Today marks the anniversary of the death, in 1422, of King Henry V of England. His death would set in motion the events that would eventually
play out as what was then referred to as the Cousins War and is today referred to as the War of the Roses.
Henry V, the
victor of Agincourt, died
young. His only child, also named Henry, was nine months oldat
the time of his father’s death. Upon his father’s death, and subject of course to a Regency, young Henry, now Henry VI, was elevated to the English throne. Henry VI’s mother was Catherine of Valois, a French
princess who after Agincourt married Henry
V; under the Treaty of Troyes, Henry V was to inherit the French throne.
Of course, that did not come to pass as
the civil war
aspect of the Hundred Years War was ultimately
resolved (the enemy of my enemy is my friend). So now sitting on the throne was Henry VI, whose mother was a member of the house in Valois. That particular house
was troubled
with some sort (today it cannot be entirely diagnosed) of mental instability. At various times in his life this instability would manifest in Henry VI. In some of the later experiences he would be effectively
catatonic while
at other times he would appear to have no appreciation
of where he was or what he was doing. Regardless of the degree of expression from time to time, these were not characteristics of
an effective
medieval king. In addition, Henry VI would go on to marry Margaret
of Anjou. Being French, she brought no natural allies
to Henry’s household and, for herself, was generally disliked.
And so the
stage was set; following the
highly effective
and well liked war hero Henry V, the country was plunged into a minority kingship with a regency and all of the instability that
flows therefrom. The
Duke of York, who
had aspirations
to the throne, served as a regent. Meanwhile nothing
to bring stability to Henry VI’s position flowed
from his marriage to Margaret of Anjou.
Ultimately, the Cousins War would erupt. York would, in one of its earlier battles, be killed
(Wakefield in 1460), but ultimately his son, Edward IV, would prevail in that conflict
(Towton, 1461), taking the throne and then protecting it
(except when he lost it for a period) through
the balance
of the War
of the Roses.
But then
after his death the throne would pass to Richard III, it in turn being taken from him at the Battle of Bosworth Field by Henry Tudor, known to history as Henry VII.
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