Bishop Morton

Bishop Morton

2017-02-28 19:38:44
Karen O

Did the good Bishop go back to his job b after his arrest and release? I've been reading that Richard was not the firmly in control King we might imagine him to be. That he was a figurehead and the church was.in control.
    The more you obeyed the people behind the scenes the longer you stayed on the throne. He feared for his life and his family's. Richard was naive and signed a document about the boys that was not a death warrant. Yet was used to put them to death. He trusted people who were nice to him, and shouldn't have.
This was all done through a Bishop, the Church, and the people behind the scenes.
The book was written by a Medium, and don't scoff It was interesting.

Re: Bishop Morton

2017-02-28 19:55:18
Hilary Jones
Sorry just resurfaced. Are we talking about Bishop Morton or Bishop Stillington here?
I think you're talking about the Collins book aren't you? No we don't scoff at him, particularly since the description of Richard's death injuries were incredibly accurate.
If one accepts the Pre-contract then one has to work out the motive behind revealing it. Who would want Edward V set aside?
The Woodvilles obiviously notMB and Morton - if Richard took over he'd be harder on them than Edward had beenBuckingham - might give him a nudge nearer the throne and he was mad enough for anythingRichard - yes the books say but really? He seemed woefully unprepared and if he'd had previous knowledge he'd have tackled Edward. Richard was no dissembler.
So who else - well I can think of two women who would have liked a Neville eventually as King; and there was a choice of two boys to pick up the mantle.
But the other question is who had the leverage on Stillington to make him reveal the PC, that's if he did? It would be good to know a bit more about Juliana's mother and her family. If you could accuse Stillington of treachery by association alone, then he's right in there with Morton and the rest. But I still don't know.
What normally happened to a woman of the gentry/nobility who conceived a child with a young priest?
H


From: "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 28 February 2017, 19:01
Subject: Bishop Morton

Did the good Bishop go back to his job b after his arrest and release? I've been reading that Richard was not the firmly in control King we might imagine him to be. That he was a figurehead and the church was.in control.
The more you obeyed the people behind the scenes the longer you stayed on the throne. He feared for his life and his family's. Richard was naive and signed a document about the boys that was not a death warrant. Yet was used to put them to death. He trusted people who were nice to him, and shouldn't have.
This was all done through a Bishop, the Church, and the people behind the scenes.
The book was written by a Medium, and don't scoff It was interesting.

Re: Bishop Morton

2017-02-28 20:07:17
Maria Torres
After Hastings' execution, Morton was imprisoned at Brecon; after Richard defeated Buckingham, Morton escaped to Flanders, not returning to England till after Bosworth.  So, at least on the face of things, it's unlikely that Morton was maneuvering anything directly with Richard after the spring/summer of 1483.
Mariaejbronte@...
On Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 2:01 PM, Karen O karenoder4@... [] <> wrote:
 

Did the good Bishop go back to his job b after his arrest and release? I've been reading that Richard was not the firmly in control King we might imagine him to be. That he was a figurehead and the church was.in control.
    The more you obeyed the people behind the scenes the longer you stayed on the throne. He feared for his life and his family's. Richard was naive and signed a document about the boys that was not a death warrant. Yet was used to put them to death. He trusted people who were nice to him, and shouldn't have.
This was all done through a Bishop, the Church, and the people behind the scenes.
The book was written by a Medium, and don't scoff It was interesting.


Re: Bishop Morton

2017-02-28 20:46:01
ricard1an
I think that if it is the Collins book that Karen is talking about then seance is in the first part of the book, written by Rev John Denham. Collins was the second part.
Doing a bit more research into the people who controlled the castles along the coast of Glamorgan during the 1480s.( blame Stephen). The Stradlings of St Donats castle had connections with the Berkerolles and when Thomas Stradling died in 1480 his widow Jane, nee Matthew, married one Sir Rhys ap Thomas who then became guardian of her son Edward. Jane died in 1485, so guess who was in control in 1485?
Mary

Re: Bishop Morton

2017-02-28 23:47:14
Karen O

Yes it's the Collins book. Very interesting. I did mean The Reverend Morton. He did go on to be Archbishop right? In the session s Richard keeps blaming churchmen for the boys murder, not himself, although he "let it happen" out of naivete. He says he was talked into signing a seemingly benign document and was later trapped.
He said he was a figurehead only. He hated being King, and it was rather forced on him.
These were seances btw. I only scanned the book as it arrived today.


On Feb 28, 2017 3:46 PM, "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 

I think that if it is the Collins book that Karen is talking about then seance is in the first part of the book, written by Rev John Denham. Collins was the second part. 
Doing a bit more research into the people who controlled the castles along the coast of Glamorgan during the 1480s.( blame Stephen). The Stradlings of St Donats castle had connections with the Berkerolles  and when Thomas Stradling died in 1480 his widow Jane, nee Matthew, married one Sir Rhys ap Thomas who then became guardian of her son Edward. Jane died in 1485, so guess who was in control in 1485? 
Mary

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-01 03:04:32
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: //snip// If one accepts the Pre-contract then one has to work out the motive behind revealing it. Who would want Edward V set aside? Doug here: Couldn't the Precontract have been revealed because it wasn't known just who did know about it? The presumption I've been going on is that Stillington was the one who presented the proofs to the Council, and possibly later to the Three Estates. However, to be completely honest, that Stillington was the one who delivered those proofs doesn't mean he was the only one who knew of them, does it? What are the possibilities that it was some member of Dame Eleanor's family who provided the Bishop with the information? My reasoning being that It's been pointed out that, as long as Edward IV was on the throne, there weren't any doubts about his legitimacy, rumors about archers to the contrary. But if the Precontract was true, then the moment Edward died, to quote a certain Dr. Song, That's when everything changes. It might be one thing to put up with one's sister not being recognized as the rightful wife of the king, especially if she was against forcing herself on Edward, and quite another to quietly allow a bastard to sit on the throne unchallenged. Hilary continued: The Woodvilles obiviously not MB and Morton - if Richard took over he'd be harder on them than Edward had been Buckingham - might give him a nudge nearer the throne and he was mad enough for anything Richard - yes the books say but really? He seemed woefully unprepared and if he'd had previous knowledge he'd have tackled Edward. Richard was no dissembler. Doug here: My only query is about Richard being harder on MB, because he certainly wasn't when he got the chance. Other than that, yup! Hilary concluded: So who else - well I can think of two women who would have liked a Neville eventually as King; and there was a choice of two boys to pick up the mantle. But the other question is who had the leverage on Stillington to make him reveal the P C, that's if he did? It would be good to know a bit more about Juliana's mother and her family. If you could accuse Stillington of treachery by association alone, then he's right in there with Morton and the rest. But I still don't know. Doug here: If anyone had wanted a Neville on the throne that desperately, why wouldn't either of Edward IV's sons have done? After all, their grandmother was a Neville. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-01 11:34:07
ricard1an
So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-02 22:20:47
Hilary Jones
Re your final paragraph Doug, well in theory yes. But EW had ignored/isolated Cis since her marriage. She was hardly likely to have let EV's grandmother have any influence when he was king. And if Cis knew he was illegitimate anyway..... ? H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 2:40
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: //snip// If one accepts the Pre-contract then one has to work out the motive behind revealing it. Who would want Edward V set aside? Doug here: Couldn't the Precontract have been revealed because it wasn't known just who did know about it? The presumption I've been going on is that Stillington was the one who presented the proofs to the Council, and possibly later to the Three Estates. However, to be completely honest, that Stillington was the one who delivered those proofs doesn't mean he was the only one who knew of them, does it? What are the possibilities that it was some member of Dame Eleanor's family who provided the Bishop with the information? My reasoning being that It's been pointed out that, as long as Edward IV was on the throne, there weren't any doubts about his legitimacy, rumors about archers to the contrary. But if the Precontract was true, then the moment Edward died, to quote a certain Dr. Song, That's when everything changes. It might be one thing to put up with one's sister not being recognized as the rightful wife of the king, especially if she was against forcing herself on Edward, and quite another to quietly allow a bastard to sit on the throne unchallenged. Hilary continued: The Woodvilles obiviously not MB and Morton - if Richard took over he'd be harder on them than Edward had been Buckingham - might give him a nudge nearer the throne and he was mad enough for anything Richard - yes the books say but really? He seemed woefully unprepared and if he'd had previous knowledge he'd have tackled Edward. Richard was no dissembler. Doug here: My only query is about Richard being harder on MB, because he certainly wasn't when he got the chance. Other than that, yup! Hilary concluded: So who else - well I can think of two women who would have liked a Neville eventually as King; and there was a choice of two boys to pick up the mantle. But the other question is who had the leverage on Stillington to make him reveal the P C, that's if he did? It would be good to know a bit more about Juliana's mother and her family. If you could accuse Stillington of treachery by association alone, then he's right in there with Morton and the rest. But I still don't know. Doug here: If anyone had wanted a Neville on the throne that desperately, why wouldn't either of Edward IV's sons have done? After all, their grandmother was a Neville. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-02 22:57:19
Hilary Jones
Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life! And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did. And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son ..... Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?

Re: Bishop Morton

2017-03-03 12:28:33
Nicholas Brown
Has there ever been any indication as to who Juliana Stillington's mother may have been. I can't find much on her, except that she married someone called John Hampden (related to the civil war John Hampden?). Is it known when she was born, where Stillington was at the time and which families he would have associated with? He was from Yorkshire originally, but seems to have been mostly in the West Country from 1450 onwards, so Clarence associations do seem likely.
As for noblewomen who had children with priests, the only case I can think of is Alice Fitzalan with Henry Beaufort. It didn't seem to affect her badly, because she married someone else. However, it probably helped that she was a widow and had more independence than an unmarried woman, whose marriage prospects would be damaged. In that were case it would most likely have been covered up and the child raised by the church. I would imagine that most children born to priests, like Wolsey's, didn't have mothers from the nobility.
Nico











On Tuesday, 28 February 2017, 23:47, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <> wrote:


Yes it's the Collins book. Very interesting. I did mean The Reverend Morton. He did go on to be Archbishop right? In the session s Richard keeps blaming churchmen for the boys murder, not himself, although he "let it happen" out of naivete. He says he was talked into signing a seemingly benign document and was later trapped.
He said he was a figurehead only. He hated being King, and it was rather forced on him.
These were seances btw. I only scanned the book as it arrived today.


On Feb 28, 2017 3:46 PM, "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:
I think that if it is the Collins book that Karen is talking about then seance is in the first part of the book, written by Rev John Denham. Collins was the second part.
Doing a bit more research into the people who controlled the castles along the coast of Glamorgan during the 1480s.( blame Stephen). The Stradlings of St Donats castle had connections with the Berkerolles and when Thomas Stradling died in 1480 his widow Jane, nee Matthew, married one Sir Rhys ap Thomas who then became guardian of her son Edward. Jane died in 1485, so guess who was in control in 1485?
Mary

Re: Bishop Morton

2017-03-03 12:55:18
Hilary Jones
Hi Nico,
In answer to your first question - no. Juliana married John Hampton (not Hampden they are a different family). Hampton, who seems to have died in the early 1480s, came from Devon but inherited coveted lands in Wales/Somerset - the Bytton inheritance. They were so coveted that his and Juliana's daughters were married off very swiftly to close Somerset familes - the Newtons (formerly Caradog) related to the Talbots, the Gorges (one of whom was an Esquire to the Body to Edward IV) and the Chokkes, children of the Judge who was their guardian. There is a Neville connection however, if we are to believe the Visitations and old local histories. John Hampton's mother was Cicely Neville's niece, the daughter of a much older brother. She went on to marry William Zouche and I'm finding it hard to substantiate her former marriage. So Hampton, and his daughters were potentially related to EIV and Richard.
Whichever way you look at it, the Hampton marriage was an important catch for Juliana. Going by the date of her daughters' births, which we do have, she would have been conceived sometime in the mid 1440s, when Stillington was a young priest in his twenties and when he had yet to aspire to being both a lawyer or a bishop. This is when he got his first Prebandary in Somerset but rapidly swapped away from it to Wales (er - former home of the Newtons). I don't think Stillington would have taken up with the innkeeper's daughter - not his style, but it could of course have been a married woman? I've also played with the idea that it could have happened in Yorkshire and he was shipped off to Somerset. Was it something to do with the Nevilles, which is why the marriage is kept in the family?
Incidentally, if it is to do with the Nevilles, then it makes much more sense of the ludicrous tale of Stillington telling Richard he wants his son to marry EOY. There is often a grain of truth in the strangest tales. Incidentally, the only potential son I've located for Stillington is George, who was buried at Wells Cathedral in the early 1490s. As for potential Neville women, the only candidate of about the correct age is Cis - now that would put the cat among the pigeons :) :) - but she was already married.
BTW a Neville connection would also make sense of:
a. Edward using Stillington as a witness to the pre-contract (he had something on him)
and b. Stillington revealing it years' later at the request of Cis, whose nose had been put out of joint by the Woodvilles for years. H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Friday, 3 March 2017, 12:25
Subject: Re: Bishop Morton

Has there ever been any indication as to who Juliana Stillington's mother may have been. I can't find much on her, except that she married someone called John Hampden (related to the civil war John Hampden?). Is it known when she was born, where Stillington was at the time and which families he would have associated with? He was from Yorkshire originally, but seems to have been mostly in the West Country from 1450 onwards, so Clarence associations do seem likely.
As for noblewomen who had children with priests, the only case I can think of is Alice Fitzalan with Henry Beaufort. It didn't seem to affect her badly, because she married someone else. However, it probably helped that she was a widow and had more independence than an unmarried woman, whose marriage prospects would be damaged. In that were case it would most likely have been covered up and the child raised by the church. I would imagine that most children born to priests, like Wolsey's, didn't have mothers from the nobility.
Nico











On Tuesday, 28 February 2017, 23:47, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <> wrote:


Yes it's the Collins book. Very interesting. I did mean The Reverend Morton. He did go on to be Archbishop right? In the session s Richard keeps blaming churchmen for the boys murder, not himself, although he "let it happen" out of naivete. He says he was talked into signing a seemingly benign document and was later trapped.
He said he was a figurehead only. He hated being King, and it was rather forced on him.
These were seances btw. I only scanned the book as it arrived today.


On Feb 28, 2017 3:46 PM, "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:
I think that if it is the Collins book that Karen is talking about then seance is in the first part of the book, written by Rev John Denham. Collins was the second part.
Doing a bit more research into the people who controlled the castles along the coast of Glamorgan during the 1480s.( blame Stephen). The Stradlings of St Donats castle had connections with the Berkerolles and when Thomas Stradling died in 1480 his widow Jane, nee Matthew, married one Sir Rhys ap Thomas who then became guardian of her son Edward. Jane died in 1485, so guess who was in control in 1485?
Mary



Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-03 13:39:15
Nicholas Brown
I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it. There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been. However, perhaps it wasn't Morton - but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King? Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage? If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power. Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely. Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles. Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower. The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani. He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died. Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him. There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though). Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life! And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did. And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son ..... Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?



Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-03 14:46:46
Karen O

The motive for killing the boys was "they are a threat to everyone".  Richard implies that he "removed them from the monarchy" by these papers. I thought he'd already done that. He claims he completely trusted these people. Evidently Morton's involvement was hidden until it was too late. "A powerful Bishop named John"
Richard was told they were dead and buried in Epping Forest. Who knows? EW surely knew Richard was a figurehead. Edward was also.


On Mar 3, 2017 8:39 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <> wrote:
 

I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it.  There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been.  However, perhaps it wasn't Morton -  but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King?  Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage?  If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power.  Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely.  Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles.  Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower.  The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani.   He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died.  Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him.  There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though).  Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


  Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life!  And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did.  And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son .....   Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

  So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp  Countess of Warwick? 



Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-03 15:37:43
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: Re your final paragraph Doug, well in theory yes. But EW had ignored/isolated Cis since her marriage. She was hardly likely to have let EV's grandmother have any influence when he was king. And if Cis knew he was illegitimate anyway..... ? Doug here: Well, there was that brief period after the failure of the Woodville coup d'etat and before Stillington's announcement where it appeared Edward would, after all, become king, but that would've only been enough time to get used to the idea of a Neville/Woodville on the throne, with the accent on that first family name, before the possibility of such a situation occurring disappeared. A lot would depend, of course, on how much animosity was carried over from EW to her offspring. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-04 12:26:12
Nicholas Brown
Hi, I forgot that he named the bishop as John. That does narrow it down. There was also a John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, who had been tutor to Edward V. Could he have had any motive?
Nico



On Friday, 3 March 2017, 14:46, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <> wrote:


The motive for killing the boys was "they are a threat to everyone". Richard implies that he "removed them from the monarchy" by these papers. I thought he'd already done that. He claims he completely trusted these people. Evidently Morton's involvement was hidden until it was too late. "A powerful Bishop named John"
Richard was told they were dead and buried in Epping Forest. Who knows? EW surely knew Richard was a figurehead. Edward was also.
On Mar 3, 2017 8:39 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <> wrote:
I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it. There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been. However, perhaps it wasn't Morton - but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King? Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage? If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power. Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely. Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles. Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower. The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani. He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died. Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him. There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though). Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life! And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did. And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son ..... Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?





Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-04 14:13:12
Karen O

The motive according to Richard, (We can call him Richard now = )was that the accusation of bastardy made them much less viable. They would create instability and so had to be removed.
Edward IV also made his presence known,. Stating that his death was "helped.' Richard may have suspected this. What more motive did he need to kill Rivers and the others? See his motive becomes more human. No further details on that.
The Bishop named John was said to have become a Cardinal.
Another Richelieu. That can be only Morton.
See Richard's name was on the paperwork, but he insisted over and over he did not order or desire the boys deaths. He said 'The were to be removed from the monarchy', but not killed. That was Richard's understanding, but he was fooled. I never did understand what exact legal 'thing" these papers accomplished. That was fuzzy.


On Mar 4, 2017 7:26 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <> wrote:
 

Hi, I forgot that he named the bishop as John.  That does narrow it down.  There was also a John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, who had been tutor to Edward V.  Could he have had any motive?
Nico



On Friday, 3 March 2017, 14:46, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


  The motive for killing the boys was "they are a threat to everyone".  Richard implies that he "removed them from the monarchy" by these papers. I thought he'd already done that. He claims he completely trusted these people. Evidently Morton's involvement was hidden until it was too late. "A powerful Bishop named John"
Richard was told they were dead and buried in Epping Forest. Who knows? EW surely knew Richard was a figurehead. Edward was also.
On Mar 3, 2017 8:39 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:
  I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it.  There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been.  However, perhaps it wasn't Morton -  but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King?  Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage?  If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power.  Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely.  Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles.  Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower.  The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani.   He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died.  Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him.  There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though).  Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


  Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life!  And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did.  And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son .....   Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

  So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp  Countess of Warwick? 





Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-04 16:03:57
Hilary Jones
Thanks a million Nico for the link, I hadn't seen that.
The timescale is very dodgy. If Jasper was born in 1429, as most authorities seem to think, then he would have had to have been about 17 to have a daughter who had a child old enough to fight at Bosworth; and if they were twins, why only one of them? But we can never discount this - times were different. The online theory seems to be that the two children were invented by the Cromwells (Thomas and Oliver) to give them some sort of royal credibility, but I doubt that bothered Oliver!
One does wonder how much HT cut and pasted his genealogy and that of those who supposedly fought with him. I was reading an article the other day by David Hipshon (not my favourite Richard biographer) who pointed out that Bernard Andre, HT's original historian, never went near talking about Bosworth. One wonders why. H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Friday, 3 March 2017, 13:38
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it. There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been. However, perhaps it wasn't Morton - but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King? Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage? If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power. Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely. Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles. Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower. The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani. He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died. Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him. There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though). Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life! And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did. And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son ..... Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?





Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-04 16:11:47
Hilary Jones
Absolutely. Edward V could have been a total rebel fed up with Uncle Rivers. He might actually have liked Uncle Richard the chivalric fighter. Down the generations we've assumed so many things which might have been totally untrue and that includes that young Edward would have been his mother's pawn.
I think it strange that all the arguments which say Richard had to kill the princes forget Warwick. He wasn't 'safe' whilst Warwick lived - attainders could easily be reversed and young Edward Warwick hadn't commited any crime. On another tack of course Cis could be extremely resentful against the Woodvilles if she felt they had a hand in killing Clarence and also had this secret. H



From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Friday, 3 March 2017, 15:37
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: Re your final paragraph Doug, well in theory yes. But EW had ignored/isolated Cis since her marriage. She was hardly likely to have let EV's grandmother have any influence when he was king. And if Cis knew he was illegitimate anyway..... ? Doug here: Well, there was that brief period after the failure of the Woodville coup d'etat and before Stillington's announcement where it appeared Edward would, after all, become king, but that would've only been enough time to get used to the idea of a Neville/Woodville on the throne, with the accent on that first family name, before the possibility of such a situation occurring disappeared. A lot would depend, of course, on how much animosity was carried over from EW to her offspring. Doug
--
This message has been scanned for viruses and
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-04 16:14:53
Hilary Jones
And John Russell - another man of mystery.
I honestly don't dismiss the Collins book. I remember watching the unveiling of the results on the Leicester find and noticing how uncanny it was that Richard's battle wounds so uncannily matched the séance. H


From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Saturday, 4 March 2017, 12:26
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi, I forgot that he named the bishop as John. That does narrow it down. There was also a John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, who had been tutor to Edward V. Could he have had any motive?
Nico



On Friday, 3 March 2017, 14:46, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <> wrote:


The motive for killing the boys was "they are a threat to everyone". Richard implies that he "removed them from the monarchy" by these papers. I thought he'd already done that. He claims he completely trusted these people. Evidently Morton's involvement was hidden until it was too late. "A powerful Bishop named John"
Richard was told they were dead and buried in Epping Forest. Who knows? EW surely knew Richard was a figurehead. Edward was also.
On Mar 3, 2017 8:39 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <> wrote:
I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it. There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been. However, perhaps it wasn't Morton - but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King? Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage? If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power. Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely. Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles. Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower. The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani. He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died. Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him. There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though). Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life! And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did. And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son ..... Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?







Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Societ

2017-03-05 15:39:58
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: Absolutely. Edward V could have been a total rebel fed up with Uncle Rivers. He might actually have liked Uncle Richard the chivalric fighter. Down the generations we've assumed so many things which might have been totally untrue and that includes that young Edward would have been his mother's pawn. Doug here: Your first two sentences might very well explain why there even was an attempted coup: a fear on the part of the Woodvilles that, should Richard become a Protector with actual power to perform the duties that went with that position, Edward might very well look to his father's family for guidance, and not his mother's. Hilary concluded: I think it strange that all the arguments which say Richard had to kill the princes forget Warwick. He wasn't 'safe' whilst Warwick lived - attainders could easily be reversed and young Edward Warwick hadn't commited any crime. On another tack of course Cis could be extremely resentful against the Woodvilles if she felt they had a hand in killing Clarence and also had this secret. Doug here: Hadn't Richard of York been attainted at one point? I can't recall if Edward and his brothers ever were but, as you say, it wouldn't be that difficult to reverse an Attainder; especially if there was enough support for Warwick. As for any resentment towards the Woodvilles by Cis, that's one reason I tend to believe there was a Pre-Contract. It might just be me, but I can't see her deliberately working to disinherit her grandchildren because she resented their mother. I could, of course, be wrong... Doug
--
This message has been scanned for viruses and
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Societ

2017-03-05 18:30:51
ricard1an
Agree Hilary and Doug. That is a scenario that I have never thought of. We have all been brain washed by Tudor propaganda and traditionalist historians. We will never know for sure not unless some definite contemporary evidence comes to light but it is a possible scenario. Is there any evidence for Richard and E5 meeting up before 1483 I wonder?
Mary

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-06 10:05:13
Nicholas Brown
John Russell, wasn't he one of the suspects for being the Croyland author? Also, I realized that Alcock was made Bishop of Ely in the by Henry VII. In the 1470s, he was Bishop of Worcester, which was Clarence territory. Stillington was Bishop of Bath and Wells, so are there any known links between the two that could be significant - and with Russell and Morton?
One question about the book. Wasn't the promotion of the Bishop named John to Cardinal an assumption of the author or was it actually stated? I recall something about a vision of him putting on hats - one larger than the other, indicating a promotion. Could this be a more important bishopric?
Nico



On Saturday, 4 March 2017, 16:14, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


And John Russell - another man of mystery.
I honestly don't dismiss the Collins book. I remember watching the unveiling of the results on the Leicester find and noticing how uncanny it was that Richard's battle wounds so uncannily matched the séance. H


From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Saturday, 4 March 2017, 12:26
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi, I forgot that he named the bishop as John. That does narrow it down. There was also a John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, who had been tutor to Edward V. Could he have had any motive?
Nico



On Friday, 3 March 2017, 14:46, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <> wrote:


The motive for killing the boys was "they are a threat to everyone". Richard implies that he "removed them from the monarchy" by these papers. I thought he'd already done that. He claims he completely trusted these people. Evidently Morton's involvement was hidden until it was too late. "A powerful Bishop named John"
Richard was told they were dead and buried in Epping Forest. Who knows? EW surely knew Richard was a figurehead. Edward was also.
On Mar 3, 2017 8:39 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <> wrote:
I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it. There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been. However, perhaps it wasn't Morton - but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King? Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage? If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power. Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely. Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles. Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower. The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani. He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died. Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him. There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though). Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life! And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did. And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son ..... Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?









Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Societ

2017-03-06 10:15:10
Hilary Jones
They had met at the marriage of Richard of Shrewsbury to Anne Mowbray and possibly when Margaret visited?
Yes the scenario could have been completely different. At Stony Stratford it could have gone something like "Uncle Richard, I'm so fed up with Uncle Rivers - he's all poetry and jousts. You've really fought, haven't you? And BTW did you know he's up to something with Mummy ......?"
Thanks to the Victorians we forget that young Edward was probably a stroppy teenager brought up to be king. He's been expunged from history, hasn't he? I just can't imagine him entering London like a lamb if he disliked Richard. He'd only have to throw a strop and Hastings for one would be at the ready, let alone the bishops. Do we really know what happened to him between entering London and the revelation of the Pre-contract? We don't hear much do we, given that Croyland was thought to be a Court person?
Fiinally Cis Doug. I don't for a moment think she invented the pre-contract but she was the self-appointed matriarch and guardian of the House of York. The thought of an illegitimate child being on the throne when there were other viable legitimate close candidates (which there no longer were in the 1490s) would not have been pleasing to her. And then of course, added to that were the old rumours surrounding Edward's own legitimacy ...... H
From: "maryfriend@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Sunday, 5 March 2017, 18:27
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Agree Hilary and Doug. That is a scenario that I have never thought of. We have all been brain washed by Tudor propaganda and traditionalist historians. We will never know for sure not unless some definite contemporary evidence comes to light but it is a possible scenario. Is there any evidence for Richard and E5 meeting up before 1483 I wonder?
Mary

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-06 10:37:50
Hilary Jones
Can't help on the latter but John Russell has always interested me because there is a family named Russell deep in the Stillington/Morton/Cradock-Newton story with long connections to Wales. The origins of Russell are difficult to pin down (the Victorians would have him as someone of humble origins - another one) but we know he went to Winchester which of course was founded by our old friend William of Wykeham who is bang in the middle of certainly 1483 rebel territory.
Alcock I have yet to look at. H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Monday, 6 March 2017, 10:05
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

John Russell, wasn't he one of the suspects for being the Croyland author? Also, I realized that Alcock was made Bishop of Ely in the by Henry VII. In the 1470s, he was Bishop of Worcester, which was Clarence territory. Stillington was Bishop of Bath and Wells, so are there any known links between the two that could be significant - and with Russell and Morton?
One question about the book. Wasn't the promotion of the Bishop named John to Cardinal an assumption of the author or was it actually stated? I recall something about a vision of him putting on hats - one larger than the other, indicating a promotion. Could this be a more important bishopric?
Nico



On Saturday, 4 March 2017, 16:14, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


And John Russell - another man of mystery.
I honestly don't dismiss the Collins book. I remember watching the unveiling of the results on the Leicester find and noticing how uncanny it was that Richard's battle wounds so uncannily matched the séance. H


From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Saturday, 4 March 2017, 12:26
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi, I forgot that he named the bishop as John. That does narrow it down. There was also a John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, who had been tutor to Edward V. Could he have had any motive?
Nico



On Friday, 3 March 2017, 14:46, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <> wrote:


The motive for killing the boys was "they are a threat to everyone". Richard implies that he "removed them from the monarchy" by these papers. I thought he'd already done that. He claims he completely trusted these people. Evidently Morton's involvement was hidden until it was too late. "A powerful Bishop named John"
Richard was told they were dead and buried in Epping Forest. Who knows? EW surely knew Richard was a figurehead. Edward was also.
On Mar 3, 2017 8:39 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <> wrote:
I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it. There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been. However, perhaps it wasn't Morton - but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King? Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage? If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power. Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely. Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles. Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower. The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani. He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died. Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him. There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though). Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life! And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did. And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son ..... Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp Countess of Warwick?











Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-06 13:38:49
Karen O

It was stated. A Bishop named John who became a Cardinal. Buck also directly accuses Morton and Beaufort of the poisoning.


On Mar 6, 2017 5:05 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <> wrote:
 

John Russell, wasn't he one of the suspects for being the Croyland author?  Also, I realized that Alcock was made Bishop of Ely in the by Henry VII.  In the 1470s, he was Bishop of Worcester, which was Clarence territory.  Stillington was Bishop of Bath and Wells, so are there any known links between the two that could be significant - and with Russell and Morton?
One question about the book.  Wasn't the promotion of the Bishop named John to Cardinal an assumption of the author or was it actually stated?  I recall something about a vision of him putting on hats - one larger than the other, indicating a promotion.  Could this be a more important bishopric?
Nico



On Saturday, 4 March 2017, 16:14, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


  And John Russell - another man of mystery.
I honestly don't dismiss the Collins book. I remember watching the unveiling of the results on the Leicester find and noticing how uncanny it was that Richard's battle wounds so uncannily matched the séance.  H


From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: "@ yahoogroups.com" <@ yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, 4 March 2017, 12:26
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

  Hi, I forgot that he named the bishop as John.  That does narrow it down.  There was also a John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, who had been tutor to Edward V.  Could he have had any motive?
Nico



On Friday, 3 March 2017, 14:46, "Karen O karenoder4@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


  The motive for killing the boys was "they are a threat to everyone".  Richard implies that he "removed them from the monarchy" by these papers. I thought he'd already done that. He claims he completely trusted these people. Evidently Morton's involvement was hidden until it was too late. "A powerful Bishop named John"
Richard was told they were dead and buried in Epping Forest. Who knows? EW surely knew Richard was a figurehead. Edward was also.
On Mar 3, 2017 8:39 AM, "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:
  I also found the Collins/Denham book fascinating, though it has been a few years since I read it.  There has been some criticism of it because of the physical description of the priest involved being a larger man than Morton was known to have been.  However, perhaps it wasn't Morton -  but if not, which bishop/senior churchman could have had the motive to murder two young boys, who had been declared illegitimate and ineligible to be King?  Also, the murder wouldn't have been committed until a few months after Edward V had been dethroned, so how would his death benefit the church - or any particular cleric - at that stage?  If there was any chance of restoring Edward V, then a rival of Lionel Woodville might have been a possibility, as he would have no doubt been promoted very generously, gaining a lot of power.  Beyond that, I'm at a loss.
As for the woman associated with the cleric, Margaret Beaufort was Denham's choice, but if it wasn't Morton, then that is less likely.  Cecily, I can't see murdering her grandchildren, but Anne Neville (not with Richard's collusion), not really likely, but we don't know much about her or how she actually felt about the Woodvilles.  Also, the woman may just have been in the background, involved with the guilty priest, but not the murder itself.

As far as I know, this is one of only two books written by psychics about the Princes in the Tower.  The other one is the rather far fetched theory that turns Edward V into Erasmus and Richard into Perkin, but who knows.
As for the question about Jasper Tudor's daughters by Myfanwy ferch Dafydd, Helen and Joan, some historians are skeptical including his most recent biographer, Debra Bayani.   He didn't formally recognize them or mention them in his will, but they had both made good marriages and it is unclear when they died.  Joan is certainly presumed to have died before him.  There isn't any proof as to whether the story is true, but there isn't anything to discount it either, and he is still listed in online family trees (not necessarily reliable though).  Being descended from Joan's son Morgan Williams, I would be interested in finding if the story is true or not.

Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Refreshed by Susan Higginbotham
Guest Post by Debra Bayani: The Supposed Daughters of an Earl | History Ref...


On Thursday, 2 March 2017, 22:57, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:


  Firstly, I really have to apologise. I was halfway through my original reply when some visitors arrived. Motto - never continue writing an email when greeting visitors :) :)
Sorry also I ignored Bishop Morton's incarceration in with Buckingham 1483 when he supposedly did his famous conversion - I was thinking more of Stillington in 1476.
The Church - yes I do think there's more to learn about what they were up to, although not exactly in the way that Collins recited. Having looked at participants in both the 1483 rebellions and Bosworth you keep being led in a circle back to the three bishoprics in the South West - Exeter, Winchester and Bath & Wells. Exeter is straightforward, 'Lancastrian' Peter Courtenay is Bishop there, Winchester is 'fundraiser' Wykeham, on whom, according to Baldwin, Richard was not over-keen, and then we have Bath and Wells, bang in the middle of rebel territory.Clarence must have been sitting in the middle of a whirlwind there. All of Stillington's extended family have contacts with old Lancaster, Morton, the 1483 rebels and of course the Lords of Cardigan and Coity Glamorgan. For a very intelligent man Stillington must have been both blind and deaf if he didn't realise that, or perhaps he was under some sort of duress?
The problem with all this is that not only are we dealing with Shakespeare, More, Rous, etc, but we're dealing with the air-brushing of the Victorians and the smoke and mirrors of a scared Tudor dynasty. The Victorians with their robust Anglican morality would have us believe that the bishops were humble men from humble backgrounds - not on your life!  And it's so difficult to wade through the treacle of Welsh genealogy and its multiple surnames which mean that it's relatively easy to claim that HT and the Welsh who fought for him were from some historically superior race. All no doubt adjusted by HT after he gained the throne?
I'll report on Bosworth in a bit, but can anyone tell me if Jasper Tudor really did have twins by a mistress (one being the John Williams who fought at Bosworth and his twin the ancestor of the Cromwells) - or is it another 'Martha Woodville'. The timeline is very tight if he did.  And then we have David ap Owen who is supposed to be Owen Tudor's son .....   Is it a bit more of the Tudor smoke and mirrors? H


From: "maryfriend@... []" <@ yahoogroups.com>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 1 March 2017, 11:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

  So could Hilary's two women be Cecily and Anne Beauchamp  Countess of Warwick? 









Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Ric

2017-03-06 15:10:35
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: They had met at the marriage of Richard of Shrewsbury to Anne Mowbray and possibly when Margaret visited? Doug here: Wouldn't the odds for meeting at that time, would have likely been perfunctory? More on the lines of a meet and greetwith little more than compliments being exchanged? For some reason, I have a hard time picturing, say, a family picnic! Hilary continued:
Yes the scenario could have been completely different. At Stony Stratford it could have gone something like "Uncle Richard, I'm so fed up with Uncle Rivers - he's all poetry and jousts. You've really fought, haven't you? And BTW did you know he's up to something with Mummy ......?"
Thanks to the Victorians we forget that young Edward was probably a stroppy teenager brought up to be king. He's been expunged from history, hasn't he? I just can't imagine him entering London like a lamb if he disliked Richard. He'd only have to throw a strop and Hastings for one would be at the ready, let alone the bishops. Do we really know what happened to him between entering London and the revelation of the Pre-contract? We don't hear much do we, given that Croyland was thought to be a Court person? Doug here: Personally, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point but, Heaven knows, there'd have been a lot people willing to act on anything they thought, or hoped, he wanted. Hilary concluded:
Finally Cis Doug. I don't for a moment think she invented the pre-contract but she was the self-appointed matriarch and guardian of the House of York. The thought of an illegitimate child being on the throne when there were other viable legitimate close candidates (which there no longer were in the 1490s) would not have been pleasing to her. And then of course, added to that were the old rumours surrounding Edward's own legitimacy ...... Doug here: That last is, I think anyway, yet another reason for the Pre-Contract being true, If anyone knew the problems that could be worked up by a false rumor, it was her. After all, wasn't the fake rumor about Edward IV's legitimacy one of the reasons for George's actions? Just imagine what troubles any hint of the Pre-Contract would have caused! Best to bite the bullet, accept her son Edward's actions as irresponsible, at best, at go from there. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-06 15:33:58
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: //snip// One does wonder how much HT cut and pasted his genealogy and that of those who supposedly fought with him. I was reading an article the other day by David Hipshon (not my favourite Richard biographer) who pointed out that Bernard Andre, HT's original historian, never went near talking about Bosworth. One wonders why. Doug here: Perhaps Andre never tried to write about Bosworth because there was no way he could put a plausible explanation together for what happened? Even allowing for Tudor propaganda that Henry was England's savior, there'd be way too many people who knew the real facts; things such as Henry relying on French mercenaries and Welsh tribesmen (which would be how the average Englishman/woman would view the Welsh) and the Stanleys' part/s in the outcome. Then there was what to do about Northumberland  portray him as a late convert to Henry? Or as someone who'd deliberately played false to Richard? Neither scenario would show the Earl in a particularly good light. As for risking making an enemy of the Stanleys, well... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 00:02:49
mariewalsh2003

Hi,


I'm afraid I wasn't impressed with Dening's book.The whole séance transcript is suspiciously vague, with the partial exception of what happened to the Princes, and that doesn't sound plausible. The gist is that Richard ordered a document drawn up excluding them from the succession, his instructions got accidentally or deliberately misunderstood and the document ordered their deaths instead, but Richard didn't read it over before he signed it. The bodies were buried in "the forest" (Epping is Dening's own suggestion) and that is where they remain. Very handy because it's too big an area to search.

Surely the only way Richard could make the disinheritance of Edward IV's children a matter of written law was by Act of Parliament, so we would have to be talking about the text of Titulus Regius, which even if drawn up that far in advance can't possibly have been misread by anybody as a death warrant. It is also incredible that, in that day and age, Richard would have found it acceptable to leave the bodies in the forest rather than transferring them to consecrated ground. Even More credits him with that much scruple.s soon as Dening tried to ask the medium about matters outside the Princes question, he went all fuzzy (had he done a bit of reading on the Princes, maybe, despite his denials?). Dening wanted to know about Richard and Clarence, but 'Richard' just waffled about the Princes being the matter in hand and the medium relayed the news that "George is a very quiet person" and staying in the background because he left the world before the Princes disappeared and so could not contribute to the present discussion (wouldn't spirit George actually have enjoyed the best vantage point to see what happened to them?).At one point the medium comes up with someone called Harold at the palace, who of course meant nothing to Dening. Nobody in the 15th century got called Harold for obvious reasons. I seem to recall Dening also asked about Katherine at one point, and the medium drew a complete blank.Sorry to rain on parade and all. . . .

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 01:48:43
maroonnavywhite
Thank you, Marie.
Tamara

Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Ric

2017-03-07 09:53:02
Hilary Jones
Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture.
I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work?
Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Monday, 6 March 2017, 15:10
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: They had met at the marriage of Richard of Shrewsbury to Anne Mowbray and possibly when Margaret visited? Doug here: Wouldn't the odds for meeting at that time, would have likely been perfunctory? More on the lines of a meet and greetwith little more than compliments being exchanged? For some reason, I have a hard time picturing, say, a family picnic! Hilary continued:
Yes the scenario could have been completely different. At Stony Stratford it could have gone something like "Uncle Richard, I'm so fed up with Uncle Rivers - he's all poetry and jousts. You've really fought, haven't you? And BTW did you know he's up to something with Mummy ......?"
Thanks to the Victorians we forget that young Edward was probably a stroppy teenager brought up to be king. He's been expunged from history, hasn't he? I just can't imagine him entering London like a lamb if he disliked Richard. He'd only have to throw a strop and Hastings for one would be at the ready, let alone the bishops. Do we really know what happened to him between entering London and the revelation of the Pre-contract? We don't hear much do we, given that Croyland was thought to be a Court person? Doug here: Personally, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point but, Heaven knows, there'd have been a lot people willing to act on anything they thought, or hoped, he wanted. Hilary concluded:
Finally Cis Doug. I don't for a moment think she invented the pre-contract but she was the self-appointed matriarch and guardian of the House of York. The thought of an illegitimate child being on the throne when there were other viable legitimate close candidates (which there no longer were in the 1490s) would not have been pleasing to her. And then of course, added to that were the old rumours surrounding Edward's own legitimacy ...... Doug here: That last is, I think anyway, yet another reason for the Pre-Contract being true, If anyone knew the problems that could be worked up by a false rumor, it was her. After all, wasn't the fake rumor about Edward IV's legitimacy one of the reasons for George's actions? Just imagine what troubles any hint of the Pre-Contract would have caused! Best to bite the bullet, accept her son Edward's actions as irresponsible, at best, at go from there. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 11:05:42
ricard1an
I think that he was duped by the medium. It seems to me that the medium knew a little bit about Richard and the Princes and tried to put his opinion, or an opinion that might be acceptable to Dening, over during the seance. Rev John Dening was a very nice man, very passionate about the House of York. It is a pity that he may have been duped in this way.
Mary

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 11:18:07
Nicholas Brown
Hi,
I mixed feelings about the Dening book. The injuries the psychic described were uncanny, but I wasn't convinced that the Church was involved in the way described, or that the boys were a threat to 'everyone' - a few individual's ambitions maybe, but not 'everyone.' Overall, there was a lot that simply didn't add up, and the burial in the forest was one of them. As you say, even More allowed Richard too much decency to do that, but even if he wasn't involved, why would the murderer cart two bodies for a few miles to the forest, when you could dump them in the river? Also, he said that the bodies were covered with quicklime to make them disappear, when actually quicklime preserves bodies - a mistake often shown in films and TV shows, something that highlights a real problem with the seance itself. I don't want to cast doubt on that the psychic has some ability to tune in outside the normal parameters of human experience, but he is also vulnerable to subconscious images from his personal life. Although he claims to have no interest in history, Richard III and the Princes in the Tower is one of the most enduring and famous mysteries, and even if you haven't done any research, you would have to have been living under a rock to have missed the essence of the story. Cultural references could clearly cloud his intuition especially since he described himself as clairsentient - ie. he relies on picking up vibes, rather than actually conversing with a spirit (clairaudient) or remote viewing (clairvoyance). However, this is also confusing as at times it seems that as if he is seeing and hearing the entities. Furthermore, the transcript is then subject to Dening's interpretations and prejudices, especially with regard to Morton and Margaret Beaufort. The psychic could be tuning into to some things that are accurate, but others that are way off. While, I'm not dismissive of the book, I think it does need to be viewed with a great deal of caution.
Nico

On Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 1:48, "khafara@... []" <> wrote:


Thank you, Marie.
Tamara

Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Ric

2017-03-07 12:33:01
Nicholas Brown
Hi,
Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant?
She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects.

Nico




On Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 9:53, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture.
I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work?
Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Monday, 6 March 2017, 15:10
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: They had met at the marriage of Richard of Shrewsbury to Anne Mowbray and possibly when Margaret visited? Doug here: Wouldn't the odds for meeting at that time, would have likely been perfunctory? More on the lines of a meet and greetwith little more than compliments being exchanged? For some reason, I have a hard time picturing, say, a family picnic! Hilary continued:
Yes the scenario could have been completely different. At Stony Stratford it could have gone something like "Uncle Richard, I'm so fed up with Uncle Rivers - he's all poetry and jousts. You've really fought, haven't you? And BTW did you know he's up to something with Mummy ......?"
Thanks to the Victorians we forget that young Edward was probably a stroppy teenager brought up to be king. He's been expunged from history, hasn't he? I just can't imagine him entering London like a lamb if he disliked Richard. He'd only have to throw a strop and Hastings for one would be at the ready, let alone the bishops. Do we really know what happened to him between entering London and the revelation of the Pre-contract? We don't hear much do we, given that Croyland was thought to be a Court person? Doug here: Personally, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point but, Heaven knows, there'd have been a lot people willing to act on anything they thought, or hoped, he wanted. Hilary concluded:
Finally Cis Doug. I don't for a moment think she invented the pre-contract but she was the self-appointed matriarch and guardian of the House of York. The thought of an illegitimate child being on the throne when there were other viable legitimate close candidates (which there no longer were in the 1490s) would not have been pleasing to her. And then of course, added to that were the old rumours surrounding Edward's own legitimacy ...... Doug here: That last is, I think anyway, yet another reason for the Pre-Contract being true, If anyone knew the problems that could be worked up by a false rumor, it was her. After all, wasn't the fake rumor about Edward IV's legitimacy one of the reasons for George's actions? Just imagine what troubles any hint of the Pre-Contract would have caused! Best to bite the bullet, accept her son Edward's actions as irresponsible, at best, at go from there. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 15:05:01
Karen O

No. A document was given to Richard to sign. He claims he did not do diligence In fact checking. He feared the cadre in the  Church with power. Legal Latin I'm sure was not his specialty. I agree it was too vague.


On Mar 6, 2017 7:02 PM, "mariewalsh2003" <[email protected]> wrote:
 

Hi,


I'm afraid I wasn't impressed with Dening's book.The whole séance transcript is suspiciously vague, with the partial exception of what happened to the Princes, and that doesn't sound plausible. The gist is that Richard ordered a document drawn up excluding them from the succession, his instructions got accidentally or deliberately misunderstood and the document ordered their deaths instead, but Richard didn't read it over before he signed it. The bodies were buried in "the forest" (Epping is Dening's own suggestion) and that is where they remain. Very handy because it's too big an area to search.

Surely the only way Richard could make the disinheritance of Edward IV's children a matter of written law was by Act of Parliament, so we would have to be talking about the text of Titulus Regius, which even if drawn up that far in advance can't possibly have been misread by anybody as a death warrant. It is also incredible that, in that day and age, Richard would have found it acceptable to leave the bodies in the forest rather than transferring them to consecrated ground. Even More credits him with that much scruple.s soon as Dening tried to ask the medium about matters outside the Princes question, he went all fuzzy (had he done a bit of reading on the Princes, maybe, despite his denials?). Dening wanted to know about Richard and Clarence, but 'Richard' just waffled about the Princes being the matter in hand and the medium relayed the news that "George is a very quiet person" and staying in the background because he left the world before the Princes disappeared and so could not contribute to the present discussion (wouldn't spirit George actually have enjoyed the best vantage point to see what happened to them?).At one point the medium comes up with someone called Harold at the palace, who of course meant nothing to Dening. Nobody in the 15th century got called Harold for obvious reasons. I seem to recall Dening also asked about Katherine at one point, and the medium drew a complete blank.Sorry to rain on parade and all. . . .

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 15:36:58
Maria Torres
That doesn't sound right: Richard had been involved with legal matters for a long time, both for Edward and in his capacity as a power in the North.  It seems to me that, especially if he fearful (which also sounds a little iffy), he would be sure to understand what he was signing.
Mariaejbronte@...
On Tue, Mar 7, 2017 at 9:55 AM, Karen O karenoder4@... [] <> wrote:
 

No. A document was given to Richard to sign. He claims he did not do diligence In fact checking. He feared the cadre in the  Church with power. Legal Latin I'm sure was not his specialty. I agree it was too vague.


On Mar 6, 2017 7:02 PM, "mariewalsh2003" <[email protected]> wrote:
 

Hi,


I'm afraid I wasn't impressed with Dening's book.The whole séance transcript is suspiciously vague, with the partial exception of what happened to the Princes, and that doesn't sound plausible. The gist is that Richard ordered a document drawn up excluding them from the succession, his instructions got accidentally or deliberately misunderstood and the document ordered their deaths instead, but Richard didn't read it over before he signed it. The bodies were buried in "the forest" (Epping is Dening's own suggestion) and that is where they remain. Very handy because it's too big an area to search.

