A Guide to the Wars of the Roses  
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781036120528
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ISBN: 9781036120528 Price: INR 1129.99
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Provides a clear, accessible explanation of the conflict’s origins, key events, and aftermath, stripping away centuries of distortion.

So much has been written, and is still being written, about the Wars of the Roses – both in print and on the internet - that the interested student of history is in grave danger of being utterly overwhelmed. The key players in the conflict are very interesting personalities but they have become so distorted by caricature that they now appear as a procession of heroes and villains rather than living, breathing people.

The aim of A Guide to the Wars of the Roses is simple: to help the reader understand what happened and why during the great political upheaval of the fifteenth century. It describes the origins, nature and aftermath of the wars in short, accessible chapters and explains how the period can be divided into three separate, though related, political crises.

In describing the rise of Richard, Duke of York, in the mid-fifteenth century, the Guide traces how his rivalry with Edmund Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, ultimately led to the deposition of the hard-pressed, and wholly unsuitable, King Henry VI. It also explains how the accession of a new king from the House of York failed to solve England’s political problems. The triumphant Yorkist faction is examined to chart how the fears and jealousies of its leading figures eventually led to a fatal instability at the heart of government.

By putting the wars firmly in their medieval context, the Guide seeks to strip away the hype of half a millennium to examine objectively the roles and motives of those involved, without seeking either to exonerate, or demonise, any particular individual. While the Guide is intended to be comprehensive, it is also an easy-to-follow manual for a subject which has often been dismissed as ‘too complicated’.
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Provides a clear, accessible explanation of the conflict’s origins, key events, and aftermath, stripping away centuries of distortion.

So much has been written, and is still being written, about the Wars of the Roses – both in print and on the internet - that the interested student of history is in grave danger of being utterly overwhelmed. The key players in the conflict are very interesting personalities but they have become so distorted by caricature that they now appear as a procession of heroes and villains rather than living, breathing people.

The aim of A Guide to the Wars of the Roses is simple: to help the reader understand what happened and why during the great political upheaval of the fifteenth century. It describes the origins, nature and aftermath of the wars in short, accessible chapters and explains how the period can be divided into three separate, though related, political crises.

In describing the rise of Richard, Duke of York, in the mid-fifteenth century, the Guide traces how his rivalry with Edmund Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, ultimately led to the deposition of the hard-pressed, and wholly unsuitable, King Henry VI. It also explains how the accession of a new king from the House of York failed to solve England’s political problems. The triumphant Yorkist faction is examined to chart how the fears and jealousies of its leading figures eventually led to a fatal instability at the heart of government.

By putting the wars firmly in their medieval context, the Guide seeks to strip away the hype of half a millennium to examine objectively the roles and motives of those involved, without seeking either to exonerate, or demonise, any particular individual. While the Guide is intended to be comprehensive, it is also an easy-to-follow manual for a subject which has often been dismissed as ‘too complicated’.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Illustrations
  • Introduction
  • Part One: Origins of the Conflict
    • Chapter 1: The Context of the Wars of the Roses
    • Chapter 2: The Minority of Henry VI
    • Chapter 3: The Personality of King Henry VI
    • Chapter 4: Divisions at Court
    • Chapter 5: An Attempted Coup 1452
    • Chapter 6: A Wedding, a Funeral and a Birth
    • Chapter 7: Fasten Your Seatbelts…
    • Chapter 8: Bust-up in St Albans, 1455
    • Chapter 9: A Line Drawn in the Sand, 1459
    • Chapter 10: So, it’s War Then, 1459
  • Part Two: The Crisis of 1459–64
    • Chapter 11: Showdown at Ludford Bridge
    • Chapter 12: A Yorkist Revival?
    • Chapter 13: The End of the ‘Old Guard’
    • Chapter 14: Two Battles
    • Chapter 15: The Bloody Meadow
    • Chapter 16: Post-Towton Blues
    • Chapter 17: A Lancastrian Revival?
    • Chapter 18: Lancaster’s Last Chance Saloon
  • Part Three: The Crisis of 1467–71
    • Chapter 19: Wedding Bells
    • Chapter 20: Warwick, the Wedding Planner…
    • Chapter 21: The Kingmaker Illusion
    • Chapter 22: A Cunning Plan…
    • Chapter 23: The House of Cards, 1470
    • Chapter 24: Return of the King?
    • Chapter 25: The Fog of War
    • Chapter 26: Another Bloody Meadow…
    • Chapter 27: Peace for Our Time…
  • Part Four: The Crisis of 1483–7
    • Chapter 28: Peace, the Final Frontier…
    • Chapter 29: A Surfeit of Brothers…
    • Chapter 30: Trouble with the In-Laws
    • Chapter 31: Richard, Duke of Gloucester
    • Chapter 32: Edward, Prince of Wales
    • Chapter 33: Crisis? What Crisis?
    • Chapter 34: Off with his Head!
    • Chapter 35: When Is a King Not a King?
    • Chapter 36: Richard III… King Slayer?
    • Chapter 37: An Autumn Storm
    • Chapter 38: The Waiting Game
    • Chapter 39: Fake News
    • Chapter 40: A Welshman Comes Calling
    • Chapter 41: Bosworth, Part One
    • Chapter 42: Bosworth, Part Two
  • Part Five: After Bosworth
    • Chapter 43: What Next?
    • Chapter 44: Trouble in Ireland
    • Chapter 45: Perkin Warbeck
    • Chapter 46: The Spectre of the White Rose
  • Part Six: Conclusion
    • Principal Protagonists of the Wars of the Roses
  • Bibliography
  • Plates
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