The Death of Kings The Plantagenets


The Death of Kings

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WIND AND RIPPLING WAVES

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In October 1399

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a prisoner was secretly taken from his cell in The Tower of London.

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He was the eighth Plantagenet King to rule England,

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Richard II.

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It was said that as he was taken along the Thames,

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he was wailing and loudly lamenting that he had ever been born.

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Three months later, he was found starved to death.

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The man responsible for Richard's downfall

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was another Plantagenet, his cousin Henry of Lancaster.

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Henry had deposed Richard and installed himself as King.

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It was a kind of original sin

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from which the Plantagenets would never recover.

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A French chronicler commented,

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"Something acquired wickedly cannot last long."

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The House of Plantagenet was now fatally divided along lines

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that would never be reconciled.

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MUSIC

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The usurpation and murder of an anointed King violated sacred taboos

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and undermined the foundations of Plantagenet power.

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The right to rule of future Plantagenet Kings

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would now be in doubt

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and they would have to fight to keep their grip on the throne.

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Plantagenet turned against Plantagenet

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in the battle for the crown

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and they dragged England into decades of brutal civil war.

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Within less than a century, four Plantagenet Kings

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met violent deaths at the hands of their own relatives.

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This was the bloodiest episode in the whole history of

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the English monarchy, and this death of Kings, this royal blood-letting,

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ended in the complete destruction of the Plantagenet dynasty.

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MUSIC

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MUSIC

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In the summer of 1381,

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thousands of armed peasants stormed the city of London.

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SHOUTING

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They set fire to palaces and property.

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Nobles, lawyers and foreigners were hunted down and killed.

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This became known as The Peasants' Revolt,

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the greatest uprising in the history of medieval England.

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The Plantagenets were confronted by the most serious threat

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the lower classes had ever posed to royal power.

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MUSIC

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And sitting on the throne was a boy King.

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Richard II had been crowned four years earlier at the age of ten.

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He was forced to flee from his own subjects.

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Richard was just 14 years old.

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He sought refuge here in the Tower of London.

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It must have been terrifying as he looked out from the top of a turret

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to see his capital engulfed in flames,

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and everyone looked to him to bring an end to the violence.

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This was the first real test of his kingship.

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A new tax had triggered the riots.

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It was levied in the name of the King

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to pay for the Plantagenets' war against the French monarchy.

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It was a poll tax imposed on every man and woman

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over the age of 14, regardless of income.

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It inflamed resentment against the great inequalities

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in medieval society.

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According to the chronicler Henry Knighton,

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the rebels outside were demanding

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that every man in the Kingdom of England should be free

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and remain free of the yoke of servitude forever.

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A particular target of their hostility was the boy King's

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inner circle, the councillors who had been ruling on his behalf.

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These powerful officials were responsible for levying

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the reviled poll tax, and they would face the wrath of the rebels.

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MUSIC

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One of the King's closest advisors and his Chancellor

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was Simon Sudbury, the Archbishop of Canterbury.

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In terror, he'd also taken refuge in the Tower.

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On the third day of rioting he was here in St John's Chapel

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praying for his life.

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The insurgents broke in

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and seized him along with the King's treasurer.

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SHOUTING AND FIGHTING

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Their heads were hacked off and paraded through the city on pikes.

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SINISTER MUSIC

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On the fourth day, in a bid to end the riots,

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Richard rode out to negotiate with the rebels.

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Some open ground here, just outside the city walls,

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was chosen for the meeting,

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a place called Smoothfield or Smithfield,

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used for tournaments, fairs and festivals.

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The King was meeting the people on their own territory -

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this was a promising start.

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But with the royal forces vastly outnumbered by the rebels,

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Richard was placing himself in a perilous position.

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MUSIC

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The peasants' leader was called Wat Tyler.

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He approached the King

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and repeated the demands for freedom and equality.

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The King agreed, but then a scuffle broke out.

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Tyler lashed out with his dagger

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and the Mayor of London plunged his sword into Tyler's neck.

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SHARP THUDS

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These are the gates of the Priory

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that stands on the edge of Smithfield.

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Just behind me was where Wat Tyler was stabbed

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and was seen to fall from his horse.

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The rebels drew their weapons to avenge him. At that moment,

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the future of the Plantagenet dynasty hung in the balance.

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But Richard took the initiative.

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He spurred his horse forward into the crowd and pledged,

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"I will be your King, your captain and your leader."

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The mood changed.

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With the added assurance of a charter granting them pardons

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and freedom, the rebels began to disperse.

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Richard had single-handedly turned the tide of rebellion

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and he'd seen for himself the impact of his royal power.

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Richard's encounter with his subjects at Smithfield

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was a defining moment in the young King's reign.

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Four years earlier at his coronation he'd been anointed with holy oil,

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which was believed to set him apart from his subjects,

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making him God's anointed.

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Triumph here at Smithfield confirmed Richard's self-belief

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in his God-given right to rule,

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a conviction that dominated the rest of his reign.

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MUSIC

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In the Middle Ages it was believed that kingship was ordained by God,

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and Richard had complete faith in his divine right to rule.

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He tried to demonstrate his elevated status,

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not through war like many of his Plantagenet predecessors,

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but through royal displays of ritual and ceremony, architecture and art.

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This altarpiece reveals how he saw his place in the world

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and his relationship with God.

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This is the Wilton Diptych,

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one of the most beautiful paintings ever produced in medieval England.

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It was commissioned by Richard II in the 1390s,

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although it shows him as a much more youthful figure,

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perhaps at the time of the meeting with the rebels in Smithfield.