Surely the only way Richard could make the disinheritance of Edward IV's children a matter of written law was by Act of Parliament, so we would have to be talking about the text of Titulus Regius, which even if drawn up that far in advance can't possibly have been misread by anybody as a death warrant. It is also incredible that, in that day and age, Richard would have found it acceptable to leave the bodies in the forest rather than transferring them to consecrated ground. Even More credits him with that much scruple.s soon as Dening tried to ask the medium about matters outside the Princes question, he went all fuzzy (had he done a bit of reading on the Princes, maybe, despite his denials?). Dening wanted to know about Richard and Clarence, but 'Richard' just waffled about the Princes being the matter in hand and the medium relayed the news that "George is a very quiet person" and staying in the background because he left the world before the Princes disappeared and so could not contribute to the present discussion (wouldn't spirit George actually have enjoyed the best vantage point to see what happened to them?).At one point the medium comes up with someone called Harold at the palace, who of course meant nothing to Dening. Nobody in the 15th century got called Harold for obvious reasons. I seem to recall Dening also asked about Katherine at one point, and the medium drew a complete blank.Sorry to rain on parade and all. . . .


Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-07 15:48:36
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture. Doug here: Well, I was thinking more along the lines of a ritzy, rather ostentatious cock-tail party, but I really like your idea!
Hilary continued: I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work? Doug here: If my memory is accurate (!), the group was met by crowds when they entered London and, while I've always presumed that included the Mayor and other notables, I can't say for certain. Again going by memory, I believe Edward stayed briefly in the residence of one of the Bishops before being ensconced in the Royal Apartments in the Tower. I'm not that up on protocol for 15th monarchs, but wouldn't any trips made by Edward to someplace outside the Tower have been on the order of a procession? Arrangements would have to be made to clear the way before his passage and, or so I presume, those efforts would have attracted attention with the result that if Edward was going abut from the Tower to other sites in London, there'd have been more record of those activities; even if only verbal ones passed down and later included in those (in)famous Chronicles. Something along the lines of how Edward was often seen moving about London until...(fill in the blank). I also have the impression that the actual day-to-day running of the kingdom was being conducted from the Council chambers at the Tower, while the meetings at Westminster were concentrated on the plans for Edward's coronation. I certainly could be in error, but it makes sense, to me anyway, that even if there's a Protector actually in charge and running the country, to have the king nearby  just in case. Edward's proximity would also allow for him to have learning experiences in how the government actually operated. FWIW, and if that last is true, perhaps it was those experiences in what was expected of a king, that explains why, after the boys disappeared from sight, Edward remained in obscurity: it wasn't that he was dead, it was that he'd been there and didn't want to go back?
Hilary concluded: Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. Doug here: I sometimes wonder what Cis actually felt about the marriage between her grand-daughter and Henry Tudor? Especially if her comments about Edward's marriage to EW have been accurately related... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 17:05:23
mariewalsh2003

Hi Nicholas,


Agree with you and Mary on what is wrong about the séance - it was fairly clear that the medium was more able to talk about the better known bits of Richard's life than some other things that were less well known but would have been every bit as important to Richard. I don't have a problem with the existence of psychic experiences per se, but I do suspect that once people - even f they have genuine psychic ability - start offering it to clients to order as if it were a controllable faculty, then hey find themselves trapped, whether consciously or not, into falling back on other means of accessing coming up with the goods.


Could you give us details or a page ref for the death wounds bit in Dening's book, though? I'm afraid I can't find it now.


Marie

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 17:09:27
mariewalsh2003

Yes, but the medium suggested the document was drafted as a result of Richard's instructions regarding the removal of the Princes from the monarchy, and that he didn't read it because he thought he knew what it would say.

The Latin in English 15th-century legal documents is actually very formulaic and normally quite simple. It's the more free-range pseudo-classical literary stuff, with its pages of unpunctuated interwoven clauses, that requires a lot of knowledge. Vatican documents are a lot harder than English government docs.


My other point is that such a document would have been senseless anyway. Richard had been offered and accepted the crown. In order to make that public acceptance watertight he had to wait for parliament. As the person who had taken Edward V's throne, I can't see how he could have tied up the legalities just by ratifying the boys' deposition himself.



Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 17:14:36
mariewalsh2003

Marie wrote:

That doesn't sound right: Richard had been involved with legal matters for a long time, both for Edward and in his capacity as a power in the North. It seems to me that, especially if he fearful (which also sounds a little iffy), he would be sure to understand what he was signing.


Marie:

I agree. that story doesn't sounds plausible on a human level either. Richard seems to have been rather hands-on as an administrator - not the sort of person who signed documents without reading them. He didn't come to the throne as a callow teenager like Edward IV, but with years of administrative experience in the North, and he had his own ideas about the running of government.

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 17:23:17
Karen O

I don't think the sense is that he dictated it. Prime Ministers and Presidents rely on their legal staff today. Why would it be different then?
    The value I saw in the book was that it might provide clues to investigate.The vagueness seems to be coming from the spirits. The Medium also has trouble occasionally.  That doesn't necessarily mean it's a hash.


On Mar 7, 2017 12:09 PM, "mariewalsh2003" <[email protected]> wrote:
 

Yes, but the medium suggested the document was drafted as a result of Richard's instructions regarding the removal of the Princes from the monarchy, and that he didn't read it because he thought he knew what it would say.

The Latin in English 15th-century legal documents is actually very formulaic and normally quite simple. It's the more free-range pseudo-classical literary stuff, with its pages of unpunctuated interwoven clauses, that requires a lot of knowledge. Vatican documents are a lot harder than English government docs.


My other point is that such a document would have been senseless anyway. Richard had been offered and accepted the crown. In order to make that public acceptance watertight he had to wait for parliament. As the person who had taken Edward V's throne, I can't see how he could have tied up the legalities just by ratifying the boys' deposition himself.



Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 17:23:26
Karen O

Do you understand terms of service contracts completely or do you just sign them on faith? He says he signed it on faith. I.think they were some sort of custody papers in a stack of others otherwise wouldn't the boys legally go to their mother? I think we are attributing absolute rule to Richard and it is the privy council and the churchmen in the background manipulating things. This is plausible to me. He says he was.persuaded this was the best thing to do and then they knifed him in the back.


On Mar 7, 2017 10:37 AM, "Maria Torres ejbronte@... []" <> wrote:
 

That doesn't sound right: Richard had been involved with legal matters for a long time, both for Edward and in his capacity as a power in the North.  It seems to me that, especially if he fearful (which also sounds a little iffy), he would be sure to understand what he was signing.
Mariaejbronte@...
On Tue, Mar 7, 2017 at 9:55 AM, Karen O karenoder4@... [] <@ yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 

No. A document was given to Richard to sign. He claims he did not do diligence In fact checking. He feared the cadre in the  Church with power. Legal Latin I'm sure was not his specialty. I agree it was too vague.


On Mar 6, 2017 7:02 PM, "mariewalsh2003" <[email protected]> wrote:
 

Hi,


I'm afraid I wasn't impressed with Dening's book.The whole séance transcript is suspiciously vague, with the partial exception of what happened to the Princes, and that doesn't sound plausible. The gist is that Richard ordered a document drawn up excluding them from the succession, his instructions got accidentally or deliberately misunderstood and the document ordered their deaths instead, but Richard didn't read it over before he signed it. The bodies were buried in "the forest" (Epping is Dening's own suggestion) and that is where they remain. Very handy because it's too big an area to search.

Surely the only way Richard could make the disinheritance of Edward IV's children a matter of written law was by Act of Parliament, so we would have to be talking about the text of Titulus Regius, which even if drawn up that far in advance can't possibly have been misread by anybody as a death warrant. It is also incredible that, in that day and age, Richard would have found it acceptable to leave the bodies in the forest rather than transferring them to consecrated ground. Even More credits him with that much scruple.s soon as Dening tried to ask the medium about matters outside the Princes question, he went all fuzzy (had he done a bit of reading on the Princes, maybe, despite his denials?). Dening wanted to know about Richard and Clarence, but 'Richard' just waffled about the Princes being the matter in hand and the medium relayed the news that "George is a very quiet person" and staying in the background because he left the world before the Princes disappeared and so could not contribute to the present discussion (wouldn't spirit George actually have enjoyed the best vantage point to see what happened to them?).At one point the medium comes up with someone called Harold at the palace, who of course meant nothing to Dening. Nobody in the 15th century got called Harold for obvious reasons. I seem to recall Dening also asked about Katherine at one point, and the medium drew a complete blank.Sorry to rain on parade and all. . . .


Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 18:25:25
b.eileen25
The problem with mediums, and I have had plenty of readings throughout the years, is that they can pick up on your psychic 'energy' which can lead you down the garden path. They can be uncannily accurate, oh yes, but never 100%. I would have thought it extremely difficult to get in touch with spirits that had passed over 500 years ago.

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 18:32:33
b.eileen25
Sorry meant to say that I would love the thought that Richard et al could be contacted by a psychic ..however we must be very, very cautious. I have read this book and Rev John Denning sounded an absolutely delightful and sincere gentleman.

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 18:54:54
Karen O

Agreed. A clear channel is difficult. That's why some see it as fraud. Also the spirits may not want to talk about certain issues. You can't compel their testimony.


On Mar 7, 2017 1:25 PM, "cherryripe.eileenb@... []" <> wrote:
 

The problem with mediums, and I have had plenty of readings throughout the years, is that they can pick up on your psychic 'energy' which can lead you down the garden path.     They can be uncannily accurate, oh yes, but never 100%.  I would have thought it extremely difficult to get in touch with spirits that had passed over 500 years ago.  

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 19:21:13
b.eileen25
I agree Karen. However having said that the part covering Richard's actual death rings true. Marie it's page 79. For those that don't have a copy of the book here it is:. "Because I'm aware of things at the back of me. His death was very quick by the way. I feel I was surprised from the back, not so much from the front. Its as if his memory is very limited about this but I feel he was retreating - he says "retreating". I feel they were on the point of reforming...Richard is saying to me, because there were only a few of them left. There was talk of them retreating so that they could actually regroup. But in the process I feel I have been felled, so what they planned to do they didn't actually achieve because I feel they were outnumbered (me/ Eileen Stanley?). The idea as Richard says was to gather everybody together and fight as a unit because they were spread out a bit. I know he wasn't going to give up- Richard wouldn't give up the battle - he would never run away but he was trying another tactic and in the process of doing that I felt I was felled from behind. It wasn't as if someone had charged up at me and struck me - it was a blow from the back, so he was taken unawares - that's his version of it".

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 20:05:48
Karen O

Also he says it was a paid assassin. Richard basically says he was assassinated by one in his group.


On Mar 7, 2017 2:24 PM, "cherryripe.eileenb@... []" <> wrote:
 

I agree Karen.  However having said that the part covering Richard's actual death rings true.  Marie it's page 79.  For those that don't have a copy of the book here it is:. "Because  I'm aware of things at the back of me.  His death was very quick by the way.  I feel I was surprised from the back, not so much from the front.  Its as if his memory is very limited about this but I feel he was retreating - he says "retreating".  I feel they were on the point of reforming...Richard is saying to me, because there were only a few of them left.  There was talk of them retreating so that they could actually regroup.  But in the process I feel I have been felled,  so what they planned to do they didn't actually achieve because I feel they were outnumbered (me/ Eileen Stanley?).  The idea as Richard says was to gather everybody together and fight as a unit because they were spread out a bit.  I know he wasn't going to give up- Richard wouldn't give up the battle - he would never run away but he was trying another tactic and in the process of doing that I felt I was felled from behind.  It wasn't as if someone had charged up at me and struck me - it was a blow from the back, so he was taken unawares - that's his version of it".

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 20:37:17
b.eileen25
sorry Karen..who was assassinated? I think I've lost the plot!?

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 21:27:27
Could it be this sentence in Dening's book that Karen refers to: " Anyway, he is on about traitors, and what he's saying is that someone was paid to manoeuvre what actually happened to him."
My problem with Dening is that I think he influences the medium by his questions and draws conclusions
too quickly. He is so bend on getting his answers that he sometimes diverts the medium from his narration.
Still I find it an interesting book.
Eva

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 21:51:38
mariewalsh2003

It is fascinating, and I've not called this medium a fraud, simply pointed out that the stuff he relayed was vague and had some damning holes in it. As I suggested, as well as frauds there are people with a genuine gift who simply commit things they should not have committed to. This faculty isn't one that can be turned on and off like a tap and I suspect that is the largest reason professional mediums and psychics can be so inaccurate. And them of course, in a situation like this, they would need to avoid picking things up from the client (whether through mindreading or verbal clues).


Yes, he got it right about Ricard being struck from behind, but of course as we know that didn't come totally out of the blue - they had had to get his helm off him first. The description of what was going on in terms of the battle at the time (talk of retreating because their to regroup because of low numbers) could have been gleaned from any existing account of the battle. And has the medium missed the important point that Richard's horse had gone down in the marsh, and that was why he was on foot?



Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-07 22:09:58
b.eileen25
Oh..that sounds like he was referring to good old Stanley...
Yes..I agree Eva..that can happen ..however it's been a long time since I read the book properly..i must take another look.

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-08 02:35:22
Karen O

In the reading, Richard says someone near him was.paid to kill him.


On Mar 7, 2017 3:39 PM, "cherryripe.eileenb@... []" <> wrote:
 

sorry Karen..who was assassinated?  I think I've lost the plot!? 

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-08 09:52:45
b.eileen25
That's true...whether it be William Stanley or the person/s who struck the blows..

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-08 14:04:44
Karen O

One more thing about spirits. In the book it was stated that all the requiems and prayer services and ceremonies for Richard and the house of York are keeping them attached to the earth plane. They come to them.


On Mar 8, 2017 4:52 AM, "cherryripe.eileenb@... []" <> wrote:
 

That's true...whether it be William Stanley or the person/s who struck the blows..


Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-08 14:47:32
5a10b259d0dd9574e371fa0f856280a9
Having been brought up in a family with a lot of spiritualists in it, I am uneasy of any claim that you can 'dial up' random people from history.
The whole object of Spiritualism is to prove that the spirit survives. If Auntie Flossie tells you from beyond the grave that her Premium Bonds are behind the clock (and they are) or tells you something that you know for a fact only you and she in the world knew, that is reasonably convincing proof.
But 'Richard III' could tell me anything, literally anything, and I would be in no position to test it against fact. Against what passes for 'history', maybe, but we should not confuse that with 'fact' - they are quite different things.
I am far from a sceptic given that I think there are things in this world and beyond way out of our ken, and given that I have even experienced some stuff I cannot explain logically. I only say beware, be cautious. Apart from anything else, there are demons out there who want nothing more than to draw us in. (Demon is a convenient term - call them entities if you like. They are better not messed with.)
Brian W.

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-08 15:29:11
Hilary Jones
I've been immersed in Bosworth participants in the past few weeks, which is why I'm always behind with emails. I wanted to both finish off my 1483 rebels project but also examine who the 'newcomers' were. I have to say I'm more than a bit short of new unhappy people who flocked to HT but I'll let you have the result when I've finished off the last half dozen.
I'm absolutely no military historian but the thing which really strikes you is that Richard's army, whilst being a very normal army of supporters compared with that of HT, is an old army. That could well be of course because they were people who had traditionally supported the HOY for the past twenty years and also done recent service in Scotland. So the average age is 45 and the median age is also 45. HT's in comparison has an average age of 38 and a median age of 35. In fact Richard's army contains a number of people in their fifties and sixties some of whom make John Howard look quite youthful.
Given that they were up against well-trained mercenaries armed with cannon (which incidentally the medium doesn't mention) how well would they have withstood this modern form of warfare, let alone the hand to hand jostling to which most battles seemed to descend? I realise that the majority of fighting would be done by those who always have no name, but I do wonder how much stamina they might have had when faced with what we'd now call a semi-professional army. H
(for info I've taken those on a selection of lists but dismissed them when they seemed improbable - some are even on the wrong side. In doing my other stuff I've also found one or two not on lists but who died on that day or within a day or two. Their families also proclaim proudly (yes proudly) that they died fighting for King Richard at Bosworth)
From: mariewalsh2003 <[email protected]>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 21:51
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

It is fascinating, and I've not called this medium a fraud, simply pointed out that the stuff he relayed was vague and had some damning holes in it. As I suggested, as well as frauds there are people with a genuine gift who simply commit things they should not have committed to. This faculty isn't one that can be turned on and off like a tap and I suspect that is the largest reason professional mediums and psychics can be so inaccurate. And them of course, in a situation like this, they would need to avoid picking things up from the client (whether through mindreading or verbal clues).
Yes, he got it right about Ricard being struck from behind, but of course as we know that didn't come totally out of the blue - they had had to get his helm off him first. The description of what was going on in terms of the battle at the time (talk of retreating because their to regroup because of low numbers) could have been gleaned from any existing account of the battle. And has the medium missed the important point that Richard's horse had gone down in the marsh, and that was why he was on foot?



Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-08 15:51:44
Karen O

The question asked through the medium related to Richard's death specifically. The cannon would have been long over by then I think.


On Mar 8, 2017 10:29 AM, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:
 

I've been immersed in Bosworth participants in the past few weeks, which is why I'm always behind with emails. I wanted to both finish off my 1483 rebels project but also examine who the 'newcomers' were. I have to say I'm more than a bit short of new unhappy people who flocked to HT but I'll let you have the result when I've finished off the last half dozen.
I'm absolutely no military historian but the thing which really strikes you is that Richard's army, whilst being a very normal army of supporters compared with that of HT, is an old army. That could well be of course because they were people who had traditionally supported the HOY for the past twenty years and also done recent service in Scotland. So the average age is 45 and the median age is also 45. HT's in comparison has an average age of 38 and a median age of 35. In fact Richard's army contains a number of people in their fifties and sixties some of whom make John Howard look quite youthful.
Given that they were up against well-trained mercenaries armed with cannon (which incidentally the medium doesn't mention) how well would they have withstood this modern form of warfare, let alone the hand to hand jostling to which most battles seemed to descend? I realise that the majority of fighting would be done by those who always have no name, but I do wonder how much stamina they might have had when faced with what we'd now call a semi-professional army. H 
(for info I've taken those on a selection of lists but dismissed them when they seemed improbable - some are even on the wrong side. In doing my other stuff I've also found one or two not on lists but who died on that day or within a day or two. Their families also proclaim proudly (yes proudly) that they died fighting for King Richard at Bosworth)
From: mariewalsh2003 <[email protected]>
To: @ yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 21:51
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

  It is fascinating, and I've not called this medium a fraud, simply pointed out that the stuff he relayed was vague and had some damning holes in it. As I suggested, as well as frauds there are people with a genuine gift who simply commit things they should not have committed to. This faculty isn't one that can be turned on and off like a tap and I suspect that is the largest reason professional mediums and psychics can be so inaccurate. And them of course, in a situation like this, they would need to avoid picking things up from the client (whether through mindreading or verbal clues).
Yes, he got it right about Ricard being struck from behind, but of course as we know that didn't come totally out of the blue - they had had to get his helm off him first. The description of what was going on in terms of the battle at the time (talk of retreating because their to regroup because of low numbers) could have been gleaned from any existing account of the battle. And has the medium missed the important point that Richard's horse had gone down in the marsh, and that was why he was on foot?




Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-08 17:11:54
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: I've been immersed in Bosworth participants in the past few weeks, which is why I'm always behind with emails. I wanted to both finish off my 1483 rebels project but also examine who the 'newcomers' were. I have to say I'm more than a bit short of new unhappy people who flocked to HT but I'll let you have the result when I've finished off the last half dozen. Doug here: Personally, I've always suspected Tudor's support was often more a case of outs versus ins than some sort of righteous crusade, but then I am a little cynical... Hilary continued: I'm absolutely no military historian but the thing which really strikes you is that Richard's army, whilst being a very normal army of supporters compared with that of HT, is an old army. That could well be of course because they were people who had traditionally supported the HOY for the past twenty years and also done recent service in Scotland. So the average age is 45 and the median age is also 45. HT's in comparison has an average age of 38 and a median age of 35. In fact Richard's army contains a number of people in their fifties and sixties some of whom make John Howard look quite youthful. Doug here: Might the age-discrepancy be caused by the fact that any Lancastrian support Tudor had would have been from the survivors of any fighting/executions in the 1460s and 1470s; aka children? Hilary continued: Given that they were up against well-trained mercenaries armed with cannon (which incidentally the medium doesn't mention) how well would they have withstood this modern form of warfare, let alone the hand to hand jostling to which most battles seemed to descend? I realise that the majority of fighting would be done by those who always have no name, but I do wonder how much stamina they might have had when faced with what we'd now call a semi-professional army. Doug here: We've had some interesting discussions about those mercenaries and their cannon and pikes here, but my personal view is that the effects have been over-rated. Tudor is credited with having something along the lines of 10,000 mercenaries but, while I have no doubt he, or the French, may have been paying for something close to that number, I seriously doubt the actual number was anywhere close to that and, quite likely, may have been nearer one-half, 5,000. Falsifying muster rolls has a long and well-documented history, stretching from the condottiere of Italy in the 13th and 14th centuries to those mustered to repel the Armada in 1588/9. Then there's the cannon. Artillery, at that point in time, was still quite basic. It could be used to knock down curtain walls around castles or towns or it could be employed against enemy troops using either solid shot, a ball about 4-6 inches, or the late-Medieval equivalent of grapeshot, which consisted of small-ish pellets which produced an effect not unlike that of a shotgun, only deadlier. Either way, it's the angle of fire that concerns us. Those early cannons were, more less, fired horizontally, which required a clear field of fire in front of them. Once the armies actually engaged, any attempt to use cannon would have meant firing through one's own troops to get at the enemy! The same would apply if attempts were made to lob cannon balls over one's own troops and into the enemy forces, what with the general melee which most battles degenerated into at that time; one would still be just as likely to hit one's own troops as the enemy. And, finally, those pike-men. Personally, I have no doubt there were pike-men at Bosworth. It's their numbers and how they were deployed that I have trouble with. Had there been the numbers some have suggested, the Yorkists would have been swept from the field shortly after fighting commenced, because there simply was no way to engage pike-men except to blow their formations apart by cannon-fire. Regular troops simply would have been pushed aside and we know from accounts that they weren't, because the fighting Bosworth lasted too long. It's my view that any pike-men present at Bosworth were employed for the exact same reason modern Beefeaters are: to protect something. Nowadays, it's the Tower of London, in August 1485 it was to protect Henry Tudor. Hilary concluded:
(for info I've taken those on a selection of lists but dismissed them when they seemed improbable - some are even on the wrong side. In doing my other stuff I've also found one or two not on lists but who died on that day or within a day or two. Their families also proclaim proudly (yes proudly) that they died fighting for King Richard at Bosworth) Doug here: Good for them! (Who also apologizes for being so long-winded! Or is it long-pixeled?)
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-09 10:11:48
Hilary Jones
I think your reply, Doug, is a lovely example of why we need the forum - we learn so much from each other! And I've just learned a lot about cannonballs! Many thanks.
Re the broader picture, I've deliberately not looked at Horrox whilst doing this but it really does astonish me how something as 'normal' as Richard's army can be the subject of such controversy when it is in fact totally logical, whilst HT's is effectively a foreign invasion with a few outlaws with grudges tagging on. It's amazing for example how many of the half dozen or so Welshmen trace their descent from Charlemagne - did HT sit down and draft his own list of participants and their pedigrees afterwards? One list even has de Velville fighting - he must have been a child prodigy. But people have fallen for this for centuries, even someone as thorough as Horrox. It's as though they've taken as gospel the words of a few crooked chroniclers, just as HT planned. I agree with you about the size as well. How many folks were High Sheriffs expected to recruit?
For an example of how we've been misled take the oft-quoted Yorkshireman Halnath Mauleverer as Sheriff of Cornwall. He might have been made HS by Richard but he wasn't a plant; he was married to a Carminowe and a friend of Bodrugan. Like a lot of younger sons he'd moved to his wife's area. So that means that anyone who does that is a plant, which accounts for a good third of the gentry! And who could blame Richard for indeed planting Brackenbury in Kent, given that area's long history of rebellion. The South West was always anti-York- after all the Beauforts had been Dukes of Somerset! That was why MOA landed there in 1471.
Finally, that other big Tudor/Victorian fib - that the Tudors culled the 'over-mighty barons'. Well unless they mean Warwick I'm not quite sure who they meant by barons anyway but as Doug says they effectively culled themselves at Tewkesbury. I do a lot of 'looking forward' (which I know irritates some :) ) but in the next hundred years every other member of the sheep-farming gentry or the Law had become a baronet. The Tudors were clearly a dynasty running scared and buying support. Plantagenets didn't do that. And the Stuarts, another scared dynasty went one step further and made them Dukes and Earls. So much for the cull which was in every schoolboy's textbook. We have been conned very effectively, haven't we? H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, 8 March 2017, 17:12
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: I've been immersed in Bosworth participants in the past few weeks, which is why I'm always behind with emails. I wanted to both finish off my 1483 rebels project but also examine who the 'newcomers' were. I have to say I'm more than a bit short of new unhappy people who flocked to HT but I'll let you have the result when I've finished off the last half dozen. Doug here: Personally, I've always suspected Tudor's support was often more a case of outs versus ins than some sort of righteous crusade, but then I am a little cynical... Hilary continued:t I'm absolutely no military historian but the thing which really strikes you is that Richard's army, whilst being a very normal army of supporters compared with that of HT, is an old army. That could well be of course because they were people who had traditionally supported the HOY for the past twenty years and also done recent service in Scotland. So the average age is 45 and the median age is also 45. HT's in comparison has an average age of 38 and a median age of 35. In fact Richard's army contains a number of people in their fifties and sixties some of whom make John Howard look quite youthful. Doug here: Might the age-discrepancy be caused by the fact that any Lancastrian support Tudor had would have been from the survivors of any fighting/executions in the 1460s and 1470s; aka children? Hilary continued: Given that they were up against well-trained mercenaries armed with cannon (which incidentally the medium doesn't mention) how well would they have withstood this modern form of warfare, let alone the hand to hand jostling to which most battles seemed to descend? I realise that the majority of fighting would be done by those who always have no name, but I do wonder how much stamina they might have had when faced with what we'd now call a semi-professional army. Doug here: We've had some interesting discussions about those mercenaries and their cannon and pikes here, but my personal view is that the effects have been over-rated. Tudor is credited with having something along the lines of 10,000 mercenaries but, while I have no doubt he, or the French, may have been paying for something close to that number, I seriously doubt the actual number was anywhere close to that and, quite likely, may have been nearer one-half, 5,000. Falsifying muster rolls has a long and well-documented history, stretching from the condottiere of Italy in the 13th and 14th centuries to those mustered to repel the Armada in 1588/9. Then there's the cannon. Artillery, at that point in time, was still quite basic. It could be used to knock down curtain walls around castles or towns or it could be employed against enemy troops using either solid shot, a ball about 4-6 inches, or the late-Medieval equivalent of grapeshot, which consisted of small-ish pellets which produced an effect not unlike that of a shotgun, only deadlier. Either way, it's the angle of fire that concerns us. Those early cannons were, more less, fired horizontally, which required a clear field of fire in front of them. Once the armies actually engaged, any attempt to use cannon would have meant firing through one's own troops to get at the enemy! The same would apply if attempts were made to lob cannon balls over one's own troops and into the enemy forces, what with the general melee which most battles degenerated into at that time; one would still be just as likely to hit one's own troops as the enemy. And, finally, those pike-men. Personally, I have no doubt there were pike-men at Bosworth. It's their numbers and how they were deployed that I have trouble with. Had there been the numbers some have suggested, the Yorkists would have been swept from the field shortly after fighting commenced, because there simply was no way to engage pike-men except to blow their formations apart by cannon-fire. Regular troops simply would have been pushed aside and we know from accounts that they weren't, because the fighting Bosworth lasted too long. It's my view that any pike-men present at Bosworth were employed for the exact same reason modern Beefeaters are: to protect something. Nowadays, it's the Tower of London, in August 1485 it was to protect Henry Tudor. Hilary concluded:
(for info I've taken those on a selection of lists but dismissed them when they seemed improbable - some are even on the wrong side. In doing my other stuff I've also found one or two not on lists but who died on that day or within a day or two. Their families also proclaim proudly (yes proudly) that they died fighting for King Richard at Bosworth) Doug here: Good for them! (Who also apologizes for being so long-winded! Or is it long-pixeled?)
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-09 11:09:51
Hilary Jones
So sorry Doug I've just found this - told you I was in a mess with emails.
I like your idea about young Edward. Again, everyone assumes someone wants to be king - just like that song from the Lion King :) But suppose they don't. Every time I go to York, which is now quite often, I can fully understand why Richard would be reluctant to take the job. Why go south to a load of backbiting folk when you're already king in your own lovely area? No doubt he took the Crown more out of religious duty than gusto. The same could well apply to young Edward being tossed from the relative boredom but peace of Ludlow into the midst of squabbling bishops, ministers, relatives and pretentious courtiers. We know that they certainly got on the nerves of HT. Perhaps he really did want to opt out, after all there's nothing to indicate he had Richard's religious duty?
As for Cis, the mystery continues. Certainly I think she would find Richard a more dutiful (though not necessarily biddable) son who would seek to enhance the reputation of his father's House. I missed an email which asked what happened to Anne Beauchamp after Bosworth. Did anyone reply? Did she go into a religious house or wonder round an empty Middleham like a wraith? H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 15:48
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture. Doug here: Well, I was thinking more along the lines of a ritzy, rather ostentatious cock-tail party, but I really like your idea!
Hilary continued: I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work? Doug here: If my memory is accurate (!), the group was met by crowds when they entered London and, while I've always presumed that included the Mayor and other notables, I can't say for certain. Again going by memory, I believe Edward stayed briefly in the residence of one of the Bishops before being ensconced in the Royal Apartments in the Tower. I'm not that up on protocol for 15th monarchs, but wouldn't any trips made by Edward to someplace outside the Tower have been on the order of a procession? Arrangements would have to be made to clear the way before his passage and, or so I presume, those efforts would have attracted attention with the result that if Edward was going abut from the Tower to other sites in London, there'd have been more record of those activities; even if only verbal ones passed down and later included in those (in)famous Chronicles. Something along the lines of how Edward was often seen moving about London until...(fill in the blank). I also have the impression that the actual day-to-day running of the kingdom was being conducted from the Council chambers at the Tower, while the meetings at Westminster were concentrated on the plans for Edward's coronation. I certainly could be in error, but it makes sense, to me anyway, that even if there's a Protector actually in charge and running the country, to have the king nearby  just in case. Edward's proximity would also allow for him to have learning experiences in how the government actually operated. FWIW, and if that last is true, perhaps it was those experiences in what was expected of a king, that explains why, after the boys disappeared from sight, Edward remained in obscurity: it wasn't that he was dead, it was that he'd been there and didn't want to go back?
Hilary concluded: Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. Doug here: I sometimes wonder what Cis actually felt about the marriage between her grand-daughter and Henry Tudor? Especially if her comments about Edward's marriage to EW have been accurately related... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-09 15:42:57
Nicholas Brown
Hi Hilary,
The Anne Beauchamp post was mine. I'll repost it for you, as I was think you might be the most likely to know.

Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant?
She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects.

