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Battle of Towton

The Battle of Towton took place on 29 March 1461 during the Wars of the Roses, near Towton in North Yorkshire, and "has the dubious distinction of being probably the largest and bloodiest battle on English soil".[4] Fought for ten hours between an estimated 50,000 soldiers in a snowstorm on Palm Sunday, the Yorkist army achieved a decisive victory over their Lancastrian opponents. As a result, Edward IV deposed the Lancastrian Henry VI and secured the English throne.

Battle of Towton
Part of the Wars of the Roses

The Battle of Towton, Richard Caton Woodville Jr. (1922)
Date29 March 1461
Location53°50′10″N 01°16′25″W / 53.83611°N 1.27361°W / 53.83611; -1.27361Coordinates: 53°50′10″N 01°16′25″W / 53.83611°N 1.27361°W / 53.83611; -1.27361
Result Yorkist victory
Belligerents
House of York House of Lancaster
Commanders and leaders
Strength
50,000–60,000[a]
Casualties and losses
3,000 to 4,500 dead [b] 6,000 to 8,500 dead [2][3]

Henry VI succeeded his father Henry V when he was nine months old in 1422, but was a weak, ineffectual and mentally unsound ruler, which encouraged the nobles to scheme for control over him. The situation deteriorated in the 1450s into a civil war between his Beaufort relatives and Queen Margaret of Anjou on one side, with those of his cousin Richard, Duke of York on the other. In October 1460, Parliament passed the Act of Accord naming York as Henry's successor, but neither the queen nor her Lancastrian allies would accept the disinheritance of her son, Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales. They raised a large army, who defeated and killed York and his second son Edmund at Wakefield in December. Financed by the City of London his son and heir, Edward, found enough backing to denounce Henry and declare himself king. The Battle of Towton was to affirm the victor's right through force of arms to rule over England.

On reaching the battlefield, the Yorkists found themselves heavily outnumbered, since part of their force under the Duke of Norfolk had yet to arrive. The Yorkist leader Lord Fauconberg turned the tables by ordering his archers to take advantage of the strong wind to outrange their enemies. The one-sided missile exchange, with Lancastrian arrows falling short of the Yorkist ranks, provoked the Lancastrians into abandoning their defensive positions. The ensuing hand-to-hand combat lasted hours, exhausting the combatants. The arrival of Norfolk's men reinvigorated the Yorkists and, encouraged by Edward, they routed their foes. Many Lancastrians were killed while fleeing; some trampled one another and others drowned in the rivers, which are said to have run red with blood for several days. Several high-ranking prisoners were also executed.

The strength of the House of Lancaster was severely reduced as a result of this battle. Henry fled the country and many of his most powerful followers were dead or in exile after the engagement, leaving a new king, Edward IV, to rule England. In 1929 the Towton Cross was erected on the battlefield to commemorate the event. Various archaeological remains and mass graves related to the battle have been found in the area centuries after the engagement.

Setting

 
 
Towton
 
Wakefield
 
Northampton
 
Mortimer's Cross
 
St. Albans
 
London
 
York
class=notpageimage|
Locations:
  – Battle of Towton;   – other battles;   – other places

In 1461 England was in the sixth year of the Wars of the Roses, a series of civil wars between the houses of York and Lancaster over the English throne. The Lancastrians backed the reigning King of England, Henry VI, a weak and indecisive man who suffered from intermittent bouts of madness.[5] The leader of the Yorkists was initially Richard, Duke of York, who resented the dominance of a small number of aristocrats favoured by the king, principally his close relatives, the Beaufort family. Fuelled by rivalries between influential supporters of both factions, York's attempts to displace Henry's favourites from power led to war.[5][6] After capturing Henry at the Battle of Northampton in 1460, the duke, who was of royal blood, issued his claim to the throne. Even York's closest supporters among the nobility were reluctant to usurp the dynasty; the nobles passed by a majority vote the Act of Accord, which ruled that the duke and his heirs would succeed to the throne upon Henry's death.[7][8]

The Queen of England, Margaret of Anjou, refused to accept an arrangement that deprived her son—Edward of Westminster—of his birthright. She had fled to Scotland after the Yorkist victory at Northampton; there she began raising an army, promising her followers the freedom to plunder on the march south through England. Her Lancastrian supporters also mustered in the north of England, preparing for her arrival. York marched with his army to meet this threat but he was lured into a trap at the Battle of Wakefield and killed. The duke and his second son, Edmund, Earl of Rutland were decapitated by the Lancastrians and their heads were impaled on spikes atop the Micklegate Bar, a gatehouse of the city of York.[9] The leadership of the House of York passed to the duke's heir, Edward.[10]

 
The armies of York (white) and Lancaster (red) move towards Towton.

The victors of Wakefield were joined by Margaret's army and marched south, plundering settlements along the way. They liberated Henry after defeating the Yorkist army of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, in the Second Battle of St Albans and continued pillaging on their way to London. The city of London refused to open its gates to Henry and Margaret for fear of being looted. The Lancastrian army was short of supplies and had no adequate means to replenish them. When Margaret learned that Richard of York's eldest son, Edward, Earl of March, and his army had won the Battle of Mortimer's Cross in Herefordshire and were marching towards London, she withdrew the Lancastrians to York.[11][12] Warwick and the remnants of his army marched from St Albans to join Edward's men and the Yorkists were welcomed into London. Having lost custody of Henry, the Yorkists needed a justification to continue the rebellion against the king and his Lancastrian followers. On 4 March Warwick proclaimed the young Yorkist leader as King Edward IV. The proclamation gained greater acceptance than Richard of