Establishing the Tudor dynasty Flashcards
Why was John de la Pole a threat?
- He was a Yorkist claimant.
- He was nephew of Edward IV and Richard III
- Designated successor of Richard III
- Regarded as the Yorkist leader after Bosworth
Why was Edward (earl of Warwick) a threat?
- He was a Yorkist claimant
- He was nephew of Edward IV and Richard III
- Imprisoned in tower of London 1485 (aged 10)
- Beheaded for alleged conspiracy with Perkin Warbeck , 1499
Who were two main threats?
- Yorkist supporters (e.g. Lovell and Stafford)
- Margaret of Burgundy (sister of Edward IV and Richard III) as she was able and willing to fund Yorkist ambitions
Who were the pretenders?
- Lambert Simnel
- Perkin Warbeck
What did Viscount Lovell and the Staffords do and when?
- 1486- Minor rising focused on traditional Yorkist Heartlands of Yorkshire and midlands
- Led by Viscount Lovell and Humphrey Stafford with his brother Thomas
- Attracted little support and was easily suppressed
Lovell escaped to Burgundy, Humphrey Stafford was captured and executed (Thomas was pardoned)
Why was the Lovell rebellion significant?
- It showed there was little support for a Yorkist rising at this point
Who arranged a Yorkist conspiracy in 1487 and who was the figurehead?
- Arranged by Earl of Lincoln (John de la Pole) - used Lambert Simnel as a figurehead
What did Simnel do?
- He impersonated the Earl of Warwick and was crowned as King Edward in Ireland (may 1487)
What were the results of the Simnel plan?
- Henry exhibited the real Earl of Warwick in London
- Lincoln fled to the court of Margaret of Burgundy and joined Lovell - persuading Margaret to support Simnel and pay for a force of mercenaries to invade England
How did Henry neutralise Yorkist support in the North?
- Took risk by reinstating the Earl of Northumberland (a traditional Yorkist supporter) to power in the north as his supporter (who was untrustworthy BoB)
- Also ensured the traditionally Yorkist Howard family had no intention of joining the conspiracy, as Northumberland was one of their descendants
Also reinforced coastal defences in East Anglia
Where did the Simnel rebels land and what was the outcome?
- Landed in Cumberland supported by 2,000 German mercenaries provided by Margaret of Burgundy
- Crossed the Pennines and tried to muster support in the Yorkist heartland but they failed to attract followers
- Henry’s army defeated the mercenary army at the battle of stoke field (June 1487)
- Simnel captured but Henry recognised him as harmless and employed him in the royal kitchens
Who was killed at the Battle of Stoke?
The earl of Lincoln
What were the reasons for Henry’s victory at the Battle of Stoke?
- His own shrewdness and hard-work
- Organisational skills and military leadership of his key supporters
- Willingness of landowners in many parts of the country to support his cause
What did the Battle of stoke effectively end?
The war of the roses
For what two reasons did Henry’s support grow?
- His lenient treatment of the rebels won over some Yorkists who had previously opposed him
- He began to use the policy of bonds of good behaviour