Richard III and the Princes in the Tower Page 33
1. Richard III: early 17th century (?) copy of a portrait by an anonymous artist of c. 1518–23 in the Royal Collection. When this picture was painted the legend of the villainous ‘crookbacked king’ with one shoulder higher than the other was firmly established.
2. The earliest surviving portrait of Richard, dating from c. 1516–22 and almost certainly a copy of a lost original painted from life, shows no apparent deformity.
3. The ‘Broken Sword’ portrait by an unknown artist, c. 1533–43. X-rays show that drastic alterations were made later on, when Richard’s reputation was rehabilitated, to give the deformed-looking king a more normal appearance.
4. Edward IV: his son Edward, the elder of the two Princes, was ‘his greatest joy’.
5. Elizabeth Wydville: ‘everyone, as he was nearest of kin unto the Queen, was so planted next about the Prince, whereby her blood might of youth be rooted in the Prince’s favour’ (Sir Thomas More).
6. Illustration from The York Roll: at the top is Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, ‘the Kingmaker’, and his wife, Anne Beauchamp, the mother-in-law whom Richard III treated so callously. To the left is Warwick’s daughter Anne Neville with her two husbands, Edward of Lancaster and Richard III, with Edward of Middleham, Prince of Wales, her son by Richard, below. To the right is Anne’s sister Isabella Neville with her husband, George, Duke of Clarence, and their children Edward, Earl of Warwick, and Margaret, later Countess of Salisbury.
7. The Tower of London: contemporary sources indicate that the Princes were imprisoned in the White Tower. The forebuilding housing the staircase beneath which the bones of two children were found in 1674 may clearly be seen in front of the White Tower, facing the River Thames.
8. Henry Tudor: this obscure scion of the royal house, whom Richard III referred to as ‘an unknown Welshman’, claimed to be ‘the very heir of the House of Lancaster’.
9. Elizabeth of York and her sisters: Elizabeth claimed that Richard III ‘was her only joy and maker in this world, and she was his in heart, in thought, in body and in all’.
10. Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond: a wise but dangerous woman who ‘imagined the destruction of the King’ (The Rolls of Parliament).
11. The Princes in the Tower: Lord Chancellor Russell wrote that Edward (right) had a ‘gentle wit and ripe understanding, far passing the nature of his youth’. The French chronicler Jean Molinet describes York (left) as joyous and witty, and ever ready for dances or games’.
12. Sir Thomas More: ‘I shall rehearse you the dolorous end of these babes, not after every way that I have heard by such men and such means as me thinketh it were hard but it should be true’.
13. The burial of the Princes: More says they were buried ‘at the stair foot, meetly deep under the ground, under a great heap of stones.
14. Ruins of the minoresses’ convent at Aldgate after the fire of 1797: here, in ‘the great house within the close’, lodged four ladies who may well have known the truth about the Princes’ fate.
15. The remains found in 1674: ‘They were small bones of lads in their teens, fully recognised to be the bones of those two Princes’ (Eye-witness report, 1674; Archaeologia).
16. The urn in which the bones repose in Westminster Abbey: ‘a curious altar of black and white marble’, designed by Sir Christopher Wren in 1678.
17. The skull of Anne Mowbray: York’s child-bride and the Princes’ cousin, exhumed in 1964. Dental evidence indicates a familial relationship between her bones and those in the urn.
Genealogical Table: Lancaster and York
Acknowledgements
I should like to acknowledge my gratitude to the following: Pamela Tudor-Craig (Lady Wedgwood) for permission to use material from her splendid and informative catalogue for the National Portrait Gallery’s 1973 exhibition on Richard III; Mr Brian Spencer, for allowing me to use information printed in that catalogue and deriving from his unpublished manuscript about the inmates of the Minories: the Archaeological Resource Centre in York for allowing me to use the services of their textiles expert.
I should also like to acknowledge my indebtedness to the works of the late Professor Charles Ross and that of Mr Desmond Seward, which were a constant inspiration. I must also express my gratitude to my editor, Jill Black, for her constant encouragement and for some extremely helpful suggestions on chronology and dates, especially in relation to Gloucester’s coup of April 1483. Gratitude is also due to my agent, Julian Alexander, for his unflagging enthusiasm, and to my husband Rankin and children John and Kate for their forbearance over the last two years.
Lastly, I must stress that, while all these good people have given valuable assistance with this book, the end product is entirely my own and reflects my conclusions, not theirs.
