Crown and Country by David Starkey
Author:David Starkey
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Published: 2010-09-15T00:00:00+00:00
III
After the unexpected death of King Edward IV, all eyes turned west, towards Ludlow in the Welsh marches, where Edwardâs son, heir and namesake Prince Edward was being brought up. But at twelve, was the boy old enough to rule in his own name? Much of the Yorkist clique, particularly the queenâs family, who had become powerful after the secret marriage, staked their future on the premise that the child could reign in his own right. They had been responsible for his education and upbringing; they had much to gain in the new reign. But a faction emerged in favour of appointing the princeâs uncle Richard as âProtectorâ or regent until the boy was old enough to exercise power himself.
Queen Elizabeth, sensing danger, was determined to get her son crowned quickly, and the council agreed that the coronation should take place without delay. On 23 April, following the councilâs decision, Edward left Ludlow for London, his coronation and his reign. His escort, as his council insisted, was limited to 2000 men. It was enough to put on a fine show as the young king took possession of his kingdom. But the great lords of the kingdom were able to muster as many men or more. And unbeknown to the boy or his mother, Richard was summoning his own troops. He too was heading south.
Late on the night of 2 May, Queen Elizabeth Woodville, waiting in London for the arrival of her eldest son, received alarming news. Edwardâs cavalcade had been intercepted by his uncle, Richard, who had taken possession of his young nephew. The duke professed loyalty to the late kingâs son and heir, his own nephew after all. But Elizabeth, immediately suspicious of Richardâs motives, fled that night with her younger son into the safe sanctuary of the Abbey at Westminster. Richard entered London with his nephew a few days later. The council quickly ratified Richardâs role as âProtectorâ. Young Edwardâs coronation was âpostponedâ until late June, and he was placed in âlodgingsâ in the Tower.
What was Richard doing and why? Hitherto, he had had a reputation, in contrast to the flighty Clarence, for rock-solid loyalty to his brother Edward, who had rewarded him with the government of the whole of the north of England. There he had won golden opinions as a fine soldier and a fair judge, and the model of a kingâs younger brother. Nevertheless, his portrait suggests a man not entirely at ease with himself or others. He is tight lipped, and he is fiddling nervously with the rings on his fingers; he also had the tic of biting hard on his lower lip and constantly pushing and pulling his dagger in and out of its sheath. Was he repressed, paranoid? A hypocrite with an iron grip on himself ? Or did he genuinely believe, in view of Edwardâs tangled marital history, that he, Richard, was now rightful king of England?
On 10 June Richard, an over-mighty subject indeed, summoned his troops to London. His bid for the crown had begun in earnest.
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