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and their voice was taken as the voice of the City. On June 25 Parliament declared Gloucester to be the lawful heir, and on July 6 he was crowned as Richard III. The Woodvilles were not popular, and the bloodshed with which Richard had maintained himself against them was readily condoned.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Richard III.: from an original painting belonging to the Society of Antiquaries.]
17. =Buckingham's Rebellion. 1483.=--Richard's enemies were chiefly to be found amongst the n.o.bility. No n.o.bleman could feel his life secure if he crossed Richard's path. The first to revolt was Buckingham, who had played the part of a king-maker, and who was disappointed because Richard did not reward him by conceding his claim to estates so vast that if he possessed them he would have been master of England.
Buckingham, who was descended from Edward III. through his youngest son, the Duke of Gloucester, at first thought of challenging a right to the throne for himself, but afterwards determined to support the claim of the Earl of Richmond, the Tudor heir of the House of Lancaster (see p. 334). He was skilfully led from one step to another by John Morton, Bishop of Ely, one of the ablest statesmen of the day. Richmond was to sail from Brittany, where he was in exile, and Buckingham was to raise forces in Wales, where the Welsh Tudors were popular, whilst other counties were to rise simultaneously. The rebellion came to nothing. Heavy rains caused a flood of the Severn, and Buckingham, in Shrops.h.i.+re, was cut off from his army in Wales.
Buckingham was betrayed to Richard, and on November 2 was beheaded at Salisbury.
18. =Murder of the Princes. 1483.=--At some time in the summer or autumn the princes in the Tower ceased to live. There had been movements in their favour in some counties, and there can be no reasonable doubt that Richard had them secretly killed. It was only by degrees that the truth leaked out. Wherever it was believed it roused indignation. Murders there had been in plenty, but the murdered as yet had been grown men. To butcher children was reserved for Richard alone.
19. =Richard's Government. 1484--1485.=--As long as the last tale of murder was still regarded as doubtful, Richard retained his popularity. In a Parliament which met in January =1484= he enacted good laws, amongst which was one declaring benevolences illegal. In the summer he was welcomed as he moved about, yet he knew that danger threatened. Richmond was preparing invasion and the hollow friends.h.i.+p of the English n.o.bility was not to be trusted. In vain Richard scattered gifts in profusion amongst them. They took the gifts and hoped for deliverance. The popular goodwill grew cooler, and in the winter Richard, needing money, and not venturing to summon another Parliament, raised a forced loan. A loan not being a gift, he did not technically break the statute against benevolences though practically he set it at naught. Domestic misfortunes came to add to Richard's political troubles. His only son, Edward, died in =1484=. His wife, Anne, died in =1485=. Richard was now eager, if he had not been eager before, to marry his niece, Elizabeth of York, the daughter of Edward IV. This monstrous proposal was scouted by his own supporters, and he had reluctantly to abandon the scheme. If there could be queens in England, Elizabeth was on hereditary principles the heiress of the throne, unless, indeed, Richard's argument against her mother's marriage (see p. 340) was to be accepted. Richmond was naturally as anxious as Richard could be to win her hand, and his promise to marry her was the condition on which he obtained the support of those Yorkists who were Richard's enemies.
20. =Richard Defeated and Slain at Bosworth. 1485.=--In August =1485= Richmond landed at Milford Haven. As he marched on he was joined by considerable numbers, but on August 22 he found Richard waiting for him near Bosworth, with a host far larger than his own. Richard, however, could not count on the fidelity of his own commanders. Lord Stanley, who had married Richmond's widowed mother, the Lady Margaret (see p. 334), together with his brother, Sir William Stanley, were secretly in accord with Richmond, though they had placed themselves on Richard's side. When the battle began Stanley openly joined Richmond, whilst the Earl of Northumberland who was also nominally on Richard's side withdrew his forces and stood aloof. Knowing that defeat was certain, Richard, with the crown on his head, rushed into the thick of the fight and met a soldier's death. After the battle the fallen crown was discovered on a bush, and placed by Stanley, amidst shouts of 'King Henry!' on Richmond's head.
CHAPTER XXIII.
HENRY VII. 1485--1509.
