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Edward V

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Edward V
King of England
Reign9 April 1483 – 26 June 1483
(78 days)
PredecessorEdward IV
SuccessorRichard III
ProtectorRichard, Duke of Gloucester
Burial
HouseHouse of York
FatherEdward IV
MotherElizabeth Woodville

Edward V (2 November 1470 – ?July or October 1483) was King of England from 9 April 1483 until his deposition two months later. His reign was dominated by the influence of his uncle Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who succeeded him as Richard III. Along with his younger brother Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York, Edward was one of the Princes in the Tower, who disappeared after being sent (ostensibly for their own safety) to the Tower of London. Richard III has been widely blamed for their deaths, but controversy continues concerning the actual events.

Along with Edward VIII, Empress Matilda and Lady Jane Grey, Edward V is one of only four English monarchs since the Norman Conquest never to have been crowned. If, as seems likely, he died before his fifteenth birthday, he is the shortest-lived monarch in English history (his great-nephew Edward VI died in his sixteenth year).

Early life

Edward was born in November 1470 in a sanctuary within Westminster Abbey, where his mother, Elizabeth Woodville, had sought sanctuary from Lancastrians who had temporarily removed his father, the Yorkist King Edward IV, from power as part of the Wars of the Roses. Edward was created Prince of Wales in June 1471, following Edward IV's restoration to the throne, and in 1473 was established at Ludlow Castle on the Welsh Marches as nominal president of a newly-created Council of Wales and the Marches.

Prince Edward was placed under the supervision of the queen's brother Anthony, Earl Rivers, a noted scholar, and in a letter to Rivers, Edward IV set down precise conditions for the upbringing of his son and the management of his household.[1] The prince was to "arise every morning at a convenient hour, according to his age". His day would begin with matins and then mass, which he was to receive uninterrupted. After breakfast, the business of educating the prince began with "virtuous learning". Dinner was served from ten in the morning, and then the prince was to be read "noble stories ... of virtue, honour, cunning, wisdom, and of deeds of worship" but "of nothing that should move or stir him to vice". Perhaps aware of his own vices, the king was keen to safeguard his son's morals, and instructed Rivers to ensure that no one in the prince's household was a habitual "swearer, brawler, backbiter, common hazarder, adulterer, [or user of] words of ribaldry". After further study, in the afternoon the prince was to engage in sporting activities suitable for his class, before evensong. Supper was served from four, and curtains were to be drawn at eight. Following this, the prince's attendants were to "enforce themselves to make him merry and joyous towards his bed". They would then watch over him as he slept.

King Edward's diligence appeared to bear fruit, as Dominic Mancini reported of the young Edward V:

In word and deed he gave so many proofs of his liberal education, of polite nay rather scholarly, attainments far beyond his age; ... his special knowledge of literature ... enabled him to discourse elegantly, to understand fully, and to declaim most excellently from any work whether in verse or prose that came into his hands, unless it were from the more abstruse authors. He had such dignity in his whole person, and in his face such charm, that however much they might gaze, he never wearied the eyes of beholders.[2]

As with several of his other children, Edward IV planned a prestigious European marriage for his eldest son, and in 1480 concluded an alliance with the Duke of Brittany, Francis II, whereby Prince Edward was betrothed to the duke's four-year-old heir, Anne. The two were to be married upon their majority, and the devolution of Brittany would have been given to the second child to be born, the first becoming Prince of Wales. Those plans disappeared together with Edward V.

Reign

Coat of arms of King Edward V

It was at Ludlow that the 12-year-old prince received news of his father's sudden death, on 9 April 1483. Edward IV's will, which has not survived, nominated his trusted brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester, as Protector during the minority of his son. Both the new king and his party from the west, and Richard from the north, set out for London, converging in Northamptonshire. On the night of 29 April Richard met and dined with Earl Rivers and Edward's half-brother, Richard Grey, but the following morning Rivers and Grey, along with the king's chamberlain, Thomas Vaughan, were arrested and sent north.[3] They were all subsequently executed. Mancini reports that Edward protested, but the remainder of his entourage was dismissed and Richard escorted him to London, where the new king took up residence in the Tower of London. On 16 June he was joined by his younger brother, Richard, Duke of York.

Edward's coronation was repeatedly postponed and then, on 22 June, Ralph Shaa presented evidence in a sermon that Edward IV had already been contracted to marry Lady Eleanor Butler when he married Elizabeth Woodville, thereby rendering his marriage to Elizabeth invalid and their children together illegitimate. The children of Richard's older brother George, Duke of Clarence, were barred from the throne by their father's attainder, and therefore, on 25 June, an assembly of Lords and Commons declared Richard to be the legitimate king (this was later confirmed by the act of parliament Titulus Regius). The following day he acceded to the throne as King Richard III.