This post by Susan Higginbotham was quite helpful about her later life, where she died in obscurity in reduced circumstances. I was surprised that she didn't attend Richard and Anne's coronation. I wonder if she was regarded as rather difficult person. I haven't been able to find anything about what relationship she may have had with Eleanor Talbot and her mother, but the inheritance contest does not appear to have been as bitter or long lasting as the Berkeley one. Even if she and her half sisters were not that close, I still think that it is likely that she would have found out about the pre-contract through some sort of inter-family gossip.
Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick

Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick

Nico


On Thursday, 9 March 2017, 11:09, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


So sorry Doug I've just found this - told you I was in a mess with emails.
I like your idea about young Edward. Again, everyone assumes someone wants to be king - just like that song from the Lion King :) But suppose they don't. Every time I go to York, which is now quite often, I can fully understand why Richard would be reluctant to take the job. Why go south to a load of backbiting folk when you're already king in your own lovely area? No doubt he took the Crown more out of religious duty than gusto. The same could well apply to young Edward being tossed from the relative boredom but peace of Ludlow into the midst of squabbling bishops, ministers, relatives and pretentious courtiers. We know that they certainly got on the nerves of HT. Perhaps he really did want to opt out, after all there's nothing to indicate he had Richard's religious duty?
As for Cis, the mystery continues. Certainly I think she would find Richard a more dutiful (though not necessarily biddable) son who would seek to enhance the reputation of his father's House. I missed an email which asked what happened to Anne Beauchamp after Bosworth. Did anyone reply? Did she go into a religious house or wonder round an empty Middleham like a wraith? H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 15:48
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture. Doug here: Well, I was thinking more along the lines of a ritzy, rather ostentatious cock-tail party, but I really like your idea!
Hilary continued: I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work? Doug here: If my memory is accurate (!), the group was met by crowds when they entered London and, while I've always presumed that included the Mayor and other notables, I can't say for certain. Again going by memory, I believe Edward stayed briefly in the residence of one of the Bishops before being ensconced in the Royal Apartments in the Tower. I'm not that up on protocol for 15th monarchs, but wouldn't any trips made by Edward to someplace outside the Tower have been on the order of a procession? Arrangements would have to be made to clear the way before his passage and, or so I presume, those efforts would have attracted attention with the result that if Edward was going abut from the Tower to other sites in London, there'd have been more record of those activities; even if only verbal ones passed down and later included in those (in)famous Chronicles. Something along the lines of how Edward was often seen moving about London until...(fill in the blank). I also have the impression that the actual day-to-day running of the kingdom was being conducted from the Council chambers at the Tower, while the meetings at Westminster were concentrated on the plans for Edward's coronation. I certainly could be in error, but it makes sense, to me anyway, that even if there's a Protector actually in charge and running the country, to have the king nearby  just in case. Edward's proximity would also allow for him to have learning experiences in how the government actually operated. FWIW, and if that last is true, perhaps it was those experiences in what was expected of a king, that explains why, after the boys disappeared from sight, Edward remained in obscurity: it wasn't that he was dead, it was that he'd been there and didn't want to go back?
Hilary concluded: Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. Doug here: I sometimes wonder what Cis actually felt about the marriage between her grand-daughter and Henry Tudor? Especially if her comments about Edward's marriage to EW have been accurately related... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-09 21:48:13
daviddurose2000

Hilary
I was interested in your comments regarding a list showing Roland as a participant at Bosworth. I believe this is almost certainly true, and would take it as further evidence against his being Henry's son. It seems a little odd to me that you assume that the much later rumours are true and therefore the list must form part of a fabrication.

I would like to know which list features Roland as would Joann Ricca of the R3 foundation who is compiling a list of participants and probables.

I think Marie was a little hasty in her conclusion, since she had not seen the whole evidence and had misread the bardic references.

I will conclude the summary of Roland's ancestry in a separate post.

Kind regards
David

Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-10 10:13:25
Hilary Jones
Hi David, I have to admit I hadn't heard of Roland until the discussion on here so I come with an open mind.
The problem is the maths. HT was 28 at the time of Bosworth (born on 28 Jan 1457) so to conceive son he would have to have been about 16? That would make Roland 12 at the time of Bosworth. Now we have had people like Edmund Rutland and Edward of Lancaster fighting at about 15 but no-one as young as 12. I have one potential 15 year old at Bosworth, Owen Perrot, and two other teenagers. the Fortescue lads who were no doubt out to avenge their rebel father who had died the year before, but the armies on both sides didn't even contain many people in their twenties.
There is indeed a list on the R Foundation site which has been there for some years. It has a few inaccuracies. I got De Velville from another list (they seem to abound). I'll look it up for you.
As for Welsh genealogy, even its most ardent publishers say it's steeped in myth. In my opinion it's easier to fake than later English genealogy - you can have Ieuan ap Dafydd, but which Dafydd? It's human nature to go for the one that's legendary. And before anyone points it out you do get Ieuan ap Dafydd Fychan (made up BTW) but to me, and just to me, it's very hit and miss. And yes I am cynical about some of HT's claims. H


From: "daviddurose2000@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Thursday, 9 March 2017, 21:48
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary
I was interested in your comments regarding a list showing Roland as a participant at Bosworth. I believe this is almost certainly true, and would take it as further evidence against his being Henry's son. It seems a little odd to me that you assume that the much later rumours are true and therefore the list must form part of a fabrication. I would like to know which list features Roland as would Joann Ricca of the R3 foundation who is compiling a list of participants and probables. I think Marie was a little hasty in her conclusion, since she had not seen the whole evidence and had misread the bardic references. I will conclude the summary of Roland's ancestry in a separate post. Kind regards
David

Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-10 10:29:48
Hilary Jones
Thanks Nico - it's very Michael Hicks but one expects that from SH!
Strangely enough it still doesn't say where she went after Bosworth does it?
I'm interested in her for two reasons;
Firstly, yes, as the last ancestress of the Warwick Beauchamps, her final gesture could be to secure the throne for one of her grandchildren. She was at least as grand as Cis and she should have been De Jure Baroness Warwick (am I right Stephen?) had not Edward (not Richard) robbed her of her lands whilst she still lived. I don't think she ever rightly got over that grudge. But she did also get on with Cis, they seem to have been in a circle, including Richard's Anne, which exchanged religious texts. I'm not going into the Middleham Jewel :) :)
The other reason concerns John Rous and why he altered his original text. Lucy Worsley has it as just to please HT but I think it was more than that. Rous was a Beauchamp man through and through, he was after all their historian and was buried in the Beauchamp chapel. I think he altered it for Anne to get her lands back - notice she did in the late 1480s. The reason I think this is that you come across Rous in economic history textbooks where he goes to great lengths to criticise enclosures. That shows he was no HT lover and certainly extremely brave - the people most involved in nearby enclosures (mainly in the Burton Dassett hills) were Reggie Bray, Empson and MB. Therefore it was a direct criticism of the king. It's a wonder he didn't end up in the Tower! So no he obviously didn't alter his text because he loved Henry. Although one does wonder whether he was encouraged to do so in exchange for the Countess's lands! H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Thursday, 9 March 2017, 15:43
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi Hilary,
The Anne Beauchamp post was mine. I'll repost it for you, as I was think you might be the most likely to know.

Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant?
She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects.

This post by Susan Higginbotham was quite helpful about her later life, where she died in obscurity in reduced circumstances. I was surprised that she didn't attend Richard and Anne's coronation. I wonder if she was regarded as rather difficult person. I haven't been able to find anything about what relationship she may have had with Eleanor Talbot and her mother, but the inheritance contest does not appear to have been as bitter or long lasting as the Berkeley one. Even if she and her half sisters were not that close, I still think that it is likely that she would have found out about the pre-contract through some sort of inter-family gossip.
Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick

Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick

Nico


On Thursday, 9 March 2017, 11:09, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


So sorry Doug I've just found this - told you I was in a mess with emails.
I like your idea about young Edward. Again, everyone assumes someone wants to be king - just like that song from the Lion King :) But suppose they don't. Every time I go to York, which is now quite often, I can fully understand why Richard would be reluctant to take the job. Why go south to a load of backbiting folk when you're already king in your own lovely area? No doubt he took the Crown more out of religious duty than gusto. The same could well apply to young Edward being tossed from the relative boredom but peace of Ludlow into the midst of squabbling bishops, ministers, relatives and pretentious courtiers. We know that they certainly got on the nerves of HT. Perhaps he really did want to opt out, after all there's nothing to indicate he had Richard's religious duty?
As for Cis, the mystery continues. Certainly I think she would find Richard a more dutiful (though not necessarily biddable) son who would seek to enhance the reputation of his father's House. I missed an email which asked what happened to Anne Beauchamp after Bosworth. Did anyone reply? Did she go into a religious house or wonder round an empty Middleham like a wraith? H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 15:48
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture. Doug here: Well, I was thinking more along the lines of a ritzy, rather ostentatious cock-tail party, but I really like your idea!
Hilary continued: I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work? Doug here: If my memory is accurate (!), the group was met by crowds when they entered London and, while I've always presumed that included the Mayor and other notables, I can't say for certain. Again going by memory, I believe Edward stayed briefly in the residence of one of the Bishops before being ensconced in the Royal Apartments in the Tower. I'm not that up on protocol for 15th monarchs, but wouldn't any trips made by Edward to someplace outside the Tower have been on the order of a procession? Arrangements would have to be made to clear the way before his passage and, or so I presume, those efforts would have attracted attention with the result that if Edward was going abut from the Tower to other sites in London, there'd have been more record of those activities; even if only verbal ones passed down and later included in those (in)famous Chronicles. Something along the lines of how Edward was often seen moving about London until...(fill in the blank). I also have the impression that the actual day-to-day running of the kingdom was being conducted from the Council chambers at the Tower, while the meetings at Westminster were concentrated on the plans for Edward's coronation. I certainly could be in error, but it makes sense, to me anyway, that even if there's a Protector actually in charge and running the country, to have the king nearby  just in case. Edward's proximity would also allow for him to have learning experiences in how the government actually operated. FWIW, and if that last is true, perhaps it was those experiences in what was expected of a king, that explains why, after the boys disappeared from sight, Edward remained in obscurity: it wasn't that he was dead, it was that he'd been there and didn't want to go back?
Hilary concluded: Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. Doug here: I sometimes wonder what Cis actually felt about the marriage between her grand-daughter and Henry Tudor? Especially if her comments about Edward's marriage to EW have been accurately related... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-10 10:39:20
Hilary Jones
I did think after writing this that by putting people like Halnath Mauleverer in charge of other counties Richard was not aiming to suppress the people, he was actually recreating his own experience. He had done just that, gone to lands owned by his wife and won over the people. No doubt York in 1472 was as sceptical about Richard as Cornwall was about Mauleverer or Kent about Brackenbury. But Richard had the luxury of time.
Which is why incidentally HT had to act fast, or his supporting rebels would be won over. H

From: "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Thursday, 9 March 2017, 10:11
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

I think your reply, Doug, is a lovely example of why we need the forum - we learn so much from each other! And I've just learned a lot about cannonballs! Many thanks.
Re the broader picture, I've deliberately not looked at Horrox whilst doing this but it really does astonish me how something as 'normal' as Richard's army can be the subject of such controversy when it is in fact totally logical, whilst HT's is effectively a foreign invasion with a few outlaws with grudges tagging on. It's amazing for example how many of the half dozen or so Welshmen trace their descent from Charlemagne - did HT sit down and draft his own list of participants and their pedigrees afterwards? One list even has de Velville fighting - he must have been a child prodigy. But people have fallen for this for centuries, even someone as thorough as Horrox. It's as though they've taken as gospel the words of a few crooked chroniclers, just as HT planned. I agree with you about the size as well. How many folks were High Sheriffs expected to recruit?
For an example of how we've been misled take the oft-quoted Yorkshireman Halnath Mauleverer as Sheriff of Cornwall. He might have been made HS by Richard but he wasn't a plant; he was married to a Carminowe and a friend of Bodrugan. Like a lot of younger sons he'd moved to his wife's area. So that means that anyone who does that is a plant, which accounts for a good third of the gentry! And who could blame Richard for indeed planting Brackenbury in Kent, given that area's long history of rebellion. The South West was always anti-York- after all the Beauforts had been Dukes of Somerset! That was why MOA landed there in 1471.
Finally, that other big Tudor/Victorian fib - that the Tudors culled the 'over-mighty barons'. Well unless they mean Warwick I'm not quite sure who they meant by barons anyway but as Doug says they effectively culled themselves at Tewkesbury. I do a lot of 'looking forward' (which I know irritates some :) ) but in the next hundred years every other member of the sheep-farming gentry or the Law had become a baronet. The Tudors were clearly a dynasty running scared and buying support. Plantagenets didn't do that. And the Stuarts, another scared dynasty went one step further and made them Dukes and Earls. So much for the cull which was in every schoolboy's textbook. We have been conned very effectively, haven't we? H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, 8 March 2017, 17:12
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: I've been immersed in Bosworth participants in the past few weeks, which is why I'm always behind with emails. I wanted to both finish off my 1483 rebels project but also examine who the 'newcomers' were. I have to say I'm more than a bit short of new unhappy people who flocked to HT but I'll let you have the result when I've finished off the last half dozen. Doug here: Personally, I've always suspected Tudor's support was often more a case of outs versus ins than some sort of righteous crusade, but then I am a little cynical... Hilary continued:t I'm absolutely no military historian but the thing which really strikes you is that Richard's army, whilst being a very normal army of supporters compared with that of HT, is an old army. That could well be of course because they were people who had traditionally supported the HOY for the past twenty years and also done recent service in Scotland. So the average age is 45 and the median age is also 45. HT's in comparison has an average age of 38 and a median age of 35. In fact Richard's army contains a number of people in their fifties and sixties some of whom make John Howard look quite youthful. Doug here: Might the age-discrepancy be caused by the fact that any Lancastrian support Tudor had would have been from the survivors of any fighting/executions in the 1460s and 1470s; aka children? Hilary continued: Given that they were up against well-trained mercenaries armed with cannon (which incidentally the medium doesn't mention) how well would they have withstood this modern form of warfare, let alone the hand to hand jostling to which most battles seemed to descend? I realise that the majority of fighting would be done by those who always have no name, but I do wonder how much stamina they might have had when faced with what we'd now call a semi-professional army. Doug here: We've had some interesting discussions about those mercenaries and their cannon and pikes here, but my personal view is that the effects have been over-rated. Tudor is credited with having something along the lines of 10,000 mercenaries but, while I have no doubt he, or the French, may have been paying for something close to that number, I seriously doubt the actual number was anywhere close to that and, quite likely, may have been nearer one-half, 5,000. Falsifying muster rolls has a long and well-documented history, stretching from the condottiere of Italy in the 13th and 14th centuries to those mustered to repel the Armada in 1588/9. Then there's the cannon. Artillery, at that point in time, was still quite basic. It could be used to knock down curtain walls around castles or towns or it could be employed against enemy troops using either solid shot, a ball about 4-6 inches, or the late-Medieval equivalent of grapeshot, which consisted of small-ish pellets which produced an effect not unlike that of a shotgun, only deadlier. Either way, it's the angle of fire that concerns us. Those early cannons were, more less, fired horizontally, which required a clear field of fire in front of them. Once the armies actually engaged, any attempt to use cannon would have meant firing through one's own troops to get at the enemy! The same would apply if attempts were made to lob cannon balls over one's own troops and into the enemy forces, what with the general melee which most battles degenerated into at that time; one would still be just as likely to hit one's own troops as the enemy. And, finally, those pike-men. Personally, I have no doubt there were pike-men at Bosworth. It's their numbers and how they were deployed that I have trouble with. Had there been the numbers some have suggested, the Yorkists would have been swept from the field shortly after fighting commenced, because there simply was no way to engage pike-men except to blow their formations apart by cannon-fire. Regular troops simply would have been pushed aside and we know from accounts that they weren't, because the fighting Bosworth lasted too long. It's my view that any pike-men present at Bosworth were employed for the exact same reason modern Beefeaters are: to protect something. Nowadays, it's the Tower of London, in August 1485 it was to protect Henry Tudor. Hilary concluded:
(for info I've taken those on a selection of lists but dismissed them when they seemed improbable - some are even on the wrong side. In doing my other stuff I've also found one or two not on lists but who died on that day or within a day or two. Their families also proclaim proudly (yes proudly) that they died fighting for King Richard at Bosworth) Doug here: Good for them! (Who also apologizes for being so long-winded! Or is it long-pixeled?)
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-10 11:03:40
Stephen

In her own right: “in suo jure”

Her husband: “in jure uxoris”.

From: [mailto: ]
Sent: 10 March 2017 10:29
To:
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

Thanks Nico - it's very Michael Hicks but one expects that from SH!

Strangely enough it still doesn't say where she went after Bosworth does it?

I'm interested in her for two reasons;

Firstly, yes, as the last ancestress of the Warwick Beauchamps, her final gesture could be to secure the throne for one of her grandchildren. She was at least as grand as Cis and she should have been De Jure Baroness Warwick (am I right Stephen?) had not Edward (not Richard) robbed her of her lands whilst she still lived. I don't think she ever rightly got over that grudge. But she did also get on with Cis, they seem to have been in a circle, including Richard's Anne, which exchanged religious texts. I'm not going into the Middleham Jewel :) :)

The other reason concerns John Rous and why he altered his original text. Lucy Worsley has it as just to please HT but I think it was more than that. Rous was a Beauchamp man through and through, he was after all their historian and was buried in the Beauchamp chapel. I think he altered it for Anne to get her lands back - notice she did in the late 1480s. The reason I think this is that you come across Rous in economic history textbooks where he goes to great lengths to criticise enclosures. That shows he was no HT lover and certainly extremely brave - the people most involved in nearby enclosures (mainly in the Burton Dassett hills) were Reggie Bray, Empson and MB. Therefore it was a direct criticism of the king. It's a wonder he didn't end up in the Tower! So no he obviously didn't alter his text because he loved Henry. Although one does wonder whether he was encouraged to do so in exchange for the Countess's lands! H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" < >
To: " " < >
Sent: Thursday, 9 March 2017, 15:43
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

Hi Hilary,

The Anne Beauchamp post was mine. I'll repost it for you, as I was think you might be the most likely to know.

Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant?

She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects.

This post by Susan Higginbotham was quite helpful about her later life, where she died in obscurity in reduced circumstances. I was surprised that she didn't attend Richard and Anne's coronation. I wonder if she was regarded as rather difficult person. I haven't been able to find anything about what relationship she may have had with Eleanor Talbot and her mother, but the inheritance contest does not appear to have been as bitter or long lasting as the Berkeley one. Even if she and her half sisters were not that close, I still think that it is likely that she would have found out about the pre-contract through some sort of inter-family gossip.

Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick

Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick

Nico

On Thursday, 9 March 2017, 11:09, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" < > wrote:

So sorry Doug I've just found this - told you I was in a mess with emails.

I like your idea about young Edward. Again, everyone assumes someone wants to be king - just like that song from the Lion King :) But suppose they don't. Every time I go to York , which is now quite often, I can fully understand why Richard would be reluctant to take the job. Why go south to a load of backbiting folk when you're already king in your own lovely area? No doubt he took the Crown more out of religious duty than gusto. The same could well apply to young Edward being tossed from the relative boredom but peace of Ludlow into the midst of squabbling bishops, ministers, relatives and pretentious courtiers. We know that they certainly got on the nerves of HT. Perhaps he really did want to opt out, after all there's nothing to indicate he had Richard's religious duty?

As for Cis, the mystery continues. Certainly I think she would find Richard a more dutiful (though not necessarily biddable) son who would seek to enhance the reputation of his father's House. I missed an email which asked what happened to Anne Beauchamp after Bosworth. Did anyone reply? Did she go into a religious house or wonder round an empty Middleham like a wraith? H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" < >
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 15:48
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote:

“Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture.”

Doug here:

Well, I was thinking more along the lines of a ritzy, rather ostentatious cock-tail party, but I really like your idea!

Hilary continued:

“I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work?”

Doug here:

If my memory is accurate (!), the group was met by crowds when they entered London and, while I’ve always presumed that included the Mayor and other notables, I can’t say for certain. Again going by memory, I believe Edward stayed briefly in the residence of one of the Bishops before being ensconced in the Royal Apartments in the Tower.

I’m not that up on protocol for 15th monarchs, but wouldn’t any trips made by Edward to someplace outside the Tower have been on the order of a “procession”? Arrangements would have to be made to clear the way before his passage and, or so I presume, those efforts would have attracted attention with the result that if Edward was going abut from the Tower to other sites in London, there’d have been more record of those activities; even if only verbal ones passed down and later included in those (in)famous “Chronicles”. Something along the lines of how Edward was often seen moving about London until...(fill in the blank).

I also have the impression that the actual day-to-day running of the kingdom was being conducted from the Council chambers at the Tower, while the meetings at Westminster were concentrated on the plans for Edward’s coronation. I certainly could be in error, but it makes sense, to me anyway, that even if there’s a Protector actually in charge and running the country, to have the king nearby – just in case. Edward’s proximity would also allow for him to have “learning experiences” in how the government actually operated.

FWIW, and if that last is true, perhaps it was those “experiences” in what was expected of a king, that explains why, after the boys disappeared from sight, Edward remained in obscurity: it wasn’t that he was dead, it was that he’d been there and didn’t want to go back?

Hilary concluded:

“Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House.”

Doug here:

I sometimes wonder what Cis actually felt about the marriage between her grand-daughter and Henry Tudor? Especially if her comments about Edward’s marriage to EW have been accurately related...

Doug


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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-10 18:17:34
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: So sorry Doug I've just found this - told you I was in a mess with emails. I like your idea about young Edward. Again, everyone assumes someone wants to be king - just like that song from the Lion King :) But suppose they don't. Every time I go to York, which is now quite often, I can fully understand why Richard would be reluctant to take the job. Why go south to a load of backbiting folk when you're already king in your own lovely area? No doubt he took the Crown more out of religious duty than gusto. The same could well apply to young Edward being tossed from the relative boredom but peace of Ludlow into the midst of squabbling bishops, ministers, relatives and pretentious courtiers. We know that they certainly got on the nerves of HT. Perhaps he really did want to opt out, after all there's nothing to indicate he had Richard's religious duty? Doug here: Well, to be honest, I was thinking more along the lines of Edward possibly feeling that the dangers of being a king didn't outweigh any advantages. Especially if there'd already been an attempt on his life. I can't say I'm 100% behind the idea that the boys weren't supposed to survive any rescue attempt sponsored by Buckingham, but I do think it deserves consideration. Hilary concluded: As for Cis, the mystery continues. Certainly I think she would find Richard a more dutiful (though not necessarily biddable) son who would seek to enhance the reputation of his father's House. I missed an email which asked what happened to Anne Beauchamp after Bosworth. Did anyone reply? Did she go into a religious house or wonder round an empty Middleham like a wraith? Doug here: FWIW, I tend to think that, while Cis would have preferred a completely legitimate Yorkist line of descent, she was willing to accept that one doesn't always get what one wants and was willing to settle for a descent via her grand-daughter and HT. Presuming, of course, that HT remained on the throne... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Societ

2017-03-10 18:35:58
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: I think your reply, Doug, is a lovely example of why we need the forum - we learn so much from each other! And I've just learned a lot about cannonballs! Many thanks. Doug here: Twas nothing, but thank you! Hilary continued: Re the broader picture, I've deliberately not looked at Horrox whilst doing this but it really does astonish me how something as 'normal' as Richard's army can be the subject of such controversy when it is in fact totally logical, whilst HT's is effectively a foreign invasion with a few outlaws with grudges tagging on. It's amazing for example how many of the half dozen or so Welshmen trace their descent from Charlemagne - did HT sit down and draft his own list of participants and their pedigrees afterwards? One list even has de Velville fighting - he must have been a child prodigy. But people have fallen for this for centuries, even someone as thorough as Horrox. It's as though they've taken as gospel the words of a few crooked chroniclers, just as HT planned. I agree with you about the size as well. How many folks were High Sheriffs expected to recruit? Doug here: To be fair, those historians and chroniclers often were all that was available. Or at least easiest to get to, anyway. As for the number of men required from each High Sherriff, I'd imagine that making a list of those available for mustering, and keeping it updated, would be one of the prime duties of a HS, but I'm not certain. Does anyone else have any information on how musters were made? Hilary continued": For an example of how we've been misled take the oft-quoted Yorkshireman Halnath Mauleverer as Sheriff of Cornwall. He might have been made HS by Richard but he wasn't a plant; he was married to a Carminowe and a friend of Bodrugan. Like a lot of younger sons he'd moved to his wife's area. So that means that anyone who does that is a plant, which accounts for a good third of the gentry! And who could blame Richard for indeed planting Brackenbury in Kent, given that area's long history of rebellion. The South West was always anti-York- after all the Beauforts had been Dukes of Somerset! That was why MOA landed there in 1471. Doug here: FWIW, I've always presumed that Kent's, um, volatility(?), was mostly due to its geographic location between London, and Canterbury, and Europe; with the result that events in the capital were very quickly spread by people traveling to and from the Continent. I don't have anything factual to back up that idea, BTW. Hilary concluded: Finally, that other big Tudor/Victorian fib - that the Tudors culled the 'over-mighty barons'. Well unless they mean Warwick I'm not quite sure who they meant by barons anyway but as Doug says they effectively culled themselves at Tewkesbury. I do a lot of 'looking forward' (which I know irritates some :) ) but in the next hundred years every other member of the sheep-farming gentry or the Law had become a baronet. The Tudors were clearly a dynasty running scared and buying support. Plantagenets didn't do that. And the Stuarts, another scared dynasty went one step further and made them Dukes and Earls. So much for the cull which was in every schoolboy's textbook. We have been conned very effectively, haven't we? Doug here: I wonder if people, read: historians, haven't mistaken the efforts of the Tudors to prevent any over-mighty subjects from arising as being that culling? As for the Tudors raising all those gentry to baronets, it looks suspiciously as if the Tudors were simply going where the money was. Land was still the sine qua non as a sign of respectability and having arrived, but hard cash was rapidly overtaking it. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-10 19:54:44
Nicholas Brown
Thanks Hilary,
That is an interesting dimension on Rous. I always assumed the Lucy Worsley version of him, but maybe he genuinely wanted to see Anne Beauchamp get some justice. He had to be careful what he said about Edward around Henry and EofY, but Richard would have been an easy target.
Also, if Anne Beauchamp knew about the precontract, then she would probably have told Cecily and Anne Neville. Also, I wonder what her relationship to Margaret Beaufort was like, since he was also Buckingham's great aunt through her other half-sister Eleanor, who was married to Edmund Beaufort.

Nico




On Friday, 10 March 2017, 11:03, "'Stephen' stephenmlark@... []" <> wrote:


In her own right: in suo jure Her husband: in jure uxoris. From: [mailto: ]
Sent: 10 March 2017 10:29
To:
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton Thanks Nico - it's very Michael Hicks but one expects that from SH! Strangely enough it still doesn't say where she went after Bosworth does it? I'm interested in her for two reasons; Firstly, yes, as the last ancestress of the Warwick Beauchamps, her final gesture could be to secure the throne for one of her grandchildren. She was at least as grand as Cis and she should have been De Jure Baroness Warwick (am I right Stephen?) had not Edward (not Richard) robbed her of her lands whilst she still lived. I don't think she ever rightly got over that grudge. But she did also get on with Cis, they seem to have been in a circle, including Richard's Anne, which exchanged religious texts. I'm not going into the Middleham Jewel :) :) The other reason concerns John Rous and why he altered his original text. Lucy Worsley has it as just to please HT but I think it was more than that. Rous was a Beauchamp man through and through, he was after all their historian and was buried in the Beauchamp chapel. I think he altered it for Anne to get her lands back - notice she did in the late 1480s. The reason I think this is that you come across Rous in economic history textbooks where he goes to great lengths to criticise enclosures. That shows he was no HT lover and certainly extremely brave - the people most involved in nearby enclosures (mainly in the Burton Dassett hills) were Reggie Bray, Empson and MB. Therefore it was a direct criticism of the king. It's a wonder he didn't end up in the Tower! So no he obviously didn't alter his text because he loved Henry. Although one does wonder whether he was encouraged to do so in exchange for the Countess's lands! H From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" < >
To: " " < >
Sent: Thursday, 9 March 2017, 15:43
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton Hi Hilary, The Anne Beauchamp post was mine. I'll repost it for you, as I was think you might be the most likely to know. Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant? She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects. This post by Susan Higginbotham was quite helpful about her later life, where she died in obscurity in reduced circumstances. I was surprised that she didn't attend Richard and Anne's coronation. I wonder if she was regarded as rather difficult person. I haven't been able to find anything about what relationship she may have had with Eleanor Talbot and her mother, but the inheritance contest does not appear to have been as bitter or long lasting as the Berkeley one. Even if she and her half sisters were not that close, I still think that it is likely that she would have found out about the pre-contract through some sort of inter-family gossip. Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick Nico On Thursday, 9 March 2017, 11:09, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" < > wrote: So sorry Doug I've just found this - told you I was in a mess with emails. I like your idea about young Edward. Again, everyone assumes someone wants to be king - just like that song from the Lion King :) But suppose they don't. Every time I go to York , which is now quite often, I can fully understand why Richard would be reluctant to take the job. Why go south to a load of backbiting folk when you're already king in your own lovely area? No doubt he took the Crown more out of religious duty than gusto. The same could well apply to young Edward being tossed from the relative boredom but peace of Ludlow into the midst of squabbling bishops, ministers, relatives and pretentious courtiers. We know that they certainly got on the nerves of HT. Perhaps he really did want to opt out, after all there's nothing to indicate he had Richard's religious duty? As for Cis, the mystery continues. Certainly I think she would find Richard a more dutiful (though not necessarily biddable) son who would seek to enhance the reputation of his father's House. I missed an email which asked what happened to Anne Beauchamp after Bosworth. Did anyone reply? Did she go into a religious house or wonder round an empty Middleham like a wraith? H From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" < >
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 15:48
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton Hilary wrote: Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture. Doug here: Well, I was thinking more along the lines of a ritzy, rather ostentatious cock-tail party, but I really like your idea! Hilary continued: I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work? Doug here: If my memory is accurate (!), the group was met by crowds when they entered London and, while I've always presumed that included the Mayor and other notables, I can't say for certain. Again going by memory, I believe Edward stayed briefly in the residence of one of the Bishops before being ensconced in the Royal Apartments in the Tower. I'm not that up on protocol for 15th monarchs, but wouldn't any trips made by Edward to someplace outside the Tower have been on the order of a procession? Arrangements would have to be made to clear the way before his passage and, or so I presume, those efforts would have attracted attention with the result that if Edward was going abut from the Tower to other sites in London, there'd have been more record of those activities; even if only verbal ones passed down and later included in those (in)famous Chronicles. Something along the lines of how Edward was often seen moving about London until...(fill in the blank). I also have the impression that the actual day-to-day running of the kingdom was being conducted from the Council chambers at the Tower, while the meetings at Westminster were concentrated on the plans for Edward's coronation. I certainly could be in error, but it makes sense, to me anyway, that even if there's a Protector actually in charge and running the country, to have the king nearby  just in case. Edward's proximity would also allow for him to have learning experiences in how the government actually operated. FWIW, and if that last is true, perhaps it was those experiences in what was expected of a king, that explains why, after the boys disappeared from sight, Edward remained in obscurity: it wasn't that he was dead, it was that he'd been there and didn't want to go back? Hilary concluded: Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. Doug here: I sometimes wonder what Cis actually felt about the marriage between her grand-daughter and Henry Tudor? Especially if her comments about Edward's marriage to EW have been accurately related... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Societ

2017-03-11 17:01:02
Doug Stamate
Hilary wrote: I did think after writing this that by putting people like Halnath Mauleverer in charge of other counties Richard was not aiming to suppress the people, he was actually recreating his own experience. He had done just that, gone to lands owned by his wife and won over the people. No doubt York in 1472 was as sceptical about Richard as Cornwall was about Mauleverer or Kent about Brackenbury. But Richard had the luxury of time. Doug here: Again, it's only my personal view, but if one would expect that, as a result of a failed rebellion, the king would replace those who'd been placed in charge of their localities and then participated in the rebellion. For some reason or another, IMO mostly propaganda lauding Tudor as the country's savior, has led writers to believe that actions that took place for one reason, were actually done for a different reason. To the best of my knowledge, Richard actually only replaced those county people who had participated in the rebellion. However, that number, as they say, grew in the telling, and when writers of later centuries put words to paper, they went with what sounded best. What we always have to remember is, regardless of what's in the various Chronicles and Histories, Tudor got the throne via the treachery of the Stanleys and Northumberland. Thus, there had to be some reason given as an explanation, and claiming Richard removed county gentry from their local positions of authority fit perfectly into the message. I quite agree with you that it wasn't Richard's lack of ability or his maniacal lust for power (I really should have followed that with a Bwaahahaha!),but simply a lack of time in order for him to establish the same relations in the south as he had in the north. Hilary concluded: Which is why incidentally HT had to act fast, or his supporting rebels would be won over. Doug here: Especially if any rebellion was attempted after the marriages of Richard to Joanna and his niece to Manuel! If my genealogy is correct, a repeal of Titulus Regius would place Tudor in the position of supporting the idea that all of Edward IV's children were legitimate and, if I'm correct about how primogeniture works, any child of Elizabeth and Manuel would, legally anyway, have precedence over any children by Henry and whoever he married of Edward's remaining daughters. Of course, there is that saying about possession being 9/10's of the law and all, but still... Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Ric

2017-03-13 08:39:06
Hilary Jones
Sorry, still catching up Nico. I agree about revenge and about the Twynyho case. A couple of other things - Anne would have known the Warwickshire gentry better than anyone and Burdet, from a High Sheriffs' family and one himself, came from there. His father had been close to the Beauchamps. Secondly, she would almost certainly have know that Ankarette was the granddaughter of two murderers. The William Lacon murder case was very famous because Bolingbroke let her grandparents get away with it. Which is the murder you mean in your last sentence?H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 12:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi,
Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant?
She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects.