Select Bibliography
Primary Sources
General Works
Annals of Ulster (4 vols, ed. William Hennessey and B. MacCarthy, Belfast, 1888–1901)
Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts relating to Antiquity (102 vols, Society of Antiquaries, 1773–1969)
Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward IV-Richard III (3 vols, Rolls Series, HMSO, 1927–54)
Calendar of Documents Relating to Scotland, Vol IV, 1357–1509 (ed. J. Bain, 1888)
Calendar of Papal Registers relating to Great Britain and Ireland (HMSO, 1960)
Calendar of Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office:
Edward IV, 1461–1467 (Rolls Series, HMSO, 1897)
Edward IV, Henry VI, 1467–1477 (Rolls Series, HMSO, 1900)
Edward IV, Edward V, Richard III, 1476–1485 (Rolls Series, HMSO, 1901)
A Collection of Ordinances and Regulations for the Government of the Royal Household made in divers reigns from King Edward III to King William and Queen Mary (Society of Antiquaries of London, 1790)
A Collection of Wills of the Kings and Queens of England from William the Conqueror to Henry VII (ed. J. Nichols, Society of Antiquaries, 1780)
The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom (13 vols, ed. V. Gibbs, H. A. Doubleday, D. Warrand, Thomas, Lord Howard de Walden, and G. White, St Catherine’s Press, 1910–59)
English Historical Documents, Vol. IV, 1327–1485 (ed. A. R. Myers, Eyres & Spottiswoode, 1969)
Excerpta Historica (ed. S. Bentley, 1831)
The Great Chronicle of London (ed. A. H. Thomas and I. D. Thornley, 1938)
The Harleian Miscellany (ed. W. Oldys and T. Park, 1810)
Letters and Papers illustrative of the Reigns of Richard III and Henry VII (2 vols, ed. J. Gairdner, Rolls Series, 1861–63)
Letters of the Kings of England (ed. J. O. Halliwell, 1846)
Original Letters illustrative of English History (11 vols, ed. H. Ellis, 1824–46)
The Popular Songs of Ireland (ed. T. Croker, 1839)
The Registers of Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells (1466–91) and Richard Fox, Bishop of Bath and Wells (1492–94) (ed. C. Maxwell-Lyte, Somerset Record Society, 52, 1937)
Rotuli Parliamentorum (The Rolls of Parliament) (7 vols, ed. J. Strachey, Record Commissioners, 1767–1832)
Statutes of the Realm, 1101–1713 (Record Commissioners, 1810–28)
Sources before 1483
Historie of the Arrivall of Edward IV in England and the final Recoverye of his Kingdomes from Henry VI, AD MCCCCLXXI (ed. J. A. Bruce, Camden Society, 1838)
Three Chronicles of the Reign of Edward IV (ed. Keith Dockray, Alan Sutton, 1988)
Warkworth, John, Master of Peterhouse College, Cambridge: A Chronicle of the First Thirteen Years of the Reign of King Edward the Fourth (to 1473; written c.1483; ed. J. O. Halliwell, Camden Society, 1839)
William of Worcester: Annales Rerum Anglicarum (ed. T. Hearne, 1728, and J. Stevenson in Letters and Papers illustrative of the Wars of the English in France, 2 vols, Rolls Series, 1861–64)
Ricardian Sources
Acts of Court of the Mercers’ Company, 1453–1527 (ed. L. Lyell and F. D. Wat
ney, Cambridge, 1936)
British Library Harleian Manuscript 433 (ed. R. E. Horrox and P. W. Hammond, 4 vols, Alan Sutton, 1979–83)
A Castilian Report on English Affairs, 1486 (ed. Anthony Goodman and Angus Mackay, English Historical Review, LXXXVIII, 1973)
The Cely Letters, 1472–1488 (ed. Alison Hanham, Early English Texts Society, 1975)
Chronicles of London (ed. C. L. Kingsford, Oxford, 1905)
The Coronation of Richard III (ed. Anne F. Sutton and P. W. Hammond, Alan Sutton, 1983)
The Croyland Chronicle Continuation, 1459–1486 (ed. N. Pronay and J. Cox, 1986)
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Manuscripts bequeathed unto the University of Oxford by Elias Ashmole (includes Humphrey Lluyd’s Latin manuscript; Oxford, 1845)
Extracts from the Municipal Records of the City of York during the Reigns of Edward IV, Edward V and Richard III (ed. R. Davies, 1843)
