Meandering Through Time
  • Home
  • My Family Stories
    • Bustaine of Braunton: Introduction
    • Hunt of Barnstaple Introduction >
      • Christopher Hunt >
        • Edward Hunt >
          • Richard Hunt >
            • Richard Hunt
            • Mary Hunt
    • Lakeman of Mevagissey >
      • Peter Lakeman c1698-1740
    • Meavy Introduction >
      • 6th to 9th Century Meavy >
        • Meavy Pre Conquest >
          • 1066 and Life in Domesday England >
            • Domesday and 13th Century Charters >
              • The Anarchy >
                • Walter, Wido and William Meavy >
                  • The Beginnings of a New Era
    • Mitchell of Crantock: An Introduction >
      • William Mitchell of Crantock >
        • Samuel Mitchell of Crantock >
          • Edith Mitchell >
            • Epilogue: Lescliston Farm
    • Mohun of Dunster: Introduction >
      • William Mohun c1050 - c1111 >
        • William Mohun c1100 - c1143 >
          • William Mohun - 1176 >
            • William - 1193 >
              • Reynold Mohun c1183 - 1213
              • Reynold Mohun c1210 -1257 >
                • Alice Mohun
    • Purches of Hampshire and Cornwall >
      • Samuel Purches 1733 - 1804 >
        • Samuel Purches 1766 - >
          • William Samuel Purches 1803 - 1861 >
            • Henry James Purches
    • Scoboryo of St Columb Major >
      • James and Joan Scoboryo 1640 - 1686
    • Thomas Vaughan: An Introduction >
      • Chapter One: Monmouthshire, Wales.
      • Chapter Two: The Beaufort Patronage
      • ​Chapter Three: Out With the Old
      • Chapter Four: Kentish Connections and Opportunities >
        • Chapter Five: Getting Personal
        • Chapter Six: ​The Children of Thomas Vaughan
        • Chapter Seven: Moving on
        • ​Chapter Eight: At Ludlow
        • Chapter Nine: The Arrest
        • Chapter Ten: Three Castles
        • Chapter Eleven: The Beginning of the End
        • Chapter Twelve: A Death Deserved ?
    • Smith of Barkby Introduction >
      • Susanna Smith
    • Taylor Introduction >
      • Joseph Taylor >
        • John Henry Taylor
    • Tosny of Normandy >
      • Godehute de Tosny
    • Toon of Leicestershire: Introduction >
      • John Toon 1799 -
      • Thomas Toon 1827 - 1874
    • Underwood of Coleorton Introduction
  • Other Families
  • History Blog
  • Wars of the Roses Blog
  • The Ancestors
  • A to E
  • F to J
  • K to O
  • P to T
  • U to Z
  • Hendley of Coursehorne Kent
    • 5th to 12th Century Hendleys >
      • Gervais Hendley 1302 - c1344 >
        • Thomas Hendley >
          • Grevais Hendley c 1471 - 1534 >
            • Walter Hendley >
              • Elizabeth Hendley >
                • Ellen Hendley 1521- 1560 >
                  • Anne Hendley 1523 - >
                    • Other Hendleys
  • Pigott Family of Whaddon Buckinghamshire
  • Links
  • Contact

Battle of Edgecote

25/7/2019

0 Comments

 
On the 26th July in 1469, the Battle of Edgecote took place on Danes Moor in Northamptonshire at a crossing of a tributary of the River Cherwell between a royal army and well-supported rebels from the north of England.
Picture
Despite his victory at Towton in 1461, Edward IV was still concerned with Lancastrian plots, however, he had not understood the gravity of his betrayal of Richard, Earl of Warwick and how much he wished to be avenged. By 1468 Edward's popularity in England was reduced and this gave Warwick his opportunity to take back control of England.

Rebellion in the north began in the spring of 1469, it gathered under the banner of a man going by the name of Robin of Holderness. Another man going by the name of Robin, whose true identity has never been identified only suspected, appeared again in the summer of 1469, he was known as Robin of Redesdale (he would later appear again, under this guise at the Battle of Luscote Field in the March of the following year.) Pulling the strings, or at least stirring the pot was Richard Neville and the sly old fox was clever enough not to be seen to be involved in any plotting of the downfall of the House of York.
Picture
Edward was at Newark in Nottinghamshire when he heard of the Redesdale rebellion and by the night of the 25th July, the forces of the king under the command of William Herbert, the Earl of Pembroke and Humphrey Stafford, Earl of Devon and a rebel army under the aforementioned Robin of Redesdale arrived at a moor not too far from Banbury in Oxfordshire. The battle began on the morning of the following day took place on the east side of the River Cherwell, but the exact battleground has never been identified. This battle has been written about by two chroniclers, Jean de Wavrin and John Warkworth both were living and writing at the time of these events. Both note that the royal army was in trouble from the start, an argument in the ranks took place at some point before the fighting took place, but they disagree as to the reason, whatever went on the Earl of Devon withdrew his troops.