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Behind him stand his patron saints, John the Baptist,

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Edward the Confessor and Edmund King and Martyr -

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the last two, like Richard himself, English Kings.

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Opposite them stands the Virgin Mary holding the Christ Child

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surrounded by angels.

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Every angel wears a badge of the white hart, Richard's own symbol.

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Christ is blessing this banner,

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which has at the top a red cross flag and a tiny orb.

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Analysis under a microscope has revealed that within that orb

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is a painting of a green island with a white tower set in a silver sea -

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England.

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Richard is receiving his kingdom from Christ himself.

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MUSIC

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This perfectly expresses Richard's exalted sense of kingship,

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but his high conception of royal status

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led to a political earthquake that destroyed him

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and would ultimately result in

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the extinction of the Plantagenet dynasty itself.

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Richard's sense of superiority as God's anointed ruler

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continued to grow.

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He demanded to be treated with ever-greater reverence

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and devised elaborate new court rituals

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to set himself above his nobles.

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Richard was the first English King who insisted

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on being addressed as "Your Highness".

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One chronicler describes how he had a throne set up in the chamber

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where he sat after supper,

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watching everyone, but addressing no-one.

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Whenever he looked at anybody, however grand they were,

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they had to bend the knee.

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But the men he was abasing included

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some of the greatest nobles in the land.

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They were outraged by his arrogance.

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Like all Plantagenet kings,

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Richard's power was dependent on the support of his nobles.

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He relied on them to supply him with money and troops.

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But Richard made no effort to win their favour or respect.

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He alienated them still further by surrounding himself with a clique

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of favourites, many of low birth, on whom he lavished land and titles.

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In 1387, the established nobility,

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as well as members of Richard's own family, took up arms against him.

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When Richard was 20, a group of his nobles,

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including his cousin Henry of Lancaster,

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seized control of the government by force

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and executed his favourite knights.

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But Richard had his revenge.

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Within 11 years all his chief enemies were either killed

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or exiled, including Henry, who was banished for ten years.

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MUSIC

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Henry was the son of England's wealthiest

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and most powerful landowner, The Duke of Lancaster.

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He was Richard's first cousin

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and they had played together as children,

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but they grew up to be very different.

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Henry was a great knight, a champion jouster

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and popular with the nobility.

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GALLOPING HOOVES

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He had four sons, while Richard was childless.

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Seeing Henry as a threat, Richard resolved to remove him.

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Henry's ten-year banishment was a terrible punishment,

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but he still expected to inherit his father's lands,

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the Great Duchy of Lancaster.

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But Richard took yet further revenge.

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When Henry's father died,

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the King confiscated all the lands that should have come to him.

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With nothing left to lose, Henry determined to return to England

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and reclaim his inheritance.

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MUSIC

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When Henry arrived in Yorkshire in July 1399,

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barons from across the country flocked to his banner.

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They feared that if Richard could confiscate his own cousin's lands,

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then no-one's property was safe.

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They began to back Henry as a replacement for the King.

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Henry's timing was perfect.

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Richard was away in Ireland, fighting to maintain English rule.

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In his absence, Henry could muster support unopposed.

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When Richard finally got back to England,

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he found that even his closest friends

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and household retainers were beginning to desert him.

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Richard realised his support was collapsing.

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According to the chronicle of Dieulacres Abbey,

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he set off secretly in the middle of the night

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accompanied by only 15 companions.

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He fled from castle to castle looking for refuge and support.

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He found none.

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Eventually Richard met with Henry's envoys, who escorted him here,

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to the great castle at Flint.

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Their ancestor Edward I had built it during his conquest of the Welsh

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and now it was to be the site of a momentous meeting

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between the two Plantagenet cousins.

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Henry approached the castle accompanied by a force

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thousands strong, among them the nobles who had deserted Richard.

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This display of military might against the anointed monarch

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set a dangerous precedent for future Plantagenet kings.

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Richard was here inside the keep,

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and Henry entered to meet his cousin.

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Later, Henry's supporters claimed that Richard then promised

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to renounce the throne,

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but given his views of Kingship that's likely to be pure propaganda.

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What is not in doubt is that Richard was now Henry's captive.

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The King who had set himself above all others

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was nothing more than a powerless prisoner.

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Just six weeks later, on 30th September 1399, Henry's seizure of

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the throne was publicly confirmed at a ceremony here at Westminster Hall.

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Parliament assembled beneath the magnificent hammer beam ceiling

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that Richard II had had constructed.

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It was announced that on the previous day,

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Richard, a captive in the Tower, had abdicated,

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and 39 charges against him were read out.

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Then Henry stood up.

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"I, Henry of Lancaster claim this kingdom of England and the crown."

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The assembled lords gave their consent and led him to the throne.

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Henry had won the crown, but he would have to fight to keep it.

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Richard's misrule had turned many against him, but in an age

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of deeply held religious belief, he was still God's anointed ruler.

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In deposing him, Henry had committed a grave sin.

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Four months later, he was guilty of an even greater crime.

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In February 1400, it was announced that the former king had died.

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In all probability, Richard had been starved to death on Henry's orders.

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Henry had broken the sacred rules of kingship

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that underpinned Plantagenet power.

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His struggle for legitimacy didn't end with Richard's murder.

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HOLLOW THUD

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Henry had not inherited his throne but usurped it,

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deposing and killing an anointed King to do so.

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And so his right to his throne was questioned, both at home and abroad.

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Plots, uprisings and conspiracies marked his reign.

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And although he managed to hold on to his throne, he had broken

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a great taboo, and others would find it easier to do the same.