Grants etc. from the Crown during the Reign of Edward the Fifth (ed. J. G. Nichols, Camden Society, 1854)
Gregory’s Chronicle, or the Historical Collections of a Citizen of London in the Fifteenth Century (ed. J. Gairdner, Camden Society, 1876)
Historiae Croylandensis Continuato in Rerum Anglicarum Scriptores Veterum (ed. W. Fulman, Oxford, 1684)
Historiae Croylandensis in Ingulph’s Chronicle of the Abbey of Croyland (trans. and ed. H. T. Riley, 1854)
Historical Notes of a London Citizen, 1483 to 1488 (being the fragment discovered in the College of Arms in 1980) (ed. Richard Firth Green, English Historical Review, Vol. 96, 1981)
Household Books of John, Duke of Norfolk, and Thomas, Earl of Surrey (ed. J. Payne-Collier, Roxburghe Club, 1844)
Mancini, Dominic: De Occupatione Regni Anglie per Riccardum Tercium (trans. and ed. C. A. J. Armstrong, 2nd edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1969)
Rous, John: The Rous Roll (ed. C. R. Ross and W. Courthope, Alan Sutton, 1980)
‘A Spanish Account of the Battle of Bosworth’ (ed. E. M. Nokes and G. Wheeler, The Ricardian, No. 36, March, 1972)
The Stonor Letters and Papers 1290–1483 (2 vols, ed. C. L. Kingsford, Camden Series, 1919)
York Civic Records, Vols. I and II (ed. Angelo Raine, Yorkshire Archaeological Society, Record Series CIII, 1939–41)
Tudor Sources
André, Bernard: Vita Henrici VII (in Memorials of King Henry VII, ed. J. Gairdner, Rolls Series, 1858)
Bull of Pope Innocent VIII on the Marriage of Henry VII with Elizabeth of York (ed. J. Payne-Collier, Camden Miscellany I, 1847)
The Chronicle of Calais in the Reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII (ed. J. G. Nichols, Camden Society, 1846)
English Historical Documents Vol. V, 1485–1588 (ed. C. H. Williams, 1967)
Fabyan, Robert: The Concordance of Histories: The New Chronicles of England and France (1516) (ed. H. Ellis, 1811)
Grafton, Richard: Grafton’s Chronicle, or History of England (2 vols, ed. H. Ellis, 1809)
Grafton, Richard: The Chronicle of John Hardyng … Together with the Continuation by Richard Grafton (ed. H. Ellis, 1812)
Hall, Edward: The Union of the Two Noble and Illustre Families of Lancaster and York (London, 1550; ed. H. Ellis, 1809; facsimile edition of the original published 1970)
Holinshed, Raphael: Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (6 vols, ed. H. Ellis, 1807–8)
Leland, John: Collectanea (6 vols, ed. T. Hearne, Oxford, 1770–74)
Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, of the Reign of Henry VIII (21 vols, ed. J. S. Brewer, J. Gairdner and R. H. Brodie, 1862–1932)
A London Chronicle in the Time of Henry VII and Henry VIII (ed. C. Hopper, Camden Society, Camden Miscellany IV, 1839)
Materials for a History of the Reign of Henry the Seventh (2 vols, ed. William Campbell, Rolls Series, 1873–7)
Memorials of King Henry VII (ed. J. Gairdner, Rolls Series, 1858)
More, Sir Thomas: The History of King Richard the Third (in The Complete Works of Sir Thomas More, Vol. II, ed. R. S. Sylvester and others, Yale, 1963, London, 1979)
The Reign of Henry VII from Contemporary Sources (3 vols, ed. A. F. Pollard, 1913; reprinted New York, 1967)
Rous, John: Joannis Rossi Antiquarii Warwicensis. Historia Regum Angliae (ed. T. Hearne, Oxford, 1716 and 1745)
The Song of the Lady Bessy (in English Historical Literature in the Fifteenth Century, ed. C. L. Kingsford, Oxford, 1913)
State Papers of King Henry VIII (11 vols, 1830–52)
Stow, John: A Survey of London (2 vols, ed. C. L. Kingsford, Oxford, 1908, and H. B. Wheatley, Dent, 1987)
Tudor Royal Proclamations. Vol. I: The Early Tudors (ed. P. L. Hughes and J. F. Larkin, New Haven, 1964)
Vergil, Polydore: The Anglica Historia of Polydore Vergil, AD 1485–1573 (trans. and ed. D. Hay, Camden Series, 1950)
Vergil, Polydore: Three Books of Polydore Vergi’s English History (ed. H. Ellis, Camden Society, 1844)
Seventeenth-Century Sources
