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  1. www.warsoftheroses.com › mapsandsources › sourcesSources - Wars of the Roses

    The sources for writing histories of the Wars of the Roses are wonderfully varied and often hotly debated. This page begins provides an explanation of the different types of source and some advice on how to use them. In the menu you will find a page with links to online editions of the sources, including the Richard III Society’s Ricardian ...

  2. Oct 23, 2023 · The romantic name “Wars of the Roses,” didn’t come along until the 19th century. While it was actually happening it was called the Civil War or the Cousins War.)

  3. May 22, 2020 · Later, a 1646 pamphlet called the medieval York/Lancaster struggle "The Quarrel of the Warring Roses." Then David Hume's 1762 History of England popularized the term "Wars Between the Two Roses."

  4. The image of red and white roses, which ultimately became joined into one Tudor rose, had been part of the royal message for years. Henry VII’s narrative had taken hold, the story of a war between the red rose of Lancaster and the white rose of York, which had ended when the Tudor dynasty established peace at the Battle of Bosworth.

  5. Edward of Lancaster/of Westminster. Edward of Lancaster (1453-71) was the only child of Henry VI and Margaret of Anjou. He was disinherited by the Act of Accord in 1460 and grew up in exile with his mother after the Yorkist triumph. He was married to Anne Neville, daughter of the Earl of Warwick, during Henry VI’s readeption, but died at the ...

  6. The sons of the York family—King Edward IV, Clarence, and their younger brother Richard—were victorious. After the executions, Edward took the throne once again. The action of Richard III begins shortly after this event, but the hostility between the two families was much older. The Lancasters had killed a second York son—Edmund, Earl of ...

  7. About The Wars of the Roses. Lancaster and York. For much of the fifteenth century, these two families were locked in battle for control of the English throne. Kings were murdered and deposed. Armies marched on London. Old noble names were ruined while rising dynasties seized power and lands. The war between the royal houses of Lancaster and ...

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