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MUSIC

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Henry's usurpation created a fatal schism

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within the Plantagenet family.

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Henry's House of Lancaster was descended

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from the third son of Edward III,

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but another Plantagenet line descended from the second son.

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In the future, these descendants could claim

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a greater right to the throne than King Henry IV and his offspring.

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Doubt over Henry's right to rule

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cast a shadow over his own heir, Henry V.

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When he came to the throne at the age of 26,

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he was already a famous warrior and a strong, forceful leader.

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He was determined to prove his right to the throne

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through victory in battle.

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He decided to go to war to win a prize

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that had obsessed the Plantagenets for generations.

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The Plantagenets had their origins in the French county of Anjou

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and at its height their empire included not only England,

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but most of France.

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Since 1340, they'd even claimed to be Kings of France.

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Henry V determined to cross the Channel and claim his birthright.

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He began in Normandy, laying siege to the port of Harfleur.

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After five weeks, the town was forced to surrender.

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Henry marched at the head of his army towards Calais,

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nearly 200 miles away.

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By then, the French had amassed a huge army

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and tried to prevent him crossing the River Somme.

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Henry's forces found a place to ford the river,

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but their path was barred by the enemy at the village of Agincourt.

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What happened here at Agincourt on 25th October 1415

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has been immortalised by Shakespeare.

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It's the most famous battle of the entire Plantagenet era

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and Henry V displayed qualities

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that made him the most celebrated of all the Plantagenet warrior kings.

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At the outset, defeat looked certain.

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The English soldiers were exhausted, starving and battle-weary.

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They were also vastly outnumbered.

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MUSIC

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The odds were overwhelmingly against the English,

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but Henry believed he had God on his side.

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When one of his knights said that he wished

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they had 1,000 more soldiers, Henry replied,

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"I would not have one man more even if I could,

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"for those that I have here are God's people.

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"These humble few will conquer the pride of the French."

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But Henry didn't rely on God alone.

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Henry was a gifted tactician.

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He drew his army up between two woods that

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stood here on the field of battle on either side at that time, so

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the French couldn't outflank him and had to advance on a narrow front.

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MUSIC

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The French were forced to attack across a muddy field.

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Their elite cavalry charged,

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only to be cut down by the English longbowmen.

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Those who survived the arrows were caught in a quagmire

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between the two armies.

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The battle turned in favour of Henry's humble few.

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With victory in their sights,

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the English began rounding up French prisoners.

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According to the chivalric code of honour

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their lives would be spared...

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..but a cry suddenly went up

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that French reinforcements were about to launch a fresh attack.

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Henry knew that his forces couldn't withstand another assault

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and secure the prisoners.

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He was afraid they would escape and rejoin the battle.

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With deliberate ruthlessness, he ordered the prisoners to be killed.

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But the second assault never came.

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Seeing so many of their men killed, the French fled the battlefield.

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The prisoners had been needlessly slaughtered.

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Henry's desire to win had led him

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to break the revered conventions of chivalry.

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Victory had come before honour.

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Henry's qualities as a brave soldier and a calculating general

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had helped the English win a great victory.

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It became a founding symbol of the English underdog

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triumphing against the odds.

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And in the medieval period it was believed

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that the outcome of battles was determined by God's will.

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Henry's victory showed that he had God's favour.

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The question mark over the Lancastrians' right to rule

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was removed for the time being.

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Agincourt was just the beginning of Henry's plan of conquest.

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Over the next five years he took France castle by castle,

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town by town.

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By 1420 he'd reclaimed many of the lands lost

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by his Plantagenet predecessor, King John.

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He now controlled more than a third of France.

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This was a spectacular triumph

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against the Plantagenet's age-old enemy.

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Henry owed his success as much to French weakness

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as to English strength.

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The King of France, Charles VI, suffered from mental illness

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and the country was being torn apart by civil war.

0:25:000:25:03

All this enabled Henry to win his resounding victories,

0:25:030:25:08

and next he negotiated this extraordinary treaty

0:25:080:25:11

with the French king,

0:25:110:25:13

signed here in the heart of Champagne in the city of Troyes.

0:25:130:25:17

Here Charles promises that after his death

0:25:170:25:19

the crown and the kingdom of France,

0:25:190:25:21

with all its rights and appurtenances,

0:25:210:25:23

will remain with King Henry and his heirs forever.

0:25:230:25:27

And here he commands his nobles that when he is dead

0:25:280:25:31

they shall recognise Henry as their liege lord,

0:25:310:25:34

sovereign and true King of France.

0:25:340:25:36

Henry was now recognised as the heir to the French throne

0:25:370:25:41

and in the meantime he would serve as Regent of France.

0:25:410:25:45

The French King's son, the Dauphin, was disinherited.

0:25:500:25:54

And on 2nd June 1420,

0:25:550:25:57

the Plantagenet seizure of the French throne

0:25:570:26:00

was secured through a magnificent diplomatic marriage.

0:26:000:26:04

Henry married the daughter of the French King,

0:26:060:26:09

Catherine of Valois, at a dazzling ceremony here in Troyes.

0:26:090:26:13

Henry had realised a Plantagenet dream -

0:26:160:26:18

he was in effect now King of England and of France.

0:26:180:26:22

At the wedding, Henry and his English followers revelled wildly.

0:26:220:26:26

According to one French chronicler,

0:26:260:26:28

it was as if at that moment he was king of the whole world.

0:26:280:26:32

18 months later, Henry V's new queen gave birth to a son.

0:26:350:26:39

The Plantagenet ambition to rule a French and English empire

0:26:410:26:45

had finally been achieved.

