Henry VII
36 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Henry Tudor born at Pembroke Castle in January 1457, was the son of Edmund Tudor and the Lady Margaret Beaufort. After Edward IV had defeated the Lancastrian Henry VI in battle, the young Henry Tudor was taken into custody by the Earl of Pembroke at his seat, Raglan Castle in Wales. Henry was fourteen years in Wales and spent another fourteen as a political exile at the Court of Francois II of Brittany." "After the murder of Henry VI (1171) and the death of his son, Prince Edward, Henry of Richmond (as he was then known) became head of the House of Lancaster. Henry invaded England in 1485 to defeat the last tyrannous Plantagenet king at Bosworth Field. Henry's hereditary claim to the throne was weak but our first Tudor King was a born politician and became one of our ablest kings." "Henry ruled over a splendid court never stinting expense. His greatest sorrow was the premature death of his son Prince Arthur and after his wife Elizabeth's death (1503) Henry's character deteriorated. He became mean and niggardly. Succeeding to an impoverished kingdom, his ambition was to make England important in the Europe of the time and in that he succeeded, leaving a prosperous kingdom to Henry VIII."--Jacket.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Roger Lockyer
Birth of Modern Europe, 1470-1
Birth of Modern Europe, 1470-1720 : the Habsburg and Bourbon Eras
Buckingham, the life and political career of George Villiers, First Duke of Buckingham, 1592-1628
Habsburg and Bourbon Europe, 1470-1720
The early Stuarts
Tudor and Stuart Britain
Tudor and Stuart Britain
Tudor and Stuart Britain, 1471-1714