LEADING DATES
Accession of Henry VII. 1485 The Battle of Stoke 1487 Poynings' Acts 1494 Capture of Perkin Warbeck 1497 Alliance with Scotland 1503 Death of Henry VII. 1509
[Ill.u.s.tration: Henry VII.: from an original picture in the National Portrait Gallery.]
1. =The First Measures of Henry VII. 1485--1486.=--Henry VII. owed his success not to a general uprising against Richard, but to a combination of the n.o.bles who had hitherto taken opposite sides. To secure this combination he had promised to marry Elizabeth, the heiress of the Yorkist family. Lest an attempt should be made to challenge her t.i.tle, Henry imprisoned in the Tower the Earl of Warwick, the son of Clarence, who might possibly maintain that a female was incapable of inheriting. He was indeed unwilling to have it thought that he derived his t.i.tle from a wife, and when Parliament met on November 7 he obtained from it a recognition of his own right to the throne, though it would have puzzled the most acute controversialist to discover in what that right consisted. Parliament, therefore, contented itself with declaring that the inheritance of the crown was to 'be, rest, and abide in King Henry VII. and his heirs,'
without giving any reasons why it was to be so.[36] As far as the House of Lords was concerned the attendance when this declaration was made was scanty. Only twenty-nine lay peers were present, not because many of the great houses had become extinct, but because some of the princ.i.p.al Yorkist peers had been attainted, and others had been left without a summons. In the quieter times which followed this slur upon them was removed, and the House of Lords was again filled. On January 18, =1486=, Henry married Elizabeth. This marriage and the blending of the white and red rose in the Tudor badge was Henry's way of announcing that he intended to be the king of both parties.
[Footnote 36: Abbreviated genealogy of Henry VII. and his compet.i.tors:--
EDWARD III.
| +----------------+----------------+ | | Lionel, Duke of Clarence John of Gaunt, : Duke of Lancaster : : +-----+-----------+ : | | : | George : | Duke of Clarence : | | : EDWARD IV. Edward, : | Earl of Warwick : Elizabeth HENRY VII.]
[Ill.u.s.tration: Elizabeth of York, queen of Henry VII.: from an original picture in the National Portrait Gallery.]
2. =Maintenance and Livery.=--Henry could not maintain himself on the throne merely by the support of the n.o.bility. The middle cla.s.ses, as in the days of Edward IV., called out for a strong king, and were ready to overlook violence and cruelty if only order could be secured.
Henry was shrewd enough to know that their aid was indispensable, and, Lancastrian as he was, he adopted the policy of the Yorkist kings.
Economical and patient, he might succeed where Edward IV. had partially failed. He had no injuries to avenge, no cruelties to repay.
He clearly saw that both the throne and the lives and properties of the middle cla.s.ses were rendered insecure by maintenance and livery--the support given by the great landowners to their retainers, and the granting of badges by which the retainers might recognise one another, and thus become as it were a uniformed army ready to serve their lords in the field. Against these abuses Richard II. had directed a statute, (see p. 281) and that statute had been confirmed by Edward IV. These laws had, however, been inoperative; and Henry, in his first Parliament, did not venture to do more than to make the peers swear to abandon their evil courses.
3. =Lovel's Rising. 1486.=--In =1486= Lord Lovel, who had been one of Richard's ministers, rose in arms and seized Worcester. Henry found warm support even in Yorks.h.i.+re, where Richard had been more popular than elsewhere. At short warning a 'marvellous great number of esquires, gentlemen, and yeomen' gathered round him, and the rebellion was easily put down. Lovel escaped to Flanders, where he found a protector in Margaret, the dowager d.u.c.h.ess of Burgundy, the sister of Edward IV. and Richard III. Before long a new attack upon Henry was developed. For the first time an English king had to ward off danger from Ireland.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Tudor rose (white and red): from the gates of the Chapel of Henry VII.]