0:26:450:26:47

But Henry's joy was short-lived.

0:26:500:26:52

In the medieval period it was births and deaths in the ruling dynasties

0:26:520:26:56

that determined the destinies of kingdoms.

0:26:560:26:59

And now the history of Western Europe was transformed

0:26:590:27:01

suddenly by two deaths.

0:27:010:27:03

While campaigning in France, Henry died of dysentery,

0:27:030:27:07

that common disease of soldiers' camps,

0:27:070:27:09

and Charles of France soon followed him to the grave.

0:27:090:27:13

Henry V's son, a baby of ten months old,

0:27:130:27:17

was now King of England and of France.

0:27:170:27:19

The English coronation of the young Plantagenet prince, another Henry,

0:27:220:27:27

took place in Westminster Abbey in November 1429.

0:27:270:27:31

His French coronation in Notre Dame in Paris came two years later.

0:27:320:27:37

Henry VI is the only monarch ever to be crowned

0:27:420:27:45

both King of England and King of France.

0:27:450:27:47

It was a Plantagenet triumph.

0:27:490:27:52

But it wasn't to last.

0:27:540:27:56

By the time of Henry VI's coronation in Paris,

0:27:560:27:59

the tide was already beginning to turn against the English.

0:27:590:28:02

The French nobles rallied to the dispossessed Dauphin,

0:28:020:28:06

a unified French force was beginning to emerge

0:28:060:28:09

and the English were overstretched.

0:28:090:28:12

Only another great warrior king could save the Plantagenet empire.

0:28:120:28:16

Henry VI was the House of Lancaster's third Plantagenet King.

0:28:240:28:28

As he grew up, the shadow of his grandfather's usurpation

0:28:310:28:35

of Richard II's throne seemed to have passed.

0:28:350:28:39

But Henry turned out to be no warrior,

0:28:390:28:42

nor was he a gifted leader.

0:28:420:28:44

He was a simple, pious man

0:28:440:28:46

who devoted himself to good works and charitable causes.

0:28:460:28:50

Unlike his father, Henry didn't lead armies in France.

0:28:530:28:57

Instead he lavished time, money and energy on this,

0:28:570:29:00

his personal project, Eton College.

0:29:000:29:04

He laid the foundation stone himself

0:29:040:29:06

and supervised its development down to the smallest detail.

0:29:060:29:09

Henry founded the school in 1440 to educate children

0:29:120:29:15

selected from the lower ranks of society.

0:29:150:29:18

There were plans to build the largest chapel in England,

0:29:210:29:24

where people would gather to pray for the soul of the king.

0:29:240:29:28

Here in the college library are the original charters for the school.

0:29:310:29:35

These documents describe everything from the services

0:29:380:29:41

that were held in the chapel to the dimensions of the building.

0:29:410:29:44

And in this magnificent charter

0:29:460:29:48

we see Henry kneeling beneath the royal arms and his crown,

0:29:480:29:52

presenting the college to the Virgin Mary.

0:29:520:29:56

This was clearly something very close to his heart.

0:29:560:29:59

And this page records instructions made by the king

0:30:010:30:05

about the dimensions of the church

0:30:050:30:07

and sometimes there are crossings-out and corrections -

0:30:070:30:11

the church was getting bigger.

0:30:110:30:14

And Henry's approval of all this

0:30:150:30:17

is recorded by his signature at the top of the page.

0:30:170:30:20

This was a worthy project,

0:30:230:30:26

but many saw it as a dangerous distraction

0:30:260:30:29

from more important royal duties.

0:30:290:30:32

While Henry was worrying about the exact dimensions

0:30:320:30:34

of the buildings here at Eton,

0:30:340:30:36

the French territories conquered by his father

0:30:360:30:39

were slipping from his grasp.

0:30:390:30:41

By now the French had crowned the Dauphin as Charles VII of France.

0:30:430:30:47

He created France's first standing army,

0:30:480:30:51

his soldiers equipped with the latest artillery.

0:30:510:30:56

Meanwhile Henry was caught up with his school for the poor.

0:30:580:31:01

His own parliament became exasperated.

0:31:030:31:05

They said the cost of Eton was extravagant and vexatious.

0:31:050:31:10

They wanted him to continue hostilities, but Henry,

0:31:100:31:14

driven by his own piety, sought peace.

0:31:140:31:17

In 1444, in an attempt to secure a truce,

0:31:190:31:24

Henry made an extraordinary secret deal with the French.

0:31:240:31:28

He agreed to marry Charles VII's niece, Margaret of Anjou.

0:31:280:31:33

And here in the college library is a rare picture of Margaret.

0:31:350:31:38

She's shown kneeling next to her husband,

0:31:380:31:41

the King, in the college chapel.

0:31:410:31:43

Usually when the terms of a dynastic marriage were hammered out,

0:31:450:31:49

the bride came with a handsome dowry.

0:31:490:31:51

Not this time.

0:31:510:31:53

Instead, in a startling move, Henry promised to hand over

0:31:530:31:57

the strategic French county of Maine to his bride's family.

0:31:570:32:01

This was where the first Plantagenet king had been born.

0:32:010:32:04

No Plantagenet had ever surrendered land in France so easily -

0:32:040:32:08

and it didn't bring peace.

0:32:080:32:10

The French were rapidly reclaiming Plantagenet territory.

0:32:120:32:16

In 1448, Maine was formally ceded to France.

0:32:160:32:20

Two years later Normandy fell,

0:32:230:32:27

then in 1453, the Plantagenets' oldest and most prized

0:32:270:32:31

French possession was taken.

