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  1. › Date of death

    • May 21, 1471May 21, 1471
  2. The Wakefield Tower in the Tower of London, which is treated as Henry VI's place of death for ceremonial purposes. Henry was imprisoned in the Tower of London again and, when the royal party arrived in London, he was reported dead. Official chronicles and documents state that the deposed king died on the night of 21 May 1471.

  3. May 12, 2022 · On 21 May, Edward IV and the victorious Yorkists returned to London. The following morning, it was announced that Henry VI had died during the night. The death of Henry VI. Precisely how Henry VI died is not conclusively known, but stories have surrounded that night in May 1471 for centuries.

  4. Henry VI (born December 6, 1421, Windsor, Berkshire, England—died May 21/22, 1471, London) was the king of England from 1422 to 1461 and from 1470 to 1471. He was a pious and studious recluse whose incapacity for government was one of the causes of the Wars of the Roses .

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Of the 120,000 men who fought, 28,000 died. London opened its gates to the Yorkist forces; Henry and his queen fled to Scotland. An unsuccessful military campaigner, Henry was captured and imprisoned in the Tower of London in 1465, but was restored to the throne in 1470 by an alliance of the Earl of Warwick and Queen Margaret.

  6. Feb 4, 2020 · Henry V died, probably of dysentery on 31 August 1422 CE at Bois de Vincennes in France. The English king had missed the chance to become the king of France by less than two months as Charles VI died on 21 October 1422 CE. Prince Henry, not even one year old, became the new king of England and the youngest to hold such a title before or since.

    • Mark Cartwright
  7. Nov 26, 2020 · Despite his poor leadership, people across England venerated Henry as a saint-like figure following his death on 21 May 1471. An increasing number of people embarked on pilgrimages to Chertsey Abbey, where the king was buried, before Richard III had Henrys remains reinterred at St George’s Chapel in Windsor.

  8. Henry and Margaret's only son was among the Lancastrian dead. Henry VI, who had been imprisoned in the Tower of London, was murdered shortly afterwards.

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