Tudors Chapter 3 - Challengers to Henry VII Flashcards

1
Q

Who were Henry VII’s rivals that had stronger claims?

A

John de la Pole, leading Yorkist claimant.
Edward Plantagenet, Earl of Warwick: placed in Tower. Nephew of Ed 4 and Rick 3.
Edward IV’s children: Princes in the Tower.

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2
Q

When was the Battle of Bosworth; what were the sizes of the forces?

A

22 August 1485.
Henry = 5,000
Richard = 10-15,000

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3
Q

What was the role of the Stanleys and Northumberland in the Battle of Bosworth?

A

Richard expected them to be on his side.
Sir William Stanley eventually fought for Henry.
Northumberland didn’t fight at all.

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4
Q

Which notable family were part of the anti-Ricardian faction?

A

The Woodvilles

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5
Q

What were the positive impacts of Henry’s win at Bosworth?

A

He could claim that God was on his side.
Rival now dead, as were his heirs.
Norfolk killed in battle.

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6
Q

What was Henry VII’s first move to secure the throne post-Bosworth?

A

He had a formal coronation, thus cementing his rule to be supported by God.

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7
Q

What was the Act of Resumption?

A

1486 - he took back all Crown land which were granted away 1455.

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8
Q

How did Henry VII change the date of his reign?

A

He backdated the start of his reign to 21 August 1485. R3 = usurper and thus anyone who fought for him could be tried for treason.

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9
Q

What did Henry VII do to the Titulus Regius?

A

He repealed it in order to make Elizabeth of York legitimate, so he could legitimately marry and unite the Yorkist and Lancastrian factions.

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10
Q

Who was Sir Thomas Lovell and how did Henry VII treat him?

A

A Yorkist who rebelled against R3 in 1483 and joined Henry. Made Treasurer of the Household.

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11
Q

How did Henry treat John de la Pole after Bosworth?

A

de la Pole swore loyalty to Henry and joined the Council.

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12
Q

What lands did Henry VII give to Jasper Tudor?

A

Became Chief Justice of Wales.
He later suppressed a revolt led by Francis Lovell in Yorkshire.

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13
Q

How was Thomas Stanley rewarded for his role at Bosworth?

A

Given custody of the Cheshire estates while Stafford heir was a minor.

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14
Q

How many German mercenaries did Margaret of Burgundy help gain support of?
Who led them?

A

2,000
Martin Schwartz

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15
Q

What was Northumberland’s role in the Simnel Rebellion?

A

June 1487 - he was ambivalent towards the rebel army and did nothing to help or stop them

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16
Q

When did Henry VII arrive at Kenilworth Castle during Simnel rebellion?

A

8 May 1487

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17
Q

When was the Battle of Stoke and why was it one-sided?

A

16 June 1487
Irish forces poorly equipped.
Henry = 12,000
Opposition = 8,000

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18
Q

Why was the Battle of Stoke good for Henry VII, other than victory?

A

John de la Pole and Martin Schwartz killed.
Francis Lovell disappeared forever.

19
Q

Why was the Simnel rebellion a significant threat?

A

Wide-ranging support:
Powerful Yorkists, rival claimants, foreign support.
Henry too trusting of de la Pole.
Aimed to remove the King.
Ended in Battle.

20
Q

Why wasn’t the Simnel rebellion a significant threat?

A

Lacked widespread popular support, even in the North.
Majority of fighting forces were mercenaries, not motivated Yorkists.
Henry acted decisively: led the army himself; well-placed at Kenilworth.

21
Q

Why didn’t the Simnel rebellion gather support?

A

People wanted stability of 30 years of civil war.
Landowning classes unwilling to risk property and betray their king.

22
Q

How did Henry VII strengthen the throne post-Simnel?

A

Nov 1487, passed 28 Acts of Attainder against rebels.

23
Q

Who were the important foreign supporters of the Perkin Warbeck rebellion?