0:32:310:32:34

Gascony had been in their hands since the formation of the dynasty.

0:32:340:32:39

Now it, too, was lost at the Battle of Castillon.

0:32:390:32:43

All that remained under English rule was a tiny enclave around Calais.

0:32:440:32:49

In just one generation, Henry V's spectacular legacy had vanished.

0:32:510:32:56

The Plantagenet lands in France were lost

0:32:590:33:02

and they would never be recovered.

0:33:020:33:04

But future English Kings were slow to abandon their claim.

0:33:040:33:07

It wasn't until 1800 that George III finally acknowledged reality

0:33:070:33:13

and gave up his official title, King of France.

0:33:130:33:16

For Henry VI, news of the fall of Gascony was devastating.

0:33:170:33:22

Within a week of the terrible defeat

0:33:220:33:24

he collapsed into a catatonic stupor.

0:33:240:33:26

His condition may have been inherited

0:33:300:33:32

from his maternal grandfather, King Charles VI of France.

0:33:320:33:36

He wasn't even aware when his wife gave birth to a son,

0:33:410:33:45

a new Lancastrian heir to the throne of England.

0:33:450:33:49

France was lost and the King was mad.

0:33:520:33:54

The absence of royal leadership showed once again

0:33:540:33:57

the fragility of dynastic rule,

0:33:570:33:59

a system that was only as strong

0:33:590:34:01

as the King or Queen who sat on the throne.

0:34:010:34:03

And with Henry VI mentally ill,

0:34:030:34:05

doubts about the Lancastrian regime came back to haunt the Plantagenets.

0:34:050:34:10

Waiting in the wings was a cousin who thought

0:34:100:34:13

he had a claim to the throne just as good as Henry VI and his young son.

0:34:130:34:17

Richard, Duke of York

0:34:210:34:23

was a descendant of Edward III's second son

0:34:230:34:27

and he believed his right to the throne was greater than Henry's.

0:34:270:34:31

Henry of Lancaster had taken the throne through military might -

0:34:340:34:39

now Richard of York felt empowered to do the same.

0:34:390:34:42

He signalled his intent to take power

0:34:440:34:47

by calling himself Richard Plantagenet.

0:34:470:34:50

He was the first to use the Plantagenet family name

0:34:520:34:55

since the foundation of the dynasty.

0:34:550:34:57

Ludlow was one of his most important power bases.

0:34:590:35:02

As Henry VI lapsed into mental illness,

0:35:020:35:05

Duke Richard began to advance the claims

0:35:050:35:08

of his branch of the Plantagenets.

0:35:080:35:10

St Laurence's Ludlow contains hidden evidence of his family pride

0:35:100:35:14

and his dynastic ambition.

0:35:140:35:16

Richard of York's ancestors had worshipped in the church

0:35:240:35:27

in Ludlow for generations.

0:35:270:35:29

These small, decorative ledges are known as misery cords

0:35:360:35:40

and they were carved onto the back of choir stalls for weary choristers

0:35:400:35:45

and clergy to lean on during long services.

0:35:450:35:48

All kinds of scenes are represented.

0:35:510:35:53

Here is the medieval idea of womanhood.

0:35:530:35:55

A little bit further down a countryman is warming himself

0:35:570:36:01

by the fire while his winter stocks and stores hang around him.

0:36:010:36:05

And here is a wrestling match, a popular sport in the Middle Ages.

0:36:070:36:11

But some of the carvings have a much more political edge.

0:36:140:36:17

There's a white hart, emblem of Richard II,

0:36:200:36:24

the king whom the Lancastrians had deposed and killed.

0:36:240:36:27

And here is a superbly carved falcon and fetterlock,

0:36:290:36:32

the personal badge of Richard Duke of York.

0:36:320:36:35

And here is the white rose,

0:36:380:36:40

the famous symbol of The House of York

0:36:400:36:43

under which they fought as they made their bid for the throne.

0:36:430:36:46

In his catatonic state Henry VI was incapable of ruling on behalf of

0:36:510:36:57

the Lancastrians, but this would be no easy takeover for the Yorkists.

0:36:570:37:02

The King's wife Margaret struggled ferociously

0:37:050:37:09

to secure her son's right to the throne.

0:37:090:37:12

Shakespeare would later call her "the she-wolf of France".

0:37:120:37:17

In their dynastic wars with France the Plantagenets had united England

0:37:180:37:23

by harnessing a growing sense of nationhood.

0:37:230:37:26

But now, as the dynasty split into warring factions,

0:37:280:37:33

the country was divided by The Houses of Lancaster and York.

0:37:330:37:37

Once again the Plantagenets dragged England into civil war.

0:37:390:37:44

The nobility was forced to take sides.

0:37:460:37:49

Many members of the leading families were killed

0:37:490:37:52

and the power struggle became ever more bitter, bloody and vengeful.

0:37:520:37:56

The war raged across England,

0:37:580:38:00

no side able to gain a decisive victory.

0:38:000:38:03

After five years of conflict,

0:38:050:38:07

the Yorkists were gaining the upper hand,

0:38:070:38:10

but then they suffered a devastating defeat.

0:38:100:38:13

In 1460, Richard, Duke of York himself

0:38:150:38:17

was killed in battle at Wakefield,

0:38:170:38:19

his head cut off and displayed on the walls of York,

0:38:190:38:22

wearing a paper crown - the only crown he ever wore.

0:38:220:38:27

But the Yorkist torch was taken up by his son, Edward.

0:38:270:38:30

Aged just 18, tall and handsome,

0:38:300:38:33

he would prove to be a formidable warrior.