4. =Lancaster and York in Ireland. 1399--1485.=--Since the expedition of Richard II. no king had visited Ireland, and the English colonists were left to defend themselves against the Celtic tribes as best they might. In =1449= Richard, Duke of York, who had not at that time entered on his rivalry with Henry VI., was sent to Dublin as Lord Lieutenant (see p. 319) where he remained till =1450=, and gained friends amongst both races by his conciliatory firmness. In =1459=, after the break-up of his party at Ludlow (see p. 326), he appeared in Ireland in the character of a fugitive seeking for allies. Between him and the English colony a bargain was soon struck. They gave him troops which fought gallantly for him at Wakefield, and he, claiming to be Lord Lieutenant, a.s.sented to an act in which they a.s.serted the complete legislative independence of the Parliament of the colony. The colony, therefore, became distinctly Yorkist. Its leader was the Earl of Kildare, the chief of the eastern Fitzgeralds or Geraldines, the Earl of Desmond being the chief of the Geraldines of the West. Between them was the Earl of Ormond, the chief of the Butlers, the hereditary foe of the Geraldines, who, probably merely because his rivals were Yorkist, had attached himself to the Lancastrian party. All three were of English descent, but all three exercised the tribal authority of an Irish chief, and were practically independent of English control.
Ormond fought at Towton on the Lancastrian side, and was executed after the battle. Family quarrels broke out amongst his kindred, and for the time Kildare was supreme in the English Pale (see p. 265).
5. =Insurrection of Lambert Simnel. 1487.=--Kildare and the colonists had every reason to distrust Henry, but to oppose him they needed a pretender. They found one in the son of an Oxford tradesman, a boy of ten, named Lambert Simnel, who had been persuaded to give himself out as the Earl of Warwick, who, as it was said, had escaped from the Tower. In =1487= Simnel landed in Ireland, where he was soon joined by Lord Lovel from Flanders, and by the Earl of Lincoln, of the family of Pole or De la Pole,[37] whose mother, Elizabeth, was the eldest sister of Edward IV., and who had been named by Richard III. as his heir after the death of his son (see p. 342). Lincoln and Lovel, after crowning Simnel at Dublin, crossed to Lancas.h.i.+re, taking with them the pretender, and 2,000 trained German soldiers under Martin Schwarz; as well as an Irish force furnished by Kildare. Scarcely an Englishman would join them, and on June 16 they were utterly defeated by Henry at Stoke, a village between Nottingham and Newark. Lincoln and Schwarz were slain. Lovel was either drowned in the Trent or, according to legend, was hidden in an underground vault, where he was at last starved to death through the neglect of the man whose duty it was to provide him with food. Simnel was pardoned, and employed by Henry as a turnspit in his kitchen.
[Footnote 37: Genealogy of the De la Poles and Poles:--
Richard, Duke of York | +------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Elizabeth= John de la Pole, George, Duke | Duke of Suffolk of Clarence, | died 1477 +--+--------------+----------------------+ | | | | | John de la Pole, Edmund de la Pole, Sir Richard Margaret, = Sir Richard Earl of Lincoln, Earl of Suffolk, de la Pole, Countess | Pole killed at Stoke, beheaded 1513 killed at of | 1487 Pavia, 1525 Salisbury | | +-------------------------------+--------------------+ | | Henry, Lord Montague, Reginald Pole, beheaded 1538 Cardinal and Archbishop of Canterbury, died 1558]
6. =The Court of Star Chamber. 1487.=--Nothing could serve Henry better than this abortive rising. At Bosworth he had been the leader of one party against the other. At Stoke he was the leader of the nation against Irishmen and Germans. He felt himself strong enough in his second Parliament to secure the pa.s.sing of an act to ensure the execution of the engagements to which the lords had sworn two years before (see p. 345). A court was to be erected, consisting of certain specified members of the Privy Council and of two judges, empowered to punish with fine and imprisonment all who were guilty of interfering with justice by force or intrigue. The new court, reviving, to some extent, the disused criminal authority of the king's Council, sat in the Star Chamber[38] at Westminster. The results of its establishment were excellent. Wealthy landowners, the terror of their neighbours, who had bribed or bullied juries at their pleasure, and had sent their retainers to inflict punishment on those who had displeased them, were brought to Westminster to be tried before a court in which neither fear nor favour could avail them. It was the greatest merit of the new court that it was not dependent on a jury, because in those days juries were unable or unwilling to give verdicts according to their conscience.
[Footnote 38: So called either because the roof was decorated with stars or because it was the room in which had formerly been kept Jewish bonds or 'starres.']
