A Game of Thrones: The Wars of the Roses

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
English Renaissance History
Advertisements

HOUSE OF LANCASTER WARS OF THE ROSES Struggles for the English Crown lasting during the time between the reigns of Richard II (last Angevin;
The Tudor Monarchs.
LO: To understand the timeline of the Tudor period.
After the 100 years war:  English nobelmen returned to England;  Soldiers became unemployed;  They knew no craft but fighting;  Lancastrians and Yorkists.
Wars of the Roses 1455–1487 Lukáš Ďurďa.
English Renaissance History
The Norman and Plantagenet Kings The Hundred Years War Same People…Different Topic Because William the Conqueror had been a powerful leader in French.
CONFLICTS OF THE MIDDLE AGES THE HUNDRED YEARS’ WAR AND THE WAR OF THE ROSES.
The War of the Roses vs. Edward III King of England from 1327 until his death in Edward transformed England into one of Europe’s most formidable.
The History of England Part II
Name: King Henry VII Born: January 28, 1457 at Pembroke Castle Parents: Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond, and Margaret Beaufort Relation to Elizabeth II:
The Lancasters. Henry IV (1367 – 1413) was styled Earl of Derby and married Mary de Bohun; was styled Earl of Derby and married Mary de Bohun; supporeted.
The Tudor Monarchs Henry VIIHenry VIII Edward VI Lady Jane Grey Mary I Elizabeth I.
Richard II (1377 – 1399) When Edward III died in 1377, his heir was his 10 year-old grandson, Richard (son of Edward the Black Prince who had died a year.
A Leap in the Park. Influencing life in and around the Bowland Deer Parks 1485 – 1603.
The Tudor Monarchs Henry VII Henry Tudor’s victory over Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Henry Tudor’s victory over Richard III at the.
An Introduction to Richard III and the Wars of the Roses University of Leicester.
Write the following on page 23 During the 15 th and 16 th Centuries, England evolved from a feudal monarchy with tyrant kings into a constitutional monarchy.
Week 14 COMPILED BY AMY. King Edward III  He had 12 Children and 5 of his Sons grew to adulthood.  His Mom was the French Princess  He nicknamed all.
The Wars of the Roses The Early Lancastrian Dynasty
From The Battle of Hastings (1066) to the Battle of Bosworth Field (1485)
By Gage Albee.  England vs. France  Edward III claimed rights to the French throne, which eventually lead to the war  The one Hundred Years War raged.
 We are going to learn about the lives of the Kings and Queens who ruled Britain from 1485 to  We are going to look at what type of people they.
Reformation in England The Tudor Dynasty. Wars of Roses,  House of York  White Rose  House of Lancaster  Red Rose  Ended when Henry VII.
T HE T UDORS Family Tree Project 8.A ZŠ Komenium, Olomouc
War of the Roses.
While ‘Henry IV Part 1’ was written in 1597, it is set in the early 15 th century ( ) The War of the Roses (as it was later named) was a series.
The Wars of Roses  a series of civil wars fought in medieval England  a bitter struggle for the English throne between two branches of the.
  Question? Alternative Beta version.
The Norman and Plantagenet Kings
Who was he? Henry Tudor became king after he defeated Richard III at the Battle of Stamford Bridge He was Welsh. He never really boasted about his Welshness.
King Richard 3rd by Thomas Saxby.. WHO WAS RICHARD THE 3 rd ? Richard was the last yorkist king of England, whose death at the battle of Bosworth effectively.
Late Middle Ages Conflicts
History VS Shakespeare. Introduction Richard III has been immortalised by Shakespeare’s play, which depicts him as an evil, ambitious character. Richard.
A Brief History of the Plantagenets & the Tudors Or: A long and complicated stint in British History when everyone was named either Edward, Richard, or.
By: Amalia Vélez. In our history, there has been several civil wars. One of these wars was fought in England in This war was called The War of the.
The Wars of the Roses.
The wars of the roses Brenda Jaup.
Timeline of the Kings and Queens of England The Tudors.
The Revival of Monarchy in Northern Europe. 4 FRANCE Charles VII ( ) Jacques Coeur and the French state. Louis XI “The Spider” ( ) The.
Richard II ( Boy King in Peasants Revolt) Lost his throne to his Cousin Henry IV in September 1399 Henry IV Henry “Bolingbroke” (he was born there) First.
Historical Tidbits. Edward I and Queen Eleanor When his queen dies in northern England in 1290, the body is taken back to London. He has monuments erected.
The Wars of the Roses, aka Civil Wars House of Lancaster (red rose) vs House of York (white rose) Fought as a result of the Hundred Years War.
Henry IV ( )  Henry of Bolingbroke  son of John of Gaunt, grandson of Edward III, cousin of Richard II  1. marriage with Mary Bohun – 7 children.
King Henry VIII and his Family Inside the Tudor MonarchyTudor.
SHAKESPEARE’S HISTORY PLAYS THE WAR OF THE ROSES ASSOC. PROF
Presentation on Tudor Monarchs
The Red Rose of Lancaster
Mary, Queen of Scots By: Kelly Key Mrs.Eckman Wissler
Reformation in England
Wars of the Roses 1455–1487.
The mystery of the Duke and his nephews
English History to Henry VIII
The Hundred Years War Began in 1337 over the vacant French throne
The War of the Roses Lobj: the consider the myths and reality behind one of the most epic periods in English History.
Henry VIII and the Church of England
The Tudor Monarchs
Rules of Succession and some related murders
The Story of King Richard III
Bellringer Who wrote the 95 Theses? What are indulgences?
Murdered shortly after Henry Bolingbroke/Henry IV r
The Tudor Monarchs
Henry VIII and the Church of England
Unit 6: Medieval Europe The Hundred Year’s War
History of British Monarchy
The War of the Roses.
Presentation transcript:

