The Wars of the Roses

The Wars of the Roses, 1377-1471, were a series of English civil wars fought for the control of the throne of England between two rival cadet branches of the House of Plantagenet, Lancaster and York. The Scottish historian, Robert Balmain Mowat writes that these wars saw "the death of the old England and the beginning of the new." But they also saw the emergence of great personalities: the noble Richard of York, Warwick the Kingmaker, King Edward IV, indolent and energetic by turns, and his relentless opponent, Margaret of Anjou, a true she-wolf of France.


By : Robert Balmain Mowat (1883 - 1941)

01 - Preface



02 - Ch. 1: The Family Settlement of Edward III



03 - Ch. 2: Constitutional History of the Lancastrian Dynasty



04 - Ch. 3: The French War



05 - Ch. 4: The Struggle in the Council, Pt. 1



06 - Ch. 4: The Struggle in the Council, Pt. 2



07 - Ch. 5: Somerset and York, Pt. 1



08 - Ch. 5: Somerset and York, Pt. 2



09 - Ch. 6: The King's Madness and the First Protectorate of York, Pt. 1



10 - Ch. 6: The King's Madness and the First Protectorate of York, Pt. 2



11 - Ch. 7: The Second Protectorate of York and the Second Reconciliation of St. Paul's, Pt. 1



12 - Ch. 7: The Second Protectorate of York and the Second Reconciliation of St. Paul's, Pt. 2



13 - Ch. 8: The Battle of Bloreheath and the Attainder of the Yorkists



14 - Ch. 9: The Yorkists in Exile



15 - Ch. 10: The Battle of Northampton



16 - Ch. 11: The Bid for the Crown



17 - Ch. 12: Wakefield



18 - Ch. 13: Mortimer's Cross and the Second Battle of St. Albans



19 - Ch. 14: The Accession of Edward IV



20 - Ch. 15: The Northern War



21 - Ch. 16: Queen Margaret Abroad



22 - Ch. 17: The Capture of Henry VI



23 - Ch. 18: The Troubled Years of King Edward, Pt. 1



24 - Ch. 18: The Troubled Years of King Edward, Pt. 2



25 - Ch. 18: The Troubled Years of King Edward, Pt. 3



26 - Ch. 19: The Last of the Lancastrians, Pt. 1



27 - Ch. 19: The Last of the Lancastrians, Pt. 2



28 - Ch. 19: The Last of the Lancastrians, Pt. 3



29 - Ch. 20: English Society during the Wars of the Roses, Pt. 1



30 - Ch. 20: English Society during the Wars of the Roses, Pt. 2



31 - Ch. 21: The Breakdown of Government under Henry VI



32 - Ch. 22: The Work of Edward IV



33 - Conclusion: The Accession of Henry VII


Tensions within England during the 1450s centred on the mental state of Henry VI and on his inability to produce an heir with his wife, Margaret of Anjou. In the absence of a direct heir, there were two rival branches with claims to the throne should Henry die without issue, those being the Beaufort family, led by Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset, and the House of York, headed by Richard of York. By 1453, issues had come to a head: though Margaret of Anjou was pregnant, Henry VI was descending into increasing mental instability, by August becoming completely non-responsive and unable to govern. A Great Council of nobles was called, and through shrewd political machinations, Richard had himself declared Lord Protector and chief regent during the mental incapacity of Henry. In the interlude, Margaret gave birth to a healthy son and heir, Edward of Westminster.

By 1455, Henry had regained his faculties, and open warfare came at the First Battle of St Albans. Several prominent Lancastrians died at the hands of the Yorkists. Henry was again imprisoned, and Richard of York resumed his role as Lord Protector. Although peace was temporarily restored, the Lancastrians were inspired by Margaret of Anjou to contest York's influence.

Fighting resumed more violently in 1459. York and his supporters were forced to flee the country, and Henry was once again restored to direct rule, but one of York's most prominent supporters, the Earl of Warwick, invaded England from Calais in October 1460 and captured Henry VI yet again at the Battle of Northampton. York returned to the country and for the third time became Protector of England, but was dissuaded from claiming the throne, though it was agreed that he would become heir to the throne (thus displacing Henry and Margaret's son, Edward of Westminster, from the line of succession). Margaret and the remaining Lancastrian nobles gathered their army in the north of England.

When York moved north to engage them, he and his second son Edmund were killed at the Battle of Wakefield in December 1460. The Lancastrian army advanced south and released Henry at the Second Battle of St Albans but failed to occupy London and subsequently retreated to the north. York's eldest son Edward, Earl of March, was proclaimed King Edward IV. He gathered the Yorkist armies and won a crushing victory at the Battle of Towton in March 1461.

After Lancastrian revolts in the north were suppressed in 1464, Henry was captured once again and placed in the Tower of London. Edward fell out with his chief supporter and adviser, the Earl of Warwick (known as the "Kingmaker"), after Edward's unpopular and secretly-conducted marriage with the widow of a Lancastrian supporter, Elizabeth Woodville. Within a few years, it became clear that Edward was favouring his wife's family and alienating several friends closely aligned with Warwick as well.

Furious, Warwick tried first to supplant Edward with his younger brother George, Duke of Clarence, establishing the alliance by marriage to his daughter, Isabel Neville. When that plan failed, due to lack of support from Parliament, Warwick sailed to France with his family and allied with the former Lancastrian Queen, Margaret of Anjou, to restore Henry VI to the throne.

This resulted in two years of rapid changes of fortune before Edward IV once again won complete victories at Barnet (14 April 1471), where Warwick was killed, and Tewkesbury (4 May 1471), where the Lancastrian heir, Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales was killed or perhaps executed after the battle. Queen Margaret was escorted to London as a prisoner, and Henry was murdered in the Tower of London several days later, ending the direct Lancastrian line of succession.

A period of comparative peace followed, ending with the unexpected death of King Edward in 1483. His surviving brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester, first moved to prevent the unpopular Woodville family of Edward's widow from participating in the government during the minority of Edward's son, Edward V, and then seized the throne for himself, using the suspect legitimacy of Edward IV's marriage as pretext.

Henry Tudor, a distant relative of the Lancastrian kings who had inherited their claim, defeated Richard III at Bosworth in 1485. He was crowned Henry VII and married Elizabeth of York, daughter of Edward IV, to unite and reconcile the two houses. Yorkist revolts, directed by John de la Pole, 1st Earl of Lincoln and others, flared up in 1487 under the banner of the pretender Lambert Simnel—who claimed he was Edward, Earl of Warwick (son of George of Clarence), resulting in the last pitched battles.

Though most surviving descendants of Richard of York were imprisoned, sporadic rebellions continued until 1497, when Perkin Warbeck, who claimed he was the younger brother of Edward V, one of the two disappeared Princes in the Tower, was imprisoned and later executed.

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