7. =Henry VII. and Brittany. 1488--1492.=--Henry VII. was a lover of peace by calculation, and would gladly have let France alone if it had been possible to do so. France, however, was no longer the divided power which it had been in the days of Henry V. When Louis XI. died in =1483=, he left to his young son, Charles VIII., a territory the whole of which, with the exception of Brittany, was directly governed by the king. Charles's sister, Anne of Beaujeu, who governed in his name, made it the object of her policy to secure Brittany. She waged war successfully against its duke, Francis II., and after he died, in =1488=, she continued to wage war against his daughter, the d.u.c.h.ess Anne. In England there was a strong feeling against allowing the d.u.c.h.ess to be overwhelmed. At the beginning of =1489= Henry, having received from Parliament large supplies, sent 6,000 Englishmen to Anne's a.s.sistance. Maximilian--whose hold on the Netherlands, where he ruled in the name of his young son, Philip (see p. 337), was always slight--proposed marriage to the young d.u.c.h.ess, and in =1490= was wedded to her by proxy. He was a restless adventurer, always aiming at more than he had the means of accomplis.h.i.+ng. Though he could not find time to go at once to Brittany to make good his claim, yet in =1491= he called on Henry to a.s.sist him in a.s.serting it.
8. =Cardinal Morton's Fork. 1491.=--Henry, who knew how unpopular a general taxation was, fell back on the system of benevolences (see p.
335), excusing his conduct on the plea that the statute of Richard III. abolis.h.i.+ng benevolences (see p. 342) was invalid, because Richard himself was a usurper. In gathering the benevolence the Chancellor, Cardinal Morton, who had been helpful to Henry in the days of his exile (see p. 341), invented a new mode of putting pressure on the wealthy, which became known as Cardinal Morton's fork. If he addressed himself to one who lived in good style, he told him that his mode of living showed that he could afford to give money to the king. If he had to do with one who appeared to be economical, he told him that he must have saved and could therefore afford to give money to the king.
Before Henry could put the money thus gained to much use, Anne, pressed hard by the French, repudiated her formal marriage with Maximilian, who had never taken the trouble to visit her, and gave her hand to Charles VIII., who on his part refused to carry out his contract to marry Maximilian's daughter Margaret (see p. 337). From that time Brittany, the last of the great fiefs to maintain its independence, pa.s.sed under the power of the king of France. Feudality was everywhere breaking down, and in France, as in England, a strong monarchy was being erected on its ruins.
9. =The Invasion of France. 1492.=--Maximilian's alliance had proved but a broken reed, but there was now arising a formidable power in the south of Europe, which might possibly give valuable support to the enemies of France. The peninsula to the south of the Pyrenees had hitherto been divided amongst various states, but in =1469= a marriage between Ferdinand, king of Aragon, and Isabella, the heiress of Castile, united the greater part under one dominion. Ferdinand and Isabella were, for the present, fully occupied with the conquest of Granada, the last remnant of the possessions of the Moors in Spain, and that city did not surrender till early in =1492=. In the meanwhile all England was indignant with the king of France on account of his marriage with the heiress of Brittany. Money was voted and men were raised, and on October 2, =1492=, Henry crossed to Calais to invade France. He was, however, cool enough to discover that both Ferdinand and Maximilian wanted to play their own game at his expense, and as Anne of Beaujeu was ready to meet him half-way, he concluded a treaty with the French king on November 3 at Etaples, receiving large sums of money for abandoning a war in which he had nothing to gain. In =1493= the Spaniards followed Henry's example, and made a peace with France to their own advantage.[39]
[Footnote 39: Genealogy of the Houses of Spain and Burgundy:--
Charles the Rash, Duke of Burgundy Frederick III., Emperor | | | +---------------+ | | Mary = Maximilian I. Ferdinand V. = Isabella, | Emperor King of Aragon | Queen of | | Castile | | +-----+--+ +----------+--------+ | | | | Margaret Philip = Juana Catharine = HENRY VIII., | | King | | of England +-----------------+---+ | | | MARY, Charles V., Ferdinand I., Queen of England Emperor Emperor]
10. =Perkin Warbeck. 1491--1494.=--Henry's prudent relinquishment of a war of conquest was not likely to bring him popularity in England, and his enemies were now on the watch for another pretender to support against him. Such a pretender was found in Perkin Warbeck, a Fleming of Tournay, who had landed at Cork in the end of =1491= or the beginning of =1492=, and who had been pressed by the townsmen to give himself some name which would attach him to the Yorkist family. He allowed them to call him Richard, Duke of York, the younger of the princes who had been murdered in the Tower. He received support from Desmond, and probably from Kildare, upon which Henry deprived Kildare of the office of Lord Deputy. Perkin crossed to France, and ultimately made his way to Flanders, where he was supported by Margaret of Burgundy. In =1493= Henry demanded his surrender, and on receiving a refusal broke off commercial intercourse between England and Flanders.
