
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Henry Tudor, the future Henry VII, has been called the most unlikely King of England. Yet his rise from obscurity was foretold by the bards, and by 1485, the familial bloodbath of the Wars of the Roses left Henry as the sole adult Lancastrian claimant to the throne. The hunchback usurper Richard III desperately wanted him dead, and in his exile Henry Tudor was left with no choice. He either invaded England or faced being traded to Richard to meet certain death. Henry's father, Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond, was the son of a Queen of England, sister to the King of France, and of an obscure Welsh court servant, who had been born in secrecy away from court. Edmund's death at the beginning of the Wars of the Roses left Henry to grow up in almost constant danger, imprisonment and exile. In 1485, his 'ragtag' invading army at Bosworth faced overwhelming odds, but succeeded. Henry went on to become England's wisest and greatest king, but it would be his son Henry VIII and granddaughter Elizabeth I who would take all the credit.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- The Ancestry of Henry VII
- Introduction
- 1: The Heritage and Birth of Henry Tudor
- 2: A Troubled Childhood, 1457–1471
- 3: Escape and Exile in Brittany, 1471–1482
- 4: The Year of Three Kings and the Failed Rebellion, 1483
- 5: Henry’s Escape to France, Invasion and Battle, 1484–1485
- 6: The First Years as King and the Simnel Rebellion, 1485–1487
- 7: Consolidation and the Warbeck Rebellion, 1488–1495
- 8: Stability and the End of Warbeck, 1496–1501
- 9: Diminishing Control, 1502–1509
- Picture Section
- Appendix: The Tragedy of the Final Years
- Select Bibliography
- List of Illustrations