0:38:330:38:36

After The Battle of Wakefield he seized control of London

0:38:360:38:39

and had himself proclaimed king.

0:38:390:38:41

There were now two Plantagenet kings in England,

0:38:410:38:44

but only one crown.

0:38:440:38:47

The battle to determine which Plantagenet was the rightful king

0:38:530:38:57

took place here at Towton in Yorkshire on Palm Sunday, 1461.

0:38:570:39:04

In the midst of a snowstorm, almost every man of noble birth

0:39:060:39:10

in England turned up with his army, tens of thousands of men.

0:39:100:39:15

This would be the bloodiest battle ever fought on English soil.

0:39:190:39:23

The Yorkists were drawn up on the ridge behind me,

0:39:290:39:33

they were led from the front by Edward,

0:39:330:39:34

an imposing sight at 6'3" and a brave fighter.

0:39:340:39:38

But Henry, the Lancastrian king, was far from the battlefield.

0:39:380:39:42

Un-warlike and mentally unstable, he had sought safety in York

0:39:420:39:47

along with his wife and son.

0:39:470:39:49

It was up to his loyal nobles to defend his cause.

0:39:490:39:52

The Lancastrian king was supported by the majority of the nobility

0:39:570:40:03

and commanded the greater army.

0:40:030:40:06

But Edward's men had the advantage.

0:40:060:40:09

The wind was behind them

0:40:160:40:18

and carried their arrows into the midst of the Lancastrian lines.

0:40:180:40:22

Lancastrian arrows, firing into the wind...

0:40:270:40:30

..fell short.

0:40:320:40:34

They were forced to charge.

0:40:370:40:39

The Plantagenets had created a rift through the nation...

0:40:470:40:50

..that even tore families apart.

0:40:530:40:55

"There was great killing on both sides," wrote one contemporary,

0:41:020:41:06

"and for a long time it was unclear who would have the victory.

0:41:060:41:09

"So furious was the battle and the slaughter so great and pitiable,

0:41:090:41:14

"for father did not spare son, nor son father."

0:41:140:41:18

The turning point came as dusk fell.

0:41:210:41:24

Yorkist reinforcements arrived and attacked the Lancastrian flank.

0:41:260:41:31

Henry's men fell into confusion and fled.

0:41:330:41:37

The Lancastrians were pushed back by the Yorkists

0:41:390:41:42

and began to fall down the hill.

0:41:420:41:43

Thousands of panic-stricken men were now seeking an escape.

0:41:430:41:47

As they tumbled down the slope they found they had to cross the river

0:41:470:41:50

that runs at the foot of the hill through the woods.

0:41:500:41:53

In the mayhem, many were crushed or drowned,

0:41:550:41:58

many more killed by their enemies.

0:41:580:42:01

The dead began to pile up in the river.

0:42:050:42:08

The retreating Lancastrians were forced to clamber over

0:42:080:42:11

what one chronicler called "bridges of bodies".

0:42:110:42:14

Another contemporary wrote,

0:42:190:42:22

"Many a lady lost her best beloved in that battle."

0:42:220:42:26

28,000 men were reported dead.

0:42:270:42:31

Even 300 years later it was noted that,

0:42:340:42:37

"Farmers oft discover the miserable remains of soldiers."

0:42:370:42:42

In 1996 workmen digging foundations came across a medieval mass grave.

0:42:470:42:53

40 skeletons were identified.

0:42:550:42:58

Men and boys between the ages of 15 and 50.

0:43:010:43:04

The butchered victims of Towton.

0:43:080:43:11

The evidence of these skulls shows that these men died

0:43:130:43:16

from savage blows to the head.

0:43:160:43:18

Here a sweeping cut across the forehead.

0:43:200:43:22

And here a crashing blow on the side of the head.

0:43:230:43:27

This one has the characteristic square wound

0:43:290:43:33

inflicted by a war hammer.

0:43:330:43:35

On occasion there are cuts on the side of the skull,

0:43:400:43:43

which might suggest perhaps that an ear was cut off as a trophy.

0:43:430:43:47

The way these men were slaughtered indicates

0:43:490:43:51

the brutal vindictiveness of The Battle of Towton.

0:43:510:43:54

There was no magnanimous chivalry here.

0:43:540:43:57

Many of the men fighting in the battle were out to avenge

0:43:570:44:01

their fathers or their brothers or their sons or their friends.

0:44:010:44:04

This was family politics on a national scale.

0:44:040:44:07

The Plantagenets had torn the country apart.

0:44:070:44:11

The Yorkists were victorious.

0:44:150:44:18

Henry VI, Queen Margaret and their son fled into exile.

0:44:190:44:23

For the second time in less than a century

0:44:260:44:29

the anointed King of England had been usurped.

0:44:290:44:33

Edward had all the qualities to be a great king.

0:44:390:44:42

He was magnanimous, diplomatic and purposeful.

0:44:440:44:49

He won the support of most of his barons.

0:44:490:44:52

His accession was seen by many

0:44:530:44:56

as the dawning of another golden era for the Plantagenets.

0:44:560:45:00

But Edward had a weakness -

0:45:030:45:05

the perceptive French diplomat Commines says that

0:45:050:45:08

he loved his pleasure and his ease more than any other ruler,

0:45:080:45:11

for he thought about nothing except the ladies.

0:45:110:45:15

He describes Edward as young

0:45:160:45:18

and more handsome than any man of his time,

0:45:180:45:20

and reports that when the King went hunting,

0:45:200:45:23

he had extra tents brought along for all his ladies.

