Edward VI took the English throne in
1461. When he unex-pectedly died in 1483, his brother Richard was one of the
most powerful men in the kingdom. Edward IV left two little sons, Edward,
Prince of Wales, age twelve, and Richard, Duke of York, age nine. Their uncle
Richard made a conspiracy to seize the Princes. He brought them to London and
locked away in the Tower, and started to move toward usurpation. He alleged
that the marriage of his dead brother, Edward IV, was invalid because Ed-ward
had previously promised to marry another woman.
As a result, the little princes were
declared bastards, and young Edward V had no right to the throne of England. To
assure his own security, Richard is believed to have ordered to murder the
little princes in the Tower. He became King Richard III. Richard had the most obvious
reasons for wanting the young princes dead. He lived through a civil war that
taught him that pow-erful men were always ready to rally around a standard
revolt. If such a flag could be raised for a prince of the royal blood to
restore him to a rightful throne, noblemen with great lands, great debts, and
empty wallets might readily take arms, looking for the main chance in the
change of kings.
Richard never felt secure on his
throne; his swift, lawless, and lethal moves against those who threatened him
showed that he was capable of murder if by murder he could rid himself of the
mortal danger. And as long as the little princes remained alive the danger was
always present. In the summer of 1483, the little princes disappeared forever;
that much is certain. Richard III was killed in the battle on 22 August 1485.
Henry Tudor, earl of Richmond, now
King Henry VII by right of con-quest and some other hereditary claims, felt he
needed to justify his own actions at the battle of Bosworth. He issued a royal
proclama-tion, dated the day before the battle, declaring himself the rightful
king of England and condemning Richard as the rebellious subject. In 1674 two
small skeletons were found in a wooden box bur-ied ten feet under a small
staircase that workmen were removing from the White Tower. They were thought to
be the bones of the little princes. King Charles II had his own reasons for
being offended at the murder of kings, so he placed these bones in the chapel
of Henry VII in Westminster Abbey.
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