
2401&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; One more mention of the Stanleys: Richard was less
2402
2403troubled by their waffling than Henry.&amp;nbsp; After all, Richard would have
2404
2405been content if they simply stayed out of the battle whereas Henry was
2406
2407desperate for their support.&amp;nbsp; Therefore, Richard's army had higher
2408
2409morale - and supposedly larger numbers.
2410
2411&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Henry marched northeast at a leisurely pace toward
2412
2413Richard's camp.&amp;nbsp; Were his troops wary of attacking first?&amp;nbsp; Undoubtedly;
2414
2415but, in the end, Richard decided to order his attack when Henry's force
2416
2417passed by a march.&amp;nbsp; At this time, he also realized that Lord Stanley
2418
2419was not joining him.&amp;nbsp; (He could see Stanley's army motionless on the
2420
2421field.)&amp;nbsp; Richard ordered his hostage, Lord Strange, beheaded but in
2422
2423the heat and confusion of battle, the order was not carried out.&amp;nbsp;
2424
2425The first moments of battle were an indication of the chaos to come.&amp;nbsp;
2426
2427Immediately, arrows were exchanged and then hand-to-hand combat began.&amp;nbsp;
2428
2429Swords, pikes, aces, spears....&amp;nbsp; These were the weapons of choice.&amp;nbsp;
2430
2431(Interesting note: Richard's ally, the duke of Northumberland, waited at
2432
2433the rear of the army with a well equipped force which never entered battle
2434
2435for one simple reason - the topography of the battlefield.)
2436
2437&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Richard's scouts told him that Henry, too, remained
2438
2439outside the fighting, observing the battle with a small group of supporters.&amp;nbsp;
2440
2441By identifying Henry's standard, Richard determined his exact position.&amp;nbsp;
2442
2443Then he undertook a most courageous and incredible feat - he spurred his
2444
2445horse to ride directly at Henry, the pretender to his throne.&amp;nbsp; He
2446
2447knew that if Henry was slain - before Stanley intervention - the battle
2448
2449would end.&amp;nbsp; On his horse, at full gallop, he slay a great number of
2450
2451those around Henry (notably his standard bearer, William Brandon, and that
2452
2453respected soldier, the 'giant' John Cheyne.)&amp;nbsp; Henry, of course, was
2454
2455innocent of real experience in battle but he did not run - though he also
2456
2457kept a horse nearby in case the battle was lost.&amp;nbsp; Still, the tide
2458
2459would have turned against Henry except....&amp;nbsp; the Stanleys finally entered
2460
2461the battle, on the Tudor side!
2462
2463&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; It cannot be emphasized enough that Richard III died
2464
2465valiantly in battle.&amp;nbsp; Every later chronicler asserted his bravery
2466
2467and skill.&amp;nbsp; One wrote that, after Stanley's men swarmed around him,
2468
2469Richard fought 'manfully in the thickest press of his enemies.'&amp;nbsp; According
2470
2471to Polydore Vergil, 'that day he would make end either of war or life';
2472
2473he would 'die like a king or win victory in this field.'&amp;nbsp; He was wounded
2474
2475several times but refused the advice of his few companions to flee.&amp;nbsp;
2476
2477He also refused the offer of a horse.&amp;nbsp; His heroism was evident to
2478
2479all.&amp;nbsp; In the end, he could not prevail.&amp;nbsp; His crown was knocked
2480
2481from his head; his head was struck so many times that the helmet was beaten
2482
2483into the skull; even after his death, his body continued to be beaten.&amp;nbsp;
2484
2485Around him lay the bodies of his few companions - Conyers, Brackenbury,
2486
2487Ratcliffe....&amp;nbsp; There is a legend that his crown landed in a hawthorne
2488
2489bush; true or not, it was soon enough in Henry Tudor's hands - and not
2490
2491because of any personal bravery on the part of the first Tudor king.
