Monday, 28 January 2019
King Edward VII
Thursday, 24 January 2019
King Edward VI
Born in 1537, the son of King Henry VIII and Jane Seymour,
Edward was only nine years old when his father died in 1547.
Effective power was exercised firstly by Edward’s maternal
uncle Edward Seymour, Earl of Somerset, and then by John Dudley, Duke of
Northumberland.
Edward was studious (he was learning Latin and Greek at the
age of five) and unemotional, and far more fervently Protestant than his
father, although the influence of Protector Somerset in this regard cannot be
ignored.
He endorsed the Church of England prayer books written by
Archbishop Thomas Cranmer in 1549 and 1552 and took steps to remove signs of
Roman Catholic influence from English churches.
Somerset’s other main aim was to continue the wars against
France and Scotland that had been instigated by King Henry VIII. One of
Somerset’s objectives was to force a marriage between Edward and Mary Queen of
Scots, who was five years younger than Edward. However, Somerset’s policy only
served to strengthen the alliance between Scotland and France, as a result of
which Mary married the heir to the French throne.
When Somerset was overthrown in 1549 he was succeeded by the
Earl of Warwick who was later declared Duke of Northumberland. He was able to
extricate England from the French and Scottish wars and then turned his
attention to the question of who would reign after Edward.
When Edward fell ill with tuberculosis in February 1553 it
soon became clear that his illness was terminal and there was clearly no
prospect of him producing an heir. Northumberland was determined that Edward’s
Catholic sister Mary should not become Queen and so hatched a plot to make Lady
Jane Grey (a great-niece of Henry VIII and Edward’s cousin) the next monarch.
Northumberland sought to advance his own position by marrying his son Guildford
Dudley to Lady Jane, much to the latter’s disgust.
However, after Edward’s death in July 1553 (aged 15) the
plot fell apart and Mary did indeed become Queen and tried her hardest to undo
Edward’s work in promoting Protestantism in England. Among the many victims of
her reign were 17-year-old Lady Jane and her husband and father-in-law.
Tuesday, 22 January 2019
Richard Trevithick and the first rail locomotive
© John Welford
King Edward IV
Born in 1442 as the son of Richard, Duke of York, Edward gained the crown in 1461 through conquest and spent most of the early part of his reign in a bitter struggle with the opposing dynasty of the House of Lancaster, the conflict being known to history as the Wars of the Roses.
Victories at Mortimer’s Cross and Towton led to Edward becoming king, helped in large measure by his cousin Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick. The Lancastrian monarch, King Henry VI, was captured and held in the Tower of London. Edward confiscated the possessions of many Lancastrian supporters and lavished them on his own cronies, with the Earl of Warwick being a main benefactor.
Edward was a skilled politician who also knew the advantages of a sound economy for boosting his popularity, especially as the boosting of trade meant that he had no need to impose heavy taxes on his subjects.
However, Edward’s main failing was his strong sexual appetite, which led to his secret marriage to Elizabeth Woodville, who refused his advances until he agreed to marry her. The problem was that Elizabeth was a Lancastrian who insisted on bringing many of her relatives with her to court. This undermined the Earl of Warwick’s position, causing him to switch sides.
Warwick, who became known to history as “the kingmaker”, allied himself with Louis XI of France and Margaret of Anjou in a successful plot to unseat Edward, who sought refuge in Burgundy in 1470 while King Henry VI was able to return to the throne, albeit briefly.
Edward was far from finished. He fought back and defeated and killed Warwick at the Battle of Barnet in April 1471. His final victory was secured against the forces of King Henry at Tewkesbury the following month, after which Henry was murdered and Edward resumed his reign.
The rest of Edward’s reign was relatively peaceful and English commerce was promoted, helped by a truce with France that lasted for seven years. Edward was even able to mount a successful invasion of
Scotland in 1482 that led to Berwick-upon-Tweed returning to English control.
Edward died suddenly from natural causes in 1483, leaving his 13-year-old son and heir Edward in the guardianship of his brother Richard, who would soon afterwards seize the throne as King Richard III. Queen Elizabeth’s intense dislike of Richard was, however, going to prove disastrous for the future of her sons.
© John Welford