A Game of Thrones: The Wars of the Roses © 2013 Rebecca Jones Or: A long and complicated stint in British History when everyone was named either Edward, Richard, Henry, and Elizabeth.

The War of the Roses: The Cousin’s War King Edward Plantagenet III's two sons the Duke of Lancaster and the Duke of York, and their descendants Series of Civil Wars over 30 years Gets the name War of the Roses because each House (family) decided to adopt a rose as their symbol. Supporters of the house of Lancaster would wear a red rose in their lapel and York supporters would wear a white. It was never called that until much later. Contemporarily, it was known as the cousin's war. Throughout the PowerPoint I put the correct color rose next to portraits of the people we are talking about so students can track each house.

Edward Plantagenet III 5 sons Edward the Black Prince is heir Fighting in France (100 Year’s War) Ed & Ed die within a year of each other Edward’s son Richard II becomes king at 10

Richard II Easily manipulated, unpopular Cousin Henry Bolingbroke led rebellion (Duke of Lancaster) Richard gives up crown, imprisoned & died Bolingbroke becomes Henry IV

Henry IV Internal struggles & Scotland Roger Mortimer Descended from Lionel, better claim, heirs to R2 Rebellion failed Daughter Anne cousin Richard of Cambridge (York) Died 1413, son becomes Henry V

Henry V Mostly popular Cambridge Plot: Richard Cambridge (York) rebels Executed Son Richard stripped of titles (remember he’s both Mortimer & York) Fights 100 Years War, marries Katherine of Valois, has son Henry Dies in France

Henry VI Henry VI becomes 5 yr old king Controlled by counselors Strange, quiet, pious child Marries Margaret of Anjou—very powerful, strong Have one son Edward Rumored to be the son of the Duke of Somerset Henry VI has a mental breakdown Henry V dies of disease when his son, Henry VI, is just a boy. It is suggested that he inherited mental illness from his grandfather (Katherine's father, Charles, king of France). Margaret of Anjou is a French princess who turns out to be hated by the English. When Henry has his mental breakdown (he goes catatonic for almost a year) she tries to rule as regent. She comes into conflict with some of his main counselors, especially Richard of York.

Meanwhile… Henry VI’s mother, Katherine secretly marries her knight, Owen Tudor Have two sons: Edmund Tudor Jasper Tudor Edmund marries Margaret Beaufort, a cousin of Henry VI Owen Tudor was a minor knight under Henry V. He was from Wales. When they marry (which was a big no no) she is essentially banished from court. Her Grandson will later overthrow the Plantagenet line Because Edmund marries Margaret Beaufort, their son lays claim to being a Lancaster, but it is a very distant connection.