0:45:230:45:27

In 1464, while Edward was hunting near the village of Grafton Regis,

0:45:300:45:35

he met a young widow named Elizabeth Woodville.

0:45:350:45:38

Chroniclers described her as the most beautiful woman in England.

0:45:410:45:46

Edward became infatuated with her.

0:45:470:45:49

According to legend, this is where Edward and Elizabeth met.

0:45:530:45:56

It's said that she resisted his advances,

0:45:560:45:59

and according to some that she even drew a dagger to protect her honour.

0:45:590:46:03

The only way the young king could have her was to marry her,

0:46:040:46:07

and quickly and secretly that's what he did.

0:46:070:46:10

But Edward had broken a cardinal rule of dynastic politics

0:46:110:46:14

by marrying not for a great dowry or political advantage,

0:46:140:46:18

but moved by passion.

0:46:180:46:20

Marriage was a crucial opportunity for the great families of Europe

0:46:220:46:27

to advance their political and dynastic ambitions.

0:46:270:46:30

Every Plantagenet king had gained advantage through marriage

0:46:320:46:36

to a wealthy, high-born woman from Europe, most of them French.

0:46:360:46:41

Now, for the first time in more than 400 years,

0:46:450:46:49

the King of England had married an English woman

0:46:490:46:52

from the lower ranks of the aristocracy.

0:46:520:46:55

She wasn't even a supporter of The House of York.

0:46:560:46:59

Elizabeth Woodville had no great fortune -

0:47:020:47:05

her father was a Lancastrian knight

0:47:050:47:07

and her first husband had been killed

0:47:070:47:09

fighting for The House of Lancaster.

0:47:090:47:11

She brought no great political or material advantage.

0:47:110:47:14

Even more outrageously,

0:47:140:47:16

the King had made the marriage without consulting his great nobles.

0:47:160:47:19

Edward's marriage was a major political miscalculation.

0:47:190:47:24

Edward didn't even tell his most loyal supporter and friend,

0:47:260:47:30

the Earl of Warwick. He was so outraged by Edward's secret marriage

0:47:300:47:35

that he deserted him, sailed for France

0:47:350:47:38

and allied himself with the exiled Henry and Margaret.

0:47:380:47:41

In 1470, Margaret of Anjou made a final bid for power

0:47:430:47:47

on behalf of the Lancastrian cause, backed by the Earl of Warwick.

0:47:470:47:51

They managed to overthrow Edward IV and send him into exile,

0:47:510:47:55

but the following year he was back

0:47:550:47:57

and he inflicted a crushing defeat on them.

0:47:570:47:59

Henry VI's heir was cut down as he fled from the battle.

0:48:020:48:06

Shortly afterwards, the former King himself was murdered.

0:48:080:48:12

After 20 years of civil war,

0:48:230:48:25

England now enjoyed a time of peace and stability under Edward IV.

0:48:250:48:30

The King presided over a flourishing court,

0:48:320:48:36

described by one European visitor as,

0:48:360:48:38

"The most splendid in all Christendom."

0:48:380:48:40

Edward commissioned beautiful manuscripts

0:48:430:48:46

from the best illuminators in Europe.

0:48:460:48:48

And he oversaw the building of a new royal banqueting hall

0:48:510:48:55

here at Eltham Palace, south-east of London.

0:48:550:48:58

The hall was one of the most expensive

0:49:060:49:09

building projects of the age.

0:49:090:49:11

It was a statement of the scale and grandeur of Edward's ambition.

0:49:110:49:16

When the hall was complete, Edward held court here

0:49:180:49:21

with Elizabeth at his side. They had two healthy young sons,

0:49:210:49:25

and the future of the Plantagenet dynasty seemed assured.

0:49:250:49:29

But not everyone at court was happy.

0:49:290:49:31

Elizabeth had ten brothers and sisters

0:49:310:49:33

and they did tremendously well

0:49:330:49:35

out of their beautiful sister's new royal connections.

0:49:350:49:38

The rise of these new favourites, the Woodvilles,

0:49:390:49:42

was resented by the old nobility

0:49:420:49:44

and by some members of the Plantagenet family itself.

0:49:440:49:48

Richard was Edward's youngest brother.

0:49:520:49:55

Although not physically strong,

0:49:560:49:58

he was a successful military leader

0:49:580:50:01

and he'd been Edward's most dependable supporter.

0:50:010:50:03

Now his loyalty was about to be tested.

0:50:050:50:09

On 9th April, 1483, Edward IV died suddenly.

0:50:130:50:18

His 12-year-old son was proclaimed Edward V.

0:50:180:50:22

But he was too young to take power.

0:50:230:50:25

Richard saw an opportunity to win the crown for himself.

0:50:270:50:31

Over the last century, two kings had already been violently deposed.

0:50:340:50:39

It's not surprising that Richard felt able

0:50:390:50:42

to make a bid for the throne.

0:50:420:50:44

Edward's death was followed by a power struggle between

0:50:480:50:51

his younger brother Richard and Richard's rivals, the Woodvilles.

0:50:510:50:55

Fearing that they would be the power behind the throne,

0:50:550:50:57

Richard made sure that he got custody of the young King, Edward IV

0:50:570:51:01

and his little brother.

0:51:010:51:03

The two princes were placed in the Tower of London.

0:51:090:51:12

They were never seen again.

0:51:130:51:15

The gossip in the courts of Europe

0:51:190:51:20

concluded that Richard had them murdered.

0:51:200:51:24

It's never been proved,

0:51:250:51:26

but Richard wouldn't be the first Plantagenet wicked uncle to be

0:51:260:51:30

accused of killing a nephew who stood between him and the throne.