Nico




On Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 9:53, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture.
I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work?
Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Monday, 6 March 2017, 15:10
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: They had met at the marriage of Richard of Shrewsbury to Anne Mowbray and possibly when Margaret visited? Doug here: Wouldn't the odds for meeting at that time, would have likely been perfunctory? More on the lines of a meet and greetwith little more than compliments being exchanged? For some reason, I have a hard time picturing, say, a family picnic! Hilary continued:
Yes the scenario could have been completely different. At Stony Stratford it could have gone something like "Uncle Richard, I'm so fed up with Uncle Rivers - he's all poetry and jousts. You've really fought, haven't you? And BTW did you know he's up to something with Mummy ......?"
Thanks to the Victorians we forget that young Edward was probably a stroppy teenager brought up to be king. He's been expunged from history, hasn't he? I just can't imagine him entering London like a lamb if he disliked Richard. He'd only have to throw a strop and Hastings for one would be at the ready, let alone the bishops. Do we really know what happened to him between entering London and the revelation of the Pre-contract? We don't hear much do we, given that Croyland was thought to be a Court person? Doug here: Personally, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point but, Heaven knows, there'd have been a lot people willing to act on anything they thought, or hoped, he wanted. Hilary concluded:
Finally Cis Doug. I don't for a moment think she invented the pre-contract but she was the self-appointed matriarch and guardian of the House of York. The thought of an illegitimate child being on the throne when there were other viable legitimate close candidates (which there no longer were in the 1490s) would not have been pleasing to her. And then of course, added to that were the old rumours surrounding Edward's own legitimacy ...... Doug here: That last is, I think anyway, yet another reason for the Pre-Contract being true, If anyone knew the problems that could be worked up by a false rumor, it was her. After all, wasn't the fake rumor about Edward IV's legitimacy one of the reasons for George's actions? Just imagine what troubles any hint of the Pre-Contract would have caused! Best to bite the bullet, accept her son Edward's actions as irresponsible, at best, at go from there. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Ric

2017-03-13 12:26:46
Nicholas Brown
Hi Hilary,
The murder that I referred to in the last sentence was the Princes - the one which, of course, may or may not have actually happened. But, if it did, perhaps Anne Beauchamp should join the suspect list as a Woodville dominated boy King may have been repulsive to her. She could have had the motive, but maybe not opportunity, unless she could get someone to do it for her.

Even if there was no murder, she still could have been the one who persuaded Stillington to come forward. Also, whatever she knew or was involved in, I wonder how much Anne Neville knew.
Nico


On Monday, 13 March 2017, 8:39, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Sorry, still catching up Nico. I agree about revenge and about the Twynyho case. A couple of other things - Anne would have known the Warwickshire gentry better than anyone and Burdet, from a High Sheriffs' family and one himself, came from there. His father had been close to the Beauchamps. Secondly, she would almost certainly have know that Ankarette was the granddaughter of two murderers. The William Lacon murder case was very famous because Bolingbroke let her grandparents get away with it. Which is the murder you mean in your last sentence?H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 12:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi,
Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant?
She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects.

Nico




On Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 9:53, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture.
I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work?
Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Monday, 6 March 2017, 15:10
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: They had met at the marriage of Richard of Shrewsbury to Anne Mowbray and possibly when Margaret visited? Doug here: Wouldn't the odds for meeting at that time, would have likely been perfunctory? More on the lines of a meet and greetwith little more than compliments being exchanged? For some reason, I have a hard time picturing, say, a family picnic! Hilary continued:
Yes the scenario could have been completely different. At Stony Stratford it could have gone something like "Uncle Richard, I'm so fed up with Uncle Rivers - he's all poetry and jousts. You've really fought, haven't you? And BTW did you know he's up to something with Mummy ......?"
Thanks to the Victorians we forget that young Edward was probably a stroppy teenager brought up to be king. He's been expunged from history, hasn't he? I just can't imagine him entering London like a lamb if he disliked Richard. He'd only have to throw a strop and Hastings for one would be at the ready, let alone the bishops. Do we really know what happened to him between entering London and the revelation of the Pre-contract? We don't hear much do we, given that Croyland was thought to be a Court person? Doug here: Personally, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point but, Heaven knows, there'd have been a lot people willing to act on anything they thought, or hoped, he wanted. Hilary concluded:
Finally Cis Doug. I don't for a moment think she invented the pre-contract but she was the self-appointed matriarch and guardian of the House of York. The thought of an illegitimate child being on the throne when there were other viable legitimate close candidates (which there no longer were in the 1490s) would not have been pleasing to her. And then of course, added to that were the old rumours surrounding Edward's own legitimacy ...... Doug here: That last is, I think anyway, yet another reason for the Pre-Contract being true, If anyone knew the problems that could be worked up by a false rumor, it was her. After all, wasn't the fake rumor about Edward IV's legitimacy one of the reasons for George's actions? Just imagine what troubles any hint of the Pre-Contract would have caused! Best to bite the bullet, accept her son Edward's actions as irresponsible, at best, at go from there. Doug
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Ric

2017-03-13 14:03:46
Hilary Jones
I thought you meant that Nico. I'm with you in thinking that she may have nudged Stillington into coming forward. And if he did have a remote Neville connection then it could have been both Cis and her who put him up to it. Yes, it's interesting about Anne. We know so little of her. H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Monday, 13 March 2017, 12:26
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi Hilary,
The murder that I referred to in the last sentence was the Princes - the one which, of course, may or may not have actually happened. But, if it did, perhaps Anne Beauchamp should join the suspect list as a Woodville dominated boy King may have been repulsive to her. She could have had the motive, but maybe not opportunity, unless she could get someone to do it for her.

Even if there was no murder, she still could have been the one who persuaded Stillington to come forward. Also, whatever she knew or was involved in, I wonder how much Anne Neville knew.
Nico


On Monday, 13 March 2017, 8:39, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Sorry, still catching up Nico. I agree about revenge and about the Twynyho case. A couple of other things - Anne would have known the Warwickshire gentry better than anyone and Burdet, from a High Sheriffs' family and one himself, came from there. His father had been close to the Beauchamps. Secondly, she would almost certainly have know that Ankarette was the granddaughter of two murderers. The William Lacon murder case was very famous because Bolingbroke let her grandparents get away with it. Which is the murder you mean in your last sentence?H

From: "Nicholas Brown nico11238@... []" <>
To: "" <>
Sent: Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 12:33
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hi,
Mary mentioned Anne Beauchamp in an earlier post in the Dening discussion. I had completely overlooked her, even forgetting that she was still alive at the time. Could she have had anything to do with the pre-contract revelation? She was Eleanor Talbot's aunt, so she may well have known about what happened. Does anyone know what kind of relationship she had with her half sisters? I know there was a dispute about the Warwick inheritance in the 1440s, but were they reconciled after the situation was resolved? Also, with her connections in the West Country, did she have any links to Stillington, Morton, Margaret Beaufort or anyone else that could be significant?
She may have had the most to gain from a regime change that sidelined Edward V and his brother. What happened in the 1460s may not have meant much at the time, but she may have had a lot of resentment building up over the years, especially towards Edward and the Woodvilles. If Edward hadn't married EW, then Warwick may not have rebelled. Then, after he was killed, she lost her lands. The final straw may have been the mystery surrounding Isabel's death with the rumours of Ankarette Twyhno poisoning her on EW's instructions. Even if it wasn't true, she still may have believed them - grief often encourages people to look for blame. Of course, once EW's children were declared illegitimate, her daughter becomes queen and her grandchildren became the ultimate heirs to the throne. Could she have arranged the murder? Revenge for Isabel could have given her a more understandable motivation than the other suspects.

Nico




On Tuesday, 7 March 2017, 9:53, "Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... []" <> wrote:


Richard (and Buckingham) did play a big role in the Mowbray wedding, so he could have been on 'top table' with young Edward :) No I don't think you'd get EW down on the grass whilst Edward cooked sausages on the barbie like the Duke of Edinburgh but it does conjure up an amusing picture.
I agree, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point, but he could have made it quite clear if he felt he needed help. He could hardly have entered London with a knife in his back. I can't remember, was there the usual reception with greeting by the Mayor etc? And on the day Hastings was arrested wasn't there another meeting at Westminster about his coronation whilst the others were at the Tower - so was he in on that? He just vanishes from record, doesn't he? He was the King in all but being crowned. Surely he was doing something other than practising his archery. Think how well-versed Edward VI was at the age of nine. Has the Morton shredding machine been at work?
Yes I agree with you entirely about Cis. Yes, she was suspected of conspiring in the 1490s, but then finding the boys, illegitimate or not, would have been the last hope for her House. H

From: "'Doug Stamate' destama@... []" <>
To:
Sent: Monday, 6 March 2017, 15:10
Subject: Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: Bishop Morton

Hilary wrote: They had met at the marriage of Richard of Shrewsbury to Anne Mowbray and possibly when Margaret visited? Doug here: Wouldn't the odds for meeting at that time, would have likely been perfunctory? More on the lines of a meet and greetwith little more than compliments being exchanged? For some reason, I have a hard time picturing, say, a family picnic! Hilary continued:
Yes the scenario could have been completely different. At Stony Stratford it could have gone something like "Uncle Richard, I'm so fed up with Uncle Rivers - he's all poetry and jousts. You've really fought, haven't you? And BTW did you know he's up to something with Mummy ......?"
Thanks to the Victorians we forget that young Edward was probably a stroppy teenager brought up to be king. He's been expunged from history, hasn't he? I just can't imagine him entering London like a lamb if he disliked Richard. He'd only have to throw a strop and Hastings for one would be at the ready, let alone the bishops. Do we really know what happened to him between entering London and the revelation of the Pre-contract? We don't hear much do we, given that Croyland was thought to be a Court person? Doug here: Personally, I can't see Edward undertaking anything at that point but, Heaven knows, there'd have been a lot people willing to act on anything they thought, or hoped, he wanted. Hilary concluded:
Finally Cis Doug. I don't for a moment think she invented the pre-contract but she was the self-appointed matriarch and guardian of the House of York. The thought of an illegitimate child being on the throne when there were other viable legitimate close candidates (which there no longer were in the 1490s) would not have been pleasing to her. And then of course, added to that were the old rumours surrounding Edward's own legitimacy ...... Doug here: That last is, I think anyway, yet another reason for the Pre-Contract being true, If anyone knew the problems that could be worked up by a false rumor, it was her. After all, wasn't the fake rumor about Edward IV's legitimacy one of the reasons for George's actions? Just imagine what troubles any hint of the Pre-Contract would have caused! Best to bite the bullet, accept her son Edward's actions as irresponsible, at best, at go from there. Doug
--
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Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Ric

2017-03-13 14:22:08
b.eileen25
Thats interesting...re Cis giving Stillington a little nudge in the right direction. We dont know anything about all the little miniutiae that went on that would make sense of everything and would clear up so many questions.

Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop Morton

2017-03-13 16:56:40
justcarol67
Hilary wrote:

I"In doing my other stuff I've also found one or two not on lists but who died on that day or within a day or two. Their families also proclaim proudly (yes proudly) that they died fighting for King Richard at Bosworth)"

Carol responds:

Hilary, I'd love to see those names with quoted proclamations. Wherever did you find them? (Thanks very much for this important bit of research on a thoroughly neglected topic.)

Carol

Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-13 18:01:36
justcarol67
Hilary wrote:

"Now we have had people like Edmund Rutland and Edward of Lancaster fighting at about 15 but no-one as young as 12."

Carol responds:

Sorry to go off topic here (I know nothing about Roland), but for what it's worth, Edmund of Rutland and Edward of Lancaster were both seventeen. In fact, EoL was almost exactly a year and a week younger than Richard of Gloucester though he's always labeled as "the young prince" while Richard is treated as if he were about thirty--except by those who would have us believe that he was involved in "murder" from a young age. As for Edmund of Rutland, I think it's Hall who first presents him as "a maidenly boy of twelve" (as he also appears in Shakespeare, who has Richard as a grown man fighting in that battle).

Anyway, just a side comment. I agree with you that there were no twelve-year-olds at Bosworth, but sixteen was considered old enough to be a soldier (and sixty young enough).

Carol


Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-13 18:08:57
Hilary Jones
Yes I agree Carol. You're right they were 17. My head's full of Bosworth ages. 65, 72? I'm not saying people didn't fight at that age but when you note that the optimum age for service in WW1 was 35 then were they fit?


Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone

On Monday, March 13, 2017, 6:02 pm, justcarol67@... [] <> wrote:

Hilary wrote:


"Now we have had people like Edmund Rutland and Edward of Lancaster fighting at about 15 but no-one as young as 12."

Carol responds:

Sorry to go off topic here (I know nothing about Roland), but for what it's worth, Edmund of Rutland and Edward of Lancaster were both seventeen. In fact, EoL was almost exactly a year and a week younger than Richard of Gloucester though he's always labeled as "the young prince" while Richard is treated as if he were about thirty--except by those who would have us believe that he was involved in "murder" from a young age. As for Edmund of Rutland, I think it's Hall who first presents him as "a maidenly boy of twelve" (as he also appears in Shakespeare, who has Richard as a grown man fighting in that battle).

Anyway, just a side comment. I agree with you that there were no twelve-year-olds at Bosworth, but sixteen was considered old enough to be a soldier (and sixty young enough).

Carol


Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-13 18:11:37
justcarol67

Doug wrote:

"FWIW, I tend to think that, while Cis would have preferred a completely legitimate Yorkist line of descent, she was willing to accept that one doesn't always get what one wants and was willing to settle for a descent via her grand-daughter and HT.Presuming, of course, that HT remained on the throne..."

Carol responds:

Isn't there some record or indication of post-Bosworth correspondence between Cicely and her daughter Margaret, who certainly was *not* willing to settle for Yorkist descent via her niece Elizabeth with Henry Tudor on the throne? (She and Maximillian had supported Richard.)

Carol

Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: [Richard III Society Forum] Bishop

2017-03-13 18:13:48
Pamela Bain
And in most wars, at the end, old men and young boys fight too. However, I agree with you on this one. And Doug, so very interesting about cannon fire.
On Mar 13, 2017, at 1:09 PM, Hilary Jones hjnatdat@... [] <> wrote:

Yes I agree Carol. You're right they were 17. My head's full of Bosworth ages. 65, 72? I'm not saying people didn't fight at that age but when you note that the optimum age for service in WW1 was 35 then were they fit?




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On Monday, March 13, 2017, 6:02 pm, justcarol67@... [] <> wrote:

Hilary wrote:


"Now we have had people like Edmund Rutland and Edward of Lancaster fighting at about 15 but no-one as young as 12."

Carol responds:

Sorry to go off topic here (I know nothing about Roland), but for what it's worth, Edmund of Rutland and Edward of Lancaster were both seventeen. In fact, EoL was almost exactly a year and a week younger than Richard of Gloucester though he's always labeled as "the young prince" while Richard is treated as if he were about thirty--except by those who would have us believe that he was involved in "murder" from a young age. As for Edmund of Rutland, I think it's Hall who first presents him as "a maidenly boy of twelve" (as he also appears in Shakespeare, who has Richard as a grown man fighting in that battle).

Anyway, just a side comment. I agree with you that there were no twelve-year-olds at Bosworth, but sixteen was considered old enough to be a soldier (and sixty young enough).

Carol


Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Disarmed} Re: {Dis

2017-03-14 16:15:59
Doug Stamate
Carol wrote:
Isn't there some record or indication of post-Bosworth correspondence between Cicely and her daughter Margaret, who certainly was *not* willing to settle for Yorkist descent via her niece Elizabeth with Henry Tudor on the throne? (She and Maximillian had supported Richard.) Doug here: I don't know of any, but considering how Margaret felt about Tudor, and her actions after he took the throne, I wouldn't be surprised. What we don't have, of course, and would likely prove even more interesting, would be her conversations... Doug
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