2492
2493&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The battle lasted about two hours.&amp;nbsp; Its outcome
2494
2495- Henry's triumph - was only made possiblee by Stanley's disgraceful betrayal
2496
2497of his king.&amp;nbsp; Had he waited a few moments longer, Henry may have been
2498
2499personally killed by Richard.&amp;nbsp; That single action inaugurated the
2500
2501Tudor dynasty - and it was a shameful inauguration.&amp;nbsp; Whatever his
2502
2503qualities before the battle, his actions immediately afterwards are not
2504
2505endearing.&amp;nbsp; Richard III, who had fought so heroically and suffered
2506
2507an awful death, continued to be humiliated and abused.&amp;nbsp; His body was
2508
2509slung naked over a horse, arms and legs hanging over the sides; a halter
2510
2511was tossed around his neck to symbolize his defeat.&amp;nbsp; In this manner,
2512
2513he was taken to a friary in Leicester where his body lay on view for two
2514
2515days; it was naked from the waist down except for a scant and cheap black
2516
2517cloth.&amp;nbsp; He was buried at the friary with no ceremony.&amp;nbsp; The church
2518
2519no longer exists - Henry's son ordered the dissolution of the monasteries
2520
2521in the 1530s and Richard's grave was opened and the body thrown out.&amp;nbsp;
2522
2523Later, the coffin was supposedly used as a horse trough and cellar steps
2524
2525in a nearby manor.&amp;nbsp; Richard III remains the only English king since
2526
25271066 to have no burial place.&amp;nbsp; He was also the last English king to
2528
2529die in battle.
2530
2531&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Henry Tudor had now declared himself Henry VII and
2532
2533Lord Stanley placed Richard's crown upon his stepson's head.&amp;nbsp; His
2534
2535officers were busy settling old scores, executing old foes and rounding
2536
2537up the prisoners.&amp;nbsp; In the end, we can reasonably estimate that about
2538
2539400 men - in total - died that day.&amp;nbsp; Of course, after the battle few
2540
2541wanted to talk about the actual fighting - those two hours which ended
2542
2543in betrayal and death for one king and the beginning of one of the most
2544
2545celebrated dynasties in English history.&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2546
2547
2548
2549&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
2550
2551&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;On a personal note....&lt;/font&gt;
2552
2553&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;I do want to stress that Henry Tudor did nto participate
2554
2555in the fighting - and, in fact, he kept a horse nearby so he could flee
2556
2557if the battle was lost.&amp;nbsp; In other words, he planned to 'turn tail
2558
2559and run', as the cliché goes.&lt;/font&gt;
2560
2561&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;It might seem odd that a king who supposedly won his crown in
2562 battle was actually quite cowardly on the battlefield, and didn't participate
2563 - but it's the truth.&amp;nbsp; Richard III only lost because Lord Stanley
2564 disgracefully betrayed his king.&amp;nbsp; And he did so after Richard had already
2565 forgiven him numerous offenses (many bordering on treason), and had treated
2566 him kindly.&amp;nbsp; Henry may have claimed a crown that day, but he claimed no
2567 glory.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;center&gt;
2568 &lt;p&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;You may visit the &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.r3.org&quot;&gt;Richard
2569
2570III Society&lt;/a&gt; site for the other side of the story.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
2571 &lt;/center&gt;
2572
2573&lt;font size=-1&gt;&lt;/font&gt;
2574
2575&lt;p&gt;
2576
2577&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
2578
2579&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
2580
2581&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
2582
2583&lt;blockquote&gt;Henry Tudor as King
2584
2585&lt;p&gt;'His [Henry VII] body was slender but well built and strong; his height
2586
2587above the average.&amp;nbsp; His appearance was remarkably attractive and his
2588
2589face was cheerful especially when speaking; his eyes were small and blue;
2590
2591his teeth few, poor and blackish; his hair was thin and grey; his complexion
2592
2593pale'.
2594
2595&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;Polydore Vergil, from the &lt;i&gt;Anglica Historia&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2596
2597
2598
2599&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
2600
2601&lt;blockquote&gt;Many historians have long argued that Bosworth Field marked
2602
2603the end of medieval England, and the beginning of more modern government.&amp;nbsp;
2604
2605This assumes at least some drastic changes occurred during the 24 years
2606
2607Henry ruled England.&amp;nbsp; However, no such changes occurred.&amp;nbsp; Henry
2608
2609maintained the government of his predecessors; he simply had a more efficient
2610
2611administration.