In the first part of the battle, the royal forces were successful but with the arrival of the army of Richard Neville, the Battle of Edgecote went the way of the rebels.

This battle saw the executions of a number of high ranking members of the Yorkist party and the king himself captured and placed under arrest. Robin of Redesdale, as we have seen, (may) have lived to fight another day.
​
With the Earl of Warwick now in control the question should be asked could he run the country?
Picture
0 Comments

Death of William Herbert.

26/7/2016

5 Comments

 
Lewys Glyn Cothi a 15th-century Welsh poet wrote the following lines ​
The mightiest of Christendom,
And through a fault it was lost:
At Banbury the vengeance was exacted
Upon fair Wales, and the great fine.
There was heard all at once 
Crying of battle between great spears.
Picture
He was referring to the deaths of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke and his brother Richard who were executed following the Battle of Edgcote in 1469. Of the Herbert brothers death Guto'r Glyn, another Welsh poet wrote

                                                                      "I was killed, I and my nation too."
                                                                     The moment that this Earl was killed"

According to Guto'r Glyn's poem the battle took place on Monday 24th July, however 'history' claims the date as the 26th July 1469 the the Battle of Edgcote took place in Northamptonshire between the royal army of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke and northern rebels under one Robin of Redesdale. History tells us that Pembroke’s army was weak due to the Earl of Devon withdrawing his troops taking the majority of the archers with him. This action culminated in a victory for the rebels.
Picture
On the day that followed the battle William Herbert was summary executed at Northampton on the order of the Earl of Warwick who was there to watch. His body was taken for burial at Tintern Abbey. In his will Herbert instructed his widow Anne, to betroth their daughter Maud to Henry Tudor, but this was not to be, Tudors mother would have other plans for him. However, William's son also William, did marry into the royal family (of sorts) his second wife was Kathrine, the illegitimate daughter of Richard III, he had been married to the sister of Elizabeth Woodville previous to that. Maud, went on to marry Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland. 

With regard to the execution of Richard Herbert contemporary sources state that he was executed on the day of the battle. His body was taken to Abergavenny and interred at St Mary’s Priory.

So why did Richard Neville have Herbert executed without trial? Well, they were rivals, this was due in part to Herbert’s influence with Edward IV, his increasing power in Wales and the relationship between Herbert and the family of Elizabeth Woodville, this Warwick saw as a threat to his influence in the royal court. Therefore, the answer is quite simply revenge.

You can read more on the subject of revenge in my blog Vengeance in Mine.


​                                   meanderingthroughtime.weebly.com/wars-of-the-roses-blog/vengeance-is-mine
5 Comments

