Image for Henry VII and the Tudor pretenders  : Simnel, Warbeck, and Warwick

Henry VII and the Tudor pretenders : Simnel, Warbeck, and Warwick

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On 22 August 1485, Henry Tudor emerged from the Battle of Bosworth victorious.

His disparate army vanquished the forces of Richard III and, according to Shakespeare over a century later, brought ‘smooth-faced peace, with smiling aplenty and fair prosperous days’ back to England.

Yet, all was not well early in the Tudor reign. Despite later attempts to portray Henry VII as single-handedly uniting a war-torn England after three decades of conflict, the kingdom was anything but settled.

Nor could it be after a tumultuous two-year period that had witnessed the untimely death of one king, the mysterious disappearance of another, and the brutal slaughter of a third on the battlefield. For the first time in one compelling and comprehensive account, Nathen Amin looks at the myriad of shadowy conspiracies and murky plots which sought to depose the Tudor usurper early in his reign, with particular emphasis on the three pretenders whose causes were fervently advanced by Yorkist dissidents - Lambert Simnel, Perkin Warbeck, and Edward, Earl of Warwick.

Just how close did the Tudors come to overthrow long before the myth of their greatness had taken hold on our public consciousness?

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Product Details
Amberley Publishing
1398112461 / 9781398112469
Paperback / softback
942.051
15/10/2022
United Kingdom
English
384 pages : illustrations (colour)
24 cm