A

Charles VIII (France); Margaret of Burgundy; Maximilian (HRE); James IV (Scotland).

24
Q

When did Warbeck meet with Charles VIII in France?

A

1492

25
Q

Where and when did the Warbeck rebellion begin?

A

Cork, Ireland, 1491

26
Q

What did Warbeck do July 1495?

A

Leads a failed invasion with 300 men in Kent.

27
Q

Where was Warbeck ‘recognised’ as Richard, Duke of York after leaving France?

A

Burgundy

28
Q

What did Warbeck do following his Kent invasion?

A

Fled to Scotland - with help of James IV, led an invasion into England with 1,400 men in 1496. Failed however.

29
Q

When and where was Warbeck captured and then when executed?

A

Captured September 1497 in Cornwall.
Executed November 1499

30
Q

How did Henry VII’s network of spies help when Warbeck invaded Kent?

A

Henry was very aware of the incoming attack and so had placed troops and defences there.

31
Q

Why was Henry VII’s relationship with Edward Courtenay important?

A

Henry had ennobled him for his support at Bosworth.
His lands in the South West made him a very important ally, as he defended Exeter.

32
Q

What were bonds and recognisances?

A

Bond - a guarantee of good behaviour with a financial penalty if broken.
Recognisance - someone who had already broken the law: if broke the law again, would have to pay an agreed sum

33
Q

How many noble families were placed under Henry VII’s financial control?

A

36 out of 62

34
Q

What made the Warbeck rising a significant threat?

A

Foreign support protected him from Henry.
1497, Henry was vulnerable due to fears of a Scottish invasion - if Warbeck had invaded Cornwall earlier he could have properly harnessed the tax revolt’s fervour.
Henry’s reactions demonstrate clear fears of revolt.
7 years of continued threat.

35
Q

What limits the significance of the threat of the Warbeck rising?

A

Poor planning - should have invaded Cornwall earlier.
Lack of popular support.
Strength of Henry’s throne by this point.
Never led to a battle - Warbeck captured due to own foolishness.

36
Q

Why did Scotland pose a threat to Henry VII’s throne?

A

-Bordering nation
-James IV wanted to assert Scotland’s presence in Europe
-Initially allied with Warbeck in 1496

37
Q

How did Henry VII reduce the Scottish threat?

A

-1497 Truce of Ayton - James drops support for Warbeck.
-James IV marries Margaret, H7’s daughter, 1503

38
Q

Why did Burgundy pose a threat to Henry VII’s throne?

A

-Margaret of Burgundy was R3’s sister and thus a passionate Yorkist with lots of money.
-She also had links with the Holy Roman Empire.
-Her support for Warbeck gave his rebellion legitimacy.

39
Q

How did H7 reduce the threat of Burgundy?

A

-Issued a trade embargo 1493.
-1496, France now a common threat.
-1496, Intercursus Magnus signed - an alliance.

40
Q

Why did Ireland pose a threat to Henry VII’s throne?

A

-Too remote yet a good launch pad for invasion
-Lord Deputy of Ireland was Kildare, a YORKIST, who provided troops for Simnel’s rebellion.
-However wasn’t involved at Stoke or in the Warbeck rising.

41
Q

How did H7 reduce the Irish threat?

A

-1492, sends troops and removes Kildare.
1494, loyal Edward Poynings made deputy.
-1495 Poyning’s Law centralised Ireland under English control
-Kildare then reappionted 1496.

42
Q

Why did France pose a threat to Henry VII’s throne?

A

-Traditional enemy; Auld Alliance with Scotland.
-Close proximity
-Duke of Britanny died 1487; Britanny absorbed 1491.
-In gathering funds to support Britanny, Henry caused a tax revolt

43
Q

How did Henry VII reduce the French threat?

A

-Invaded 1492 when Charles preoccupied with invading Italy.
-Signed Treaty of Etaples 1492 to neutralise French threat.
-France now had to pay 50,000 crowns P.A.