    RSS Feed

    Categories

    All
    1420
    1450
    1461
    1471
    14th Century
    15th Century
    16th Century
    19th Century
    Acts Statutes And Treaties
    Adam Moleyns
    Alice De La Pole
    Alice Montacute
    Andrew Trollope
    Anjou
    Anne Beauchamp
    Anne Mortimer
    Anne Neville
    Anthony Woodville
    April
    Aristrocracy And Nobility
    Art
    Audley Family
    August
    Baron Sutton
    Battle Of Barnet
    Battle Of Blore Heath
    Battle Of Bosworth
    Battle Of Bramham Moor
    Battle Of Edgecote
    Battle Of Edington
    Battle Of Ferrybridge
    Battle Of Hedgeley Moor
    Battle Of Losecoat Field
    Battle Of Ludford Bridge
    Battle Of Mortimer's Cross
    Battle Of Shewsbury
    Battle Of St Albans 1455
    Battle Of St Albans 1461
    Battle Of Stoke
    Battle Of Tewkesbury
    Battle Of Towton
    Battle Of Wakefield
    Beaumont Family
    Berwick On Tweed
    Boston
    Bosworth Field
    Bredwardine Family
    Burgundian Wars
    Cadaver Tomb
    Calais
    Castles
    Cathedrals And Churches
    Catherine Of Valois
    Cecily Neville
    Charles The Bold
    Christmas
    Crowland Abbey
    Crowland Cronicles
    December
    De La Pole Family
    Despencer Family
    De Vere Family
    Dublin
    Duchess Of Burgundy
    Duchess Of Suffolk
    Duke Of York
    Earl Of Devon
    Earl Of Salisbury
    Edmund Beaufort Duke Of Somerset
    Edmund Earl Of Rutland
    Edmund Tudor
    Edward Earl Of Warwick
    Edward III
    Edward IV
    Edward Of Lancaster
    Edward Of Middleham
    Edward The Black Prince
    Edward V
    Elizabeth
    Elizabeth I
    Elizabeth Of York
    Elizabeth Woodville
    Execution Of Nobles
    February
    Food
    France
    Francis Lovell
    Gainsborough Hall
    Geoffrey Chaucer
    George Duke Of Clarence
    God
    Hampshire
    Henry Earl Of Lancester
    Henry Percy
    Henry Tudor
    Henry V
    Henry VI
    Henry VII
    Henry VIII
    Hereford
    Humphrey Duke Of Gloucester
    Humphrey Stafford
    Isabella Of Burgundy
    Isabel Neville
    Isabel Of Bourbon
    Jack Cade
    James I Of England
    James Tuchet
    January
    Jasper Tudor
    John Beaufort
    John Clifford
    John De La Pole
    John De Vere
    John Duke Of Bedford
    John Fiennes
    John Grey Of Groby
    John Leland
    John Morton
    John Of Gaunt
    John Sutton
    John Tuchet
    July
    June
    Katherine (daug Of Richard III)
    Lambart Simnel
    Lancaster
    Leicester
    Lincolnshire
    Lionel Of Antwerp
    Literature
    Lord Audley
    Louis XI
    Ludlow
    March
    Margaret Beauchamp
    Margaret Beaufort
    Margaret Of Anjou
    Margaret Of York
    Mary Of Guelders
    Mary Of Guise
    May
    Medicine
    Medieval Castles
    Medieval Music
    Medieval Warfare
    Micklegate Bar
    Mohun Family
    Mortimer Cross
    Neville Family
    Normandy
    Northamptonshire
    Nostell Priory
    Nottinghamshire
    November
    October
    On This Day
    Owen Glyndwr
    Owen Tudor
    Parhelion
    Parliament
    Percy Family
    Philippe De Commynes
    Phillippe Pot
    Plantagenet
    Pontifract
    Prince Of Wales
    Princes
    Princes In The Tower
    Princesses
    Propaganda
    Ralph And Edward Shaa
    Ravenspur
    Readeption Of Henry VI
    Rebellion
    Re Enactments
    Revenge
    Rhys Ap Thomas
    Richard Duke Of York
    Richard Herbert
    Richard II
    Richard III
    Richard Neville
    Richard Neville (The King Maker)
    Richard Of Conisbrough
    Richard Of Eastwell
    Richard Of Shrewsbury
    Road To Bosworth: Henry Of Richmond
    Robin Of Redesdale
    Roger Vaughan
    Rowland Lockey
    Rutland
    Sandal Castle
    Sand Sculptures
    Saxton
    Scarborough
    Second Battle Of St Albans
    September
    Shakespeare
    Skirbeck
    Statutes And Treaties
    St Paul's Cross London
    Sufflok
    Tattershall
    Tattershall Collage
    Tewkesbury Abbey
    The Arrivall
    The Beaufort Family
    The Black Death
    The Black Prince
    The Blue Boar Inn
    The Browne Family
    The De La Pole Family
    The Hollow Crown
    The King Maker
    The Legendary Ten Seconds
    The-road-to-bosworth-richard-iii
    The-road-to-bosworth-richard-iii
    The Tudors
    The Wakefield Tower
    The Woodville Family
    Thomas Browne
    Thomas Burgh
    Thomas Clifford
    Thomas Earl Of Lancaster
    Thomas More
    Thomas Percy
    Thomas Stanley
    Thomas Vaughan
    Tilney Family
    Tower Of London
    Towton 25
    Transie Tomb
    Treaties
    Tudor
    Tudors
    Tyrell Family
    Vengeance
    Vulgate
    Wales
    Walter Devereux
    Wars Of The Roses
    Wars Of The Roses In Art
    Weapons
    Welles Family
    Westminster Abbey
    William Aschough
    William Cromer
    William De La Pole
    William Hastings
    William Herbert
    William Hobbes
    William Of Hatfield
    William Of Worcester
    William Oldhall
    William Shakespeare
    Women
    Woodville Family
    York
    Yorkshire

    Archives

    December 2022
    September 2022
    June 2022
    November 2021
    January 2021
    September 2020
    July 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    January 2019
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    December 2014
    February 2014
    December 2013

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.