Henry VII: Consolidation - Warbeck Rebellion Flashcards
1
Q
Who was Warbeck?
A
- Warbeck was a servant for a Yorkist, Sir Edward Brampton in 1485 and became interested in the Yorkist court
- Impersonated Richard, Edward IV’s son
2
Q
Warbeck: France
A
- In 1492, Warbeck travelled to France and was received as a prince by Charles VIII
- Charles probably did this to embarrass Henry and distract him from the fact he was planning to annex Brittany
- Henry and Charles signed the Treaty of Etaples in November 1492 agreeing not to shelter rebels, forcing Warbeck to move
3
Q
Warbeck: Burgundy
A
- In 1492, Warbeck was forced to go to the court of Margaret of Burgundy
- Welcomed by Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, but didn’t have the available resources to help
- Leaves in 1495
4
Q
Warbeck: Spies
A
- In 1494, Henry’s spies uncovered English conspirators among the government
- Lord Chamberlain, Sir William Stanley, was executed in February 1495
5
Q
Warbeck: Scotland & Ireland
A
- 1495, Warbeck fled to Scotland and was given a royal welcome by James IV
- James supported an unsuccessful invasion of England in 1497
- Truce of Ayton was signed so Warbeck fled to Ireland but was rejected
6
Q
Warbeck: End
A
- Warbeck gave himself up in August 1497
- Warbeck allowed to remain at Court
- 1498, Warbeck ran away and was imprisoned in the Tower of London
- 1499, executed for treason after being accused of plotting to escape with the Earl of Warwick
- Unclear if plot was genuine but allowed Henry to rid of two troublesome individuals
7
Q
Overview
A
- 1485 - Servant for Sir Edward Brampton
- 1492 - travels to France
- 1492 - flees to Burgundy
- 1495 - flees to Scotland
- 1497 - unsuccessful invasion of England, backed by James IV; gives himself up
- 1498 - runs away from court and imprisoned in Tower of London
- 1499 - executed for treason