Disappearance

King Edward V and the Duke of York in the Tower of London by Paul Delaroche. The theme of innocent children awaiting an uncertain fate was a popular one amongst 19th-century painters.

After Richard III's accession, the princes were gradually seen less and less within the Tower, and by the end of the summer of 1483 they had disappeared from public view altogether. Their fate remains unknown, but it is generally believed that they were murdered. The five principal suspects are King Richard; his one-time ally Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham; Richard's servant James Tyrrel; and Margaret Beaufort and her son Henry Tudor, who defeated Richard at Bosworth Field and took the throne as Henry VII. William Shakespeare depicted Tyrrel as the murderer (under King Richard's orders) in the play Richard III.

Bones were discovered in 1674 by workmen rebuilding a stairway in the Tower, and these were subsequently placed in Westminster Abbey, in an urn bearing the names of Edward and Richard. However it has never been proven that the bones belonged to the princes. In 1789, workmen carrying out repairs in St George's Chapel, Windsor, rediscovered and accidentally broke into the vault of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville. Adjoining this was another vault, which was found to contain the coffins of two unidentified children. However no inspection or examination was conducted and the tomb was resealed.[4]

In 1486 Edward's sister, Elizabeth, married Henry VII, thereby uniting the Houses of York and Lancaster.

Family of Edward V
16. Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York
8. Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge
17. Infanta Isabella of Castile, Duchess of York
4. Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York
18. Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March
9. Anne de Mortimer
19. Alianore de Holland
2. Edward IV of England
20. John Neville, 3rd Baron Neville de Raby
10. Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland
21. Maud Percy
5. Cecily Neville
22. John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster
11. Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland
23. Katherine Swynford
1. Edward V of England
24. Richard Wydeville
12. Sir Richard Wydevill
25. Elizabeth Lyons
6. Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers
26. John Bodulgate
13. Elizabeth Bodulgate
27. Joan Beauchamp
3. Elizabeth Woodville
28. Jean I de Luxembourg, Comte de Brienne
14. Peter of Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol
29. Marguerite d'Enghien, Comtesse de Brienne
7. Jacquetta of Luxembourg
30. Francois de Baux, Duke of Andria
15. Margherita del Balzo
31. Sueva Orsini del Balzo

Portrayals in fiction

Edward is a character in the play Richard III by William Shakespeare. In film and television adaptations of this play he has been portrayed by the following actors:

Edward has also been portrayed by Ronald Sinclair in Tower of London, a 1939 horror film loosely dramatising the rise to power of Richard III, and by Eugene Martin in the 1962 remake. Jonathan Soper portrayed him in the "Who Killed the Princes in the Tower?" episode of the BBC drama documentary series Second Verdict in 1976, and Timotei Cresta played him in the 2005 British television drama Princes in the Tower.

In the book Sent from The Missing series by Margaret Peterson Haddix, Edward is revealed to be Chip. In the future, a time travel organization is created to save the "missing" children of history. They travel to the night of the murder, and grab Edward and his brother before they were killed. In the anime Black Butler (Kuroshitsuji), Edward and his brother are presented as ghosts haunting Ludlow Castle until they can pass on to heaven. Edward also appears in Robin Maxwell's To The Tower Born: A Novel of the Lost Princes a story of what might have happened to the princes while they were in the tower.

References

  • Ashley, Mike (2002). British Kings & Queens. Carroll & Graf. ISBN 0-7867-1104-3. pp. 217–9.
  • Hicks, Michael (2003). Edward V: The Prince in the Tower. The History Press. ISBN 0-7524-1996-X.
  • Kendall, Paul Murray (1955). Richard III. W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-3930-0785-5.
  • Weir, Alison (1995). The Princes in the Tower. Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-3453-9178-0.
  1. ^ Letter from Edward IV to Earl Rivers and the Bishop of Rochester (1473), in Readings in English Social History (Cambridge University Press, 1921), pp. 205-8.
  2. ^ Dominic Mancini, The Usurpation of Richard III (1483), in A. R. Myers (ed.), English Historical Documents 1327-1485 (Routledge, 1996), pp. 330-3.
  3. ^ History of Croyland Abbey, Third Continuation
  4. ^ Chapter Records XXIII to XXVI, The Chapter Library, St George's Chapel, Windsor (Permission required); William St John Hope, Windsor Castle: An Architectural History (1913), pp. 418-9; Vetusta Monumenta, Volume III (1789), p. 4.
Edward V
Cadet branch of the House of Plantagenet
Born: 2 November 1470 Died: 1483?
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of England
Lord of Ireland

1483
Succeeded by
English royalty
Preceded by Heir to the English Throne
as heir apparent
11 April 1471 – 9 April 1483
Succeeded by
Prince of Wales
1471–1483
Succeeded by
Peerage of England
Preceded by Duke of Cornwall
1470–1483
Succeeded by
New creation Earl of March
2nd creation
1479–1483
Merged in Crown

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