2612
2613&lt;p&gt;This should detract from his formidable accomplishments.&amp;nbsp; Despite
2614
2615his very questionable claim to the throne, Henry proved himself to be an
2616
2617able and enthusiastic king.&amp;nbsp; He devoted himself to the minutiae of
2618
2619government, personally initialing household account books.&amp;nbsp; He was
2620
2621quite miserly, which greatly benefited his spendthrift son Henry VIII,
2622
2623but this was understandable - the first Tudor king knew financial success
2624
2625would be the life or death of his new dynasty.&amp;nbsp; Like all monarchs,
2626
2627he needed money - and often badly.&amp;nbsp; But he needed parliament's permission
2628
2629to raise taxes or create new ones.&amp;nbsp; Yet Henry knew that parliament
2630
2631would be opposed to giving a new - and unpopular king - more sources of
2632
2633revenue, particularly since England's economy was not prosperous.&amp;nbsp;
2634
2635And so Henry only called parliament seven times during his reign.&amp;nbsp;
2636
2637Instead of creating new methods to raise money, he cannily exploited the
2638
2639existing sources.&amp;nbsp; Every loophole that existed was stretched wide
2640
2641- Henry sought every penny he could from eevery source of revenue.&amp;nbsp;
2642
2643And he protected the money fanatically.&amp;nbsp; Few monarchs lived so frugally,
2644
2645and as Francis Bacon noted, 'towards his queen [Elizabeth of York] he was
2646
2647nothing uxorious, nor scarce indulgent....'
2648
2649&lt;br&gt;For Henry VII, money equaled security.&amp;nbsp; And so rights of Wardship,
2650
2651Marriage, Promotions, and Death, forced loans and benvolences, and trade
2652
2653dues were all tools to gain financial security.
2654
2655&lt;p&gt;Upon becoming king, Henry's immediate problem was the same as his Yorkist
2656
2657predecessors - the legitimacy of his claim to the throne.&amp;nbsp; Bosworth
2658
2659Field had not ended the struggle for England's crown, and Henry faced considerable
2660
2661unrest throughout the early years of his reign.&amp;nbsp; The Northerners (who
2662
2663never lost their distrust of the Tudors) had supported Richard III, and
2664
2665did not welcome a Welsh king.&amp;nbsp; And Yorkist support continued in Ireland
2666
2667(where Lambert Simnel was crowned Edward VI 1487), and in Europe (where
2668
2669Edward IV and Richard III's sister Margaret lived on as the influential
2670
2671duchess of Burgundy.)&amp;nbsp; Also, because Henry's claim to the throne was
2672
2673so weak, he inevitably had to work harder to create the impression of royal
2674
2675authority.&amp;nbsp; By all accounts, he lacked the majesty, or charisma, of
2676
2677his son Henry VIII and granddaughter Elizabeth I.&amp;nbsp; But charisma was
2678
2679perhaps a negligible quality during those early years; more important were
2680
2681hard work, dedication, and discipline.&amp;nbsp; And Henry possessed those
2682
2683qualities in abundance.
2684
2685&lt;p&gt;First, Henry benefited directly from the Wars of the Roses - heirs to
2686
2687many of the old noble families were killed during the battles.&amp;nbsp; Henry
2688
2689simply appropriated their lands and revenue.&amp;nbsp; Those that had supported
2690
2691Richard III (those that survived, that is) were attainted and their estates
2692
2693confiscated.&amp;nbsp; He also created a council 'Learned in the Law' in 1495
2694
2695to deal with enforcement of already-existing taxes, particularly those
2696
2697owed by the nobility.&amp;nbsp; Henry also forbid nobles to retain their own
2698
2699armies.&amp;nbsp; A small number of attendants was acceptable, but Henry did
2700
2701not want any lord to have more power than the king.&amp;nbsp; Edward IV had
2702
2703attempted the same maneuver, with less success.&amp;nbsp; Henry was aided by
2704
2705a simple fact - as king, he owned most of the gunpowder in the country.&amp;nbsp;
2706
2707Therefore, he simply blew up the castles and keeps of recalcitrant barons.&amp;nbsp;
2708
2709It was quite an effective policy, though Henry did not curb the power and
2710
2711influence of all nobles.&amp;nbsp; But it is worth noting that the English
2712
2713nobility, already in decline during the Wars of the Roses, fell from influence
2714
2715rapidly under the Tudors - under Elizabeth I, for instance, England had
2716
2717just one duke (and he was executed for treason.)