Bacon, Sir Francis: The History of the Reign of Henry VII (1622; ed. J. R. Lumby, Cambridge, 1881, and F. Levy, Indianapolis, 1972)
Buck, Sir George: History of the Life and Reign of Richard III (5 vols, ed. G. Buck (nephew), 1646; included in White Kennett’s History of England, 1710; ed. A. N. Kincaid, Alan Sutton, 1979)
Cotton, Sir Robert: A Brief Abridgement of Records in the Tower of London (London, 1657)
Foreign Sources
Basin, Thomas: Histoire de Charles VII (2 vols, ed. C. Samaran, Paris, 1933 and 1944)
But, Adrien de: Chroniques relatives à l’Histoire de la Belgique sous la Domination des Ducs de Bourgogne, Vol. I (ed. Kervyn de Lettenhove, Académie Royale de Belgique, Brussels, 1870)
Calendar of Letters, Despatches and State Papers relating to the Negotiations between England and Spain, preserved in the Archives of Simancas and elsewhere (13 vols, ed. G. A. Bergenroth, P. de Gayangos, G. Mattingley, M. A. S. Hume and R. Taylor, 1862–1965)
Calendar of State Papers and Manuscripts existing in the Archives and Collections of Milan (ed. A. B. Hinds, HMSO, 1912)
Calendar of State Papers and Manuscripts relating to English Affairs existing in the Archives and Collections of Venice and in other Libraries of Northern Italy (38 vols, ed. Rawdon Brown, G. Cavendish-Bentinck, H. F. Brown and A. B. Hinds, 1864–1947)
Clercq, J. du: Mémoires sur le Règne de Philippe le Bon, Duc de Bourgogne (ed. M. le Baron de Reiffenberg, 1835–36)
Commines, Philippe de: Mémoires (ed. Andrew Scobie, 1900, and by J. Calmette and G. Durville, 3 vols, Paris, 1924–25)
Journal des États Généraux de France tenus à Tours en 1484 (ed. J. Masselin and A. Bernier, Paris, 1835)
Marche, Olivier de la: Mémoires d’Olivier de la Marche (ed. H. Beaune and J. d’Arbaumont, Paris, 1883)
Molinet, Jean: Chroniques des Ducs de Bourgogne, 1476–1506 (5 vols, ed. J. A. Buchon, Paris, 1827–28)
Molinet, Jean: Chroniques de Jean Molinet, 1476–1506 (3 vols, ed. J. Doutrepont and O. Jodogne, Académie Royale de Belgique, Brussels, 1935–37)
Scriptores Rerum Silesiacarum (3 vols, ed. G. A. Stenzel, Breslau, 1847)
Waurin, Jean de: Anchiennes Chroniques d’Engleterre (3 vols, ed. Mlle E. Dupont, Paris, 1858–63)
Secondary Sources
General and Miscellaneous Works
Armstrong, C. A. J.: The Inauguration Ceremonies of the Yorkist Kings (Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 30, 1948)
Armstrong, C. A. J.: The Piety of Cecily, Duchess of York (in For Hilaire Belloc, ed. D. Woodruffe, 1942)
Brooks, F. W.: The Council of the North (Historical Association Pamphlet, 1966)
Cust, Mrs Henry: Gentleman Errant: Gabriel Tetzel of Nuremburg (1909)
Dart, John: The History and Antiquities of the Abbey Church of Westminster (2 vols, 1723)
Davies, C. S. L.: Peace, Print and Protestantism: 1450–1558 (The Paladin History of England, Hart-Davis, MacGibbon, 1976)
The Dictionary of National Biography (63 vo
ls, ed. L. Stephen and S. Lee, 1885–1938)
Fletcher, Brian: ‘Tree-Ring Dates for Some Paintings in England’ (Burlington Magazine, cxvi, 1974)
Fowler, Kenneth: The Age of Plantagenet and Valois (Ferndale, 1980)
Green, V. H. H.: The Later Plantagenets (Edward Arnold, 1955)
The Handbook of British Chronology (ed. F. M. Powicke and E. B. Fryde, Royal Historical Society, 1961)
Harvey, John: The Plantagenets (Batsford, 1948)
Hassall, W. O.: They Saw it Happen, 55 BC to 1485 (Blackwell, Oxford, 1957)
Hassall, W. O.: Who’s Who in History, Vol. I: 55 BC to 1485 (Blackwell, Oxford, 1960)
Howard, Maurice: The Earl Tudor Country House: Architecture and Politics, 1490–1550 (George Philips, 1987)
Jacob, E. F.: The Fifteenth Century, 1399–1485 (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1961, 1969)
Kendall, Paul Murray: The Yorkist Age (Allen and Unwin, 1962) Lander, J. R.: Conflict and Stability in Fifteenth-Century England (Hutchinson, 1969)
Lane, Henry Murray: The Royal Daughters of England (2 vols, Constable, 1910)
Lindsay, Philip: Kings of Merry England (Howard Baker, 1936)