The interruption of trade did more harm to England than to Flanders, and gave hopes to the Yorkist party that it might give rise to ill-will between the nation and the king. For some time, however, no one gave a.s.sistance to Perkin, and in =1494= Charles VIII. crossed the Alps to invade Italy, and drew the attention of the Continental powers away from the affairs of England.
11. =Poynings' Acts. 1494.=--Henry seized the opportunity to bring into obedience the English colony in Ireland. He sent over as Lord Deputy Sir Edward Poynings, a resolute and able man. At a Parliament held by him at Drogheda two acts were pa.s.sed. By the one it was enacted that all English laws in force at that time should be obeyed in Ireland; by the other, known for many generations afterwards as Poynings' Law, no bill was to be laid before the Irish Parliament which had not been previously approved by the king and his Council in England. At the same time the greater part of the Statute of Kilkenny (see p. 265) was re-enacted; and restricted the authority of the Government at Dublin to the English Pale.
12. =Perkin's First Attempt on England. 1495.=--Henry's firm government in England had given offence even to men who were not Yorkists. Early in =1495= he discovered that Sir William Stanley, who had helped him to victory at Bosworth, had turned against him.
Stanley, who was probably involved in a design for sending Perkin to invade England, was tried and executed. In the summer of =1495= Perkin actually arrived off Deal. Being no warrior, he sent a party of his followers on sh.o.r.e, though he remained himself on s.h.i.+pboard to see what would happen. The countrymen fell upon the invaders, who were all slain or captured. Then Perkin sailed to Ireland, was repulsed at Waterford, and ultimately took refuge in Scotland, where King James IV., anxious to distinguish himself in a war with England, acknowledged him as the Duke of York, and found him a wife of n.o.ble birth, Lady Catherine Gordon. It was probably in order to rally even the most timid around him, in face of such a danger, that Henry obtained the consent of Parliament to an act declaring that no one supporting a king in actual possession of the crown could be subjected to the penalty of treason in the event of that king's dethronement.
13. =The Intercursus Magnus. 1496.=--The danger of a Scottish invasion made Henry anxious to be on good terms with his neighbours. Maximilian had become Emperor in =1493= upon his father's death. In the Netherlands, however, his influence had declined, as his son, the young Archduke Philip, was now growing up, and claimed actually to rule the country which he had inherited from his mother, Mary of Burgundy (see p. 337), his father having merely the right of administering the government of it till he himself came of age. It was therefore with Philip, and not with Maximilian, that Henry concluded, in =1496=, a treaty known as the _Intercursus Magnus_, for the encouragement of trade between England and the Netherlands, each party engaging at the same time to give no shelter to each other's rebels.
14. =Kildare Restored to the Deputys.h.i.+p. 1496.=--In Ireland also Henry was careful to avert danger. The government of Poynings had not been entirely successful, and the Geraldines had taken good care to show that they could be troublesome in spite of the establishment of English government. The Earl of Kildare was at the time in England, and a story is told of some one who, having brought a long string of charges against him, wound up by saying that all Ireland could not govern the Earl, whereupon the king replied that then the Earl should govern all Ireland. The story is untrue, but it well represents the real situation. In =1496= Henry sent Kildare back as Lord Deputy. A bargain seems to have been struck between them. Henry abandoned his attempt to govern Ireland from England, and Kildare was allowed to use the king's name in any enterprise upon which his heart was set, provided that he did not support any more pretenders to the English throne.