0:51:300:51:34

On 6th July, 1483, Richard was crowned.

0:51:370:51:42

With a helping hand from Shakespeare, he's been painted as

0:51:450:51:48

one of the greatest villains in English history.

0:51:480:51:51

But his actions were driven

0:51:510:51:53

by the same dynastic ambitions that drove his ancestors.

0:51:530:51:56

This latest usurpation, however, would lead directly

0:51:560:51:59

to the downfall of the dynasty.

0:51:590:52:02

Richard's suspected murder of the young princes caused outrage.

0:52:060:52:10

The Plantagenets had often been brutal in their pursuit of power...

0:52:120:52:16

..but the killing of innocent children was an abomination.

0:52:190:52:22

Both Lancastrians and some Yorkists now turned against Richard.

0:52:240:52:29

The Lancastrians backed a man whose claim to the Plantagenet throne

0:52:340:52:38

was tenuous - Henry Tudor.

0:52:380:52:41

Henry had been living in exile and had won the support

0:52:460:52:50

of the Plantagenet's perennial enemy, the French King.

0:52:500:52:54

In August 1485, he landed at Milford Haven

0:52:570:53:00

with thousands of French troops.

0:53:000:53:03

He marched east, gathering Welsh and English support along the way.

0:53:050:53:09

Richard rode out to meet them.

0:53:100:53:12

The two armies met near the Midlands town of Leicester.

0:53:120:53:17

Richard's forces camped here, a few miles from Bosworth.

0:53:180:53:22

Tudor propagandists later reported that on the night before the battle

0:53:220:53:26

Richard saw hideous images, as it were, of evil spirits,

0:53:260:53:30

haunting him, and they would not let him rest -

0:53:300:53:33

clearly a sign of a guilty conscience.

0:53:330:53:35

But for Richard the battle offered an opportunity

0:53:350:53:39

to prove that he was God's chosen monarch.

0:53:390:53:42

Richard wore the royal crown on his battle helmet and declared,

0:53:440:53:49

"This day I will die as King, or win."

0:53:490:53:53

His army was far superior in numbers,

0:53:550:53:58

but the loyalty of his men was in doubt.

0:53:580:54:01

As the battle began, his soldiers

0:54:030:54:06

seemed to be fighting half-heartedly.

0:54:060:54:08

But then Richard saw an opportunity to bring the battle to a swift end.

0:54:090:54:14

Richard caught sight of Henry Tudor, surrounded by only a small retinue,

0:54:160:54:21

and he charged directly at him with a few loyal knights.

0:54:210:54:24

The chronicler John Rous says that although Richard was small

0:54:240:54:28

and physically weak, he fought like a noble knight.

0:54:280:54:31

He cut down Henry's standard-bearer

0:54:330:54:35

and almost slashed his way to Henry himself,

0:54:350:54:38

but then he was betrayed.

0:54:380:54:41

One of his most powerful nobles, Lord Stanley,

0:54:420:54:45

was watching the battle unfold from a distance.

0:54:450:54:48

He commanded up to 5,000 men,

0:54:500:54:52

but his allegiance was in doubt.

0:54:520:54:55

When he saw Richard isolated and vulnerable,

0:54:560:55:00

he threw in his lot with the Tudors.

0:55:000:55:02

Stanley's troops were then unleashed upon the Plantagenet king.

0:55:070:55:12

The recent discovery of Richard III's body

0:55:150:55:18

in a Leicester car park

0:55:180:55:19

confirms the chronicler's reports of what happened next.

0:55:190:55:24

The King was abandoned, but he chose not to flee.

0:55:270:55:30

The last Plantagenet monarch was cut down by a lethal blow to the head.

0:55:300:55:35

Even his enemies admitted Richard's courage.

0:55:350:55:38

They describe him fighting manfully in the thickest press of his enemies

0:55:380:55:43

and describe how, "In battle and not in flight King Richard died

0:55:430:55:47

"like a noble ruler, most bold in the field."

0:55:470:55:51

The last Plantagenet King of England

0:55:530:55:55

was stripped naked and slung over a horse.

0:55:550:55:58

His corpse was paraded along the road to Leicester

0:55:580:56:03

for all men to wonder upon.

0:56:030:56:05

He was later carelessly buried in a hastily dug grave.

0:56:070:56:12

The crown Richard wore into battle

0:56:190:56:21

was discovered in the carnage at Bosworth.

0:56:210:56:25

It was placed upon the head of the new king, Henry Tudor.

0:56:250:56:30

When the Plantagenets won the English crown

0:56:410:56:43

three centuries earlier,

0:56:430:56:44

England had been devastated by decades of civil war.

0:56:440:56:48

Now a civil war between two branches of their own family

0:56:540:56:58

had brought about their downfall.

0:56:580:57:00

But the longest-ruling dynasty in English history

0:57:030:57:06

had helped transform the culture and politics of the British Isles.

0:57:060:57:11

They'd inspired and provoked the emergence

0:57:150:57:18

of many of the country's distinctive institutions and laws.

0:57:180:57:22

And adopted symbols that represent the nation to this day.

0:57:250:57:30

For 331 years this single family's ambition, cruelties and achievements

0:57:370:57:42

had shaped the history of much of Britain and France.

0:57:420:57:46

Now Henry Tudor led England into a new world.

0:57:460:57:49

The Tudors sought their empire not in France but across The Atlantic,

0:57:490:57:54

and they would hunt down

0:57:540:57:55

any remaining Plantagenet claimants to the throne.

0:57:550:57:58

This once mighty dynasty ended in oblivion.

0:57:580:58:02

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