The Battle of Tewkesbury
in Gloucestershire,
which took place on May 4,
1471, completed one phase of
the Wars
of the Roses, and temporarily put an end to Lancastrian hopes of regaining
the throne of England.
There would be fourteen years of peace before another political coup finally
settled the dispute between the two dynasties in the form of Henry Tudor.
At the time of Tewkesbury, the Lancastrian king, the mentally unstable Henry
VI of England, had just been deposed for a second time by his rival, the
super-warrior Edward
IV of England. This change in circumstances had come about because of the
interference of Richard
Neville, Earl of Warwick, "the Kingmaker", who had at first supported Edward,
then Henry. Warwick was now dead (killed at the Battle
of Barnet three weeks earlier) and the remaining Lancastrian forces were
led by Henry's queen, Margaret
of Anjou, and her seventeen-year-old son, Edward, Prince
of Wales. Had Margaret, arriving back in England to the shocking news of
Warwick's final defeat, been able to team up with her ally, Jasper
Tudor, (uncle of Henry Tudor), she might have stood a chance against the
Yorkist forces of King Edward. Her only hope was to cross the river Severn
at Gloucester, and
this she failed to do.
Margaret relied heavily on the Duke of Somerset, her remaining experienced
commander, but his skills were no match for those of the king. The Yorkists
were superior in artillery, and Somerset misjudged his battle position just
enough to allow the king's young brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester (later
King Richard
III of England]), to attack
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their flank. Panic set in among the retreating Lancastrians, and Somerset
is alleged to have killed one of his own commanders, Lord Wenlock, as punishment
for his fatal lack of initiative. In a field known as the "Bloody Meadow",
perhaps as many as half Somerset's forces were slaughtered. Some fled to the
nearby Tewkesbury
Abbey, where their enemies are said to have pursued them. One of the casualties
was Edward, Prince of Wales, though whether he died during or after the battle
is uncertain. He remains the only Prince of Wales to have died in battle.
All his commanders, including Somerset, were summarily executed shortly afterwards,
leaving Queen Margaret and her daughter-in-law, Anne
Neville, as the king's most prestigious prisoners. King Henry VI, already
imprisoned in the Tower
of London, was murdered there a few days later.