15. =Perkin's Overthrow. 1496--1497.=--In the autumn of =1496= James IV. made an attack on England in Perkin's name, but it was no more than a plundering foray. Henry, however, early in =1497=, obtained from Parliament a grant of money, to enable him to resist any attempt to repeat it. This grant had unexpected consequences. The Cornishmen, refusing payment, marched up to Blackheath, where on June 18 they were overpowered by the king's troops. James IV., thinking it time to be quit of Perkin, sent him off by sea. In July Perkin arrived at Cork, but there was no shelter for him there now that Kildare was Lord Deputy, and in September he made his way to Cornwall. Followed by 6,000 Cornishmen he reached Taunton, but the news of the defeat of the Cornish at Blackheath depressed him, and the poor coward ran away from his army and took sanctuary in Beaulieu Abbey. He was brought to London, where he publicly acknowledged himself to be an impostor.
Henry was too humane to do more than place him in confinement.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Tower of St. Mary's Church, Taunton: built about 1500.]
16. =European Changes. 1494--1499.=--In =1494= Charles VIII. had pa.s.sed through Italy as a conqueror to make good his claims to the kingdom of Naples. In =1495= he had returned to France, and in =1496= the French army left behind had been entirely destroyed. Yet the danger of a renewed attack from France made the other Continental powers anxious to unite, and in =1496= the Archduke Philip married Juana, the eldest daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, whilst his sister was sent to Spain to be married to their only son, Juan. In =1497= the death of the young prince led to consequences unexpected when the two marriages were arranged. Philip, who held Franche Comte and the Netherlands, and who was through his father Maximilian heir to the German dominions of the House of Austria, would now, that his wife had become the heiress of Spain, be able to transmit to his descendants the whole of the Spanish monarchy as well. That monarchy was no longer confined to Europe. Portugal at the end of the fourteenth century had led the way in maritime adventure, and Portuguese navigators discovered a way to India round the Cape of Good Hope. Spain was anxious to do as much, and in =1492= Columbus had discovered the West Indies, and the kings of Spain became masters of the untold wealth produced by the gold and silver mines of the New World. It was impossible but that the huge power thus brought into existence would one day arouse the jealousy of Europe. For the present, however, the danger was less than it would be after the deaths of Ferdinand and Isabella, as the actual combination of their territories with those which Philip was to inherit from Maximilian had not been effected. In =1499= France gave a fresh shock to her neighbours. Charles VIII. had died the year before, and his successor, Louis XII., invaded Italy and subdued the duchy of Milan, to which he had set up a claim. Naturally the powers jealous of France sought to have Henry on their side. There had been for some time a negotiation for a marriage between Henry's eldest son, Arthur, Prince of Wales, and Catherine of Aragon, the youngest daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, but hitherto nothing had been concluded.
17. =Execution of the Earl of Warwick. 1499.=--Perkin had long been eager to free himself from prison. In =1498= he was caught attempting to escape, but Henry contented himself with putting him in the stocks.
He was then removed to the Tower, where he persuaded the unhappy Earl of Warwick (see p. 343) to join him in flight. It is almost certain that Warwick was guilty of no more, but Henry, soured by the repeated attempts to dethrone him, resolved to remove him from his path. On trumped-up evidence Warwick was convicted and executed, and Perkin shared his fate.
[Ill.u.s.tration: King's College Chapel, Cambridge (looking east). Begun by Henry VI. in 1441, completed by Henry VII. The screen built between 1531 and 1535.]
18. =Prince Arthur's Marriage and Death. 1501--1502.=--Warwick's death was the one judicial murder of Henry's reign. To the Spaniards it appeared to be a prudent action which had cleared away the last of Henry's serious compet.i.tors. The negotiations for the Spanish marriage were pushed on, and in =1501= Catherine, a bride of fifteen, gave her hand to Arthur, a bridegroom of fourteen. In =1502= the prince died, and the attempt to bind England and Spain together seemed to have come to an end.
19. =The Scottish Marriage. 1503.=--Another marriage treaty proved ultimately to be of far greater importance. Henry was sufficiently above the prejudices of his time to be anxious to be on good terms with Scotland. For some time a negotiation had been in progress for a marriage between James IV. and Henry's daughter, Margaret. The marriage took place in =1503=. To the counsellors who urged that in the case of failure of Henry's heirs in the male line England would become subject to Scotland Henry shrewdly replied that there was no fear of that, as 'the greater would draw the less.'