2718
2719&lt;p&gt;Henry did continue the Yorkist tradition of promoting government officers
2720
2721from the middle class (primarily clerics and lawyers.)&amp;nbsp; But he did
2722
2723not create the middle class government that many historians propose; nobles
2724
2725still retained the most powerful positions.&amp;nbsp; Henry kept many of Edward
2726
2727IV and Richard III's councilors, and these were either from the aristocracy,
2728
2729or related through marriage.&amp;nbsp; But it should be noted that the middle
2730
2731class was growing in power and influence, and carefully making its way
2732
2733through the corridors of power.
2734
2735&lt;p&gt;Henry also revived the powers of the Justices of the Peace, first introduced
2736
2737by Henry II.&amp;nbsp; They administered the king's justice throughout England,
2738
2739and were supposedly free of local prejudices.&amp;nbsp; His Yorkist predecessors
2740
2741had appointed a Council of the North and thus allowed the great border
2742
2743families of Neville, Dacre, Scrope, and Percy to rule as virtually independent
2744
2745princes with their own armies.&amp;nbsp; This was necessary because the Scottish
2746
2747border was notoriously difficult to maintain; raids from the north were
2748
2749all too common, and the Yorkists had needed the Northern lords to protect
2750
2751English interests.&amp;nbsp; When Edward IV was king, Richard had been 'Lord
2752
2753of the North', having inherited the vast Neville estates through his wife.&amp;nbsp;
2754
2755Henry was not so inclined - he did not want the Northern families to be
2756
2757too powerful; after all, they could turn that power against their king.&amp;nbsp;
2758
2759But he also knew the North needed a strong leader, a servant of the crown.&amp;nbsp;
2760
2761And so he released the last Percy heir, the earl of Northumberland, from
2762
2763the Tower of London and appointed him Lord Warden of the East and Middle
2764
2765Marches.&amp;nbsp; But Henry carefully trimmed Percy's powers, and only allowed
2766
2767the council to meet sporadically.&amp;nbsp; He successfully subdued it into
2768
2769becoming a mere extension of his own London-based authority.
2770
2771&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
2772
2773&lt;p&gt;Henry also attempted to quell the Scottish problem, and undercut the
2774
2775Auld Alliance (the alliance between France and Scotland), by marrying his
2776
2777eldest daughter Margaret to the king of Scots in 1503.&amp;nbsp; He planned
2778
2779to marry his youngest daughter, Mary, to Charles, the prince of Castile.&amp;nbsp;
2780
2781His eldest son and heir apparent, Prince Arthur, was wed to the youngest
2782
2783daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, the powerful 'Catholic Kings' of Spain.&amp;nbsp;
2784
2785With these marriage alliances, Henry hoped to protect his domestic interests;
2786
2787he did not want to engage in costly foreign wars since the establishment
2788
2789of his own dynasty was more important, but he needed foreign allies.&amp;nbsp;
2790
2791Marriage was less costly than war, and - Henry hoped - more effective.&amp;nbsp;
2792
2793The matches were impressive, particularly the match with Spain since it
2794
2795meant that the most powerful European monarchs recognized his shaky claim
2796
2797to the throne.&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2798
2799&lt;/blockquote&gt;
2800
2801
2802
2803&lt;center&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;font size=-1&gt;&lt;/font&gt;
2804
2805&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs.html&quot;&gt;to
2806
2807Tudor Monarchs&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/center&gt;
2808
2809
2810
2811
2812
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2815</Content>
2816</Section>
2817</Archive>
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