Richard v. Margaret Richard, 3rd Duke of York claims throne Battles for power against Margaret and Henry VI

Edward IV Richard dies in battle, his son Edward takes control Henry overthrown Edward becomes King Married to Elizabeth Woodville Eldest children: Elizabeth, Edward, & Richard The Duke of York, Richard dies in a battle against the forces of Margret when Henry VI is catatonic. His son Edward takes up his banner and eventually marches into London and is crowned king under the reason that Henry is no longer fit to be king. They also claim that the son of Henry and Margaret is actually a bastard and therefore cannot inherit. Thereby, Edward is next in line. Henry VI is moved into the Tower of London to be kept "for safety" Now this means there is a York on the throne. Lancasters still believe Henry VI is the rightful king. Hs marriage to Elizabeth is also controversial. Many believed she tricked him into marriage and that her family is just trying to climb the social ladder. The Lancansters try to use her against Edward. Edward had also been supposedly betrothed to another woman when they married, which made him legally a bigamist. She also does not get along with Edward's younger brother Richard (Duke of Gloucester [Gl-ow-ster] later Richard III) who was very loyal to him. Elizabeth and Edward had 10 children together, but I only mention these three because they are the children who play important roles.

Edward IV Rebellion in reign, but regains throne Reigns a total of 20 years, until death Leaves 12 year old son king Edward V, with Edward IV’s brother Richard as protectorate During Edwards reign there are several rebellions: Margaret of Anjou tries to get her son on the throne (and he is killed), Henry VI gets a following and after an attempted uprising, he is mysteriously killed in the tower (some say by Richard III), Edwards brother George also attempts a rebellion, and is arrested and executed. So the story goes, he was allowed to choose his own manner of execution and was drowned in a giant vat of wine (again, Shakespeare blames Richard III) Edward IV dies of overindulgence (ate too much food, drank too much, messed around too much) There some controversy surrounding Richard as protectorate as well: Elizabeth wanted her brother Anthony to take control but Richard essentially met them on the road to London and had Anthony arrested and brought young Edward back to London. Elizabeth and the other children hid in sanctuary.

But then there’s Richard Moves Edward to the Tower of London Postpones coronation, rumors illegitimacy Brings young Edward’s 9 year old brother Richard to Tower By end of 1483…no one sees the young princes in public Richard is crowned king Richard III So what happened to the Princes in the Tower? Richard's arguments: the Tower is the safest place in London for the princes. He also wants to keep them away from Elizabeth's family. For a while the princes were seen playing in the tower greens, however, they eventually went missing. The mystery is never satisfactorily resolved. Richard crowns himself king after a rumor that his older brother Edward had been a bastard, and therefore not in the line of Richard of York, making his sons illegitimate. Even if Edward was legitimate, his children would be illegitimate if it was true that he had been betrothed already. Controversy over whether or not Richard was really a bad guy or if that was Tudor propaganda that came later—most famously by Shakespeare. New revisionist history tries to portray Richard III in a better light. Regardless, there were some pretty mysterious circumstances surrounding the Princes in the Tower

Recent History!!! Richard III found! Can see his “hunchback” (Scoliosis) 2 blows to the head, 8 to the body Buried naked, hands bound 2013: found the body of Richard III in a parking lot in northern England. DNA testing of one of his descendants proved it was him. Damage on the body consistent with contemporary reports of the Battle of Bosworth; also proved he did have a slight hunchback (thought to be a Shakespeare invention) due to scoliosis. They did a facial reconstruction based on the skull and he looked very similar to portraits

Enter: Henry Tudor Son of Edmund Tudor & Margaret Beaufort Leads an army against Richard III’s army Bosworth Field: So the story goes—kills Richard and takes up his crown from the battlefield Everyone is dead except for Richard III, and Henry Tudor (grandson of Katherine Valois, claims Lancaster heritage through his mother Margaret) and Elizabeth (daughter of Edward IV) Henry was raised in France by his uncle Jasper Tudor, sensing weakness from Richard III, sails back to England and fights Richard at the Battle of Bosworth Field.

Henry VII Henry Tudor is crowned Henry VII, King of England He marries Elizabeth of York, daughter of Edward IV—uniting the Lancaster and York lines under the Tudor name ending the War of the Roses There were at least 7 people who had a better claim than Henry Tudor to the throne of England. He tries to strengthen his claim by marrying Elizabeth, who would have been Edward’s heir after her two brothers. It also linked the two houses of York and Lancaster. Henry never felt completely secure in his claim to the throne, however, he had George’s son killed, as well as a young pretender in Ireland (who claimed to be one of the lost princes, Richard)