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  1. They were called the Wars of the Roses because it was fought between the houses of York and Lancaster. One of the symbols of the house of York was the white rose and one of the symbols of the ...

  2. Battle of Tewkesbury, (May 4, 1471), in the English Wars of the Roses, the Yorkist king Edward IV’s final victory over his Lancastrian opponents. Edward, who had displaced the Lancastrian Henry VI in 1461, later quarreled with his powerful subject Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, and Warwick in 1470 restored Henry to the throne.

  3. Search for: 'Wars of the Roses' in Oxford Reference ». (1455–85)A protracted struggle for the throne of England, lasting for 30 years of sporadic fighting. These civil wars grew out of the bitter rivalry between two aspirants to the throne – Edmund Beaufort (1406–55), Duke of Somerset, of the House of Lancaster (whose badge was a red ...

  4. In the simplest terms, the war began because Richard, Duke of York, believed he had a better claim to the throne than the man sitting on it, Henry VI. Ever since Henry II, the first Plantagenet, took power, kings struggled to keep a firm grip on the crown and not all of them succeeded.

  5. Jan 12, 2022 · The Wars of the Roses was a civil war fought between the House of Lancaster (Red Rose of Lancaster) and the House of York (White Rose of York) for the English throne from 1455 to 1487. Defeat in the Hundred Years’ War which resulted in loss of all English territories on the Continent and weak central authority provoked a struggle between the ...

  6. The Wars of the Roses effectively ended at Bosworth Field. Richard's defeat and death in this battle marked the end of the Wars of the Roses and the rise of the Tudor Dynasty. Henry Tudor, crowned Henry VII , married Elizabeth of York, symbolically uniting the warring factions with the merging of the red rose of Lancaster and the white rose of ...

  7. List. Wars of the Roses (1455–85), in English history, the series of civil wars that preceded the rise of the Tudors. Fought between the houses of Lancaster and York for the English throne, the wars were named years afterward from the supposed badges of the contenders: the white rose of York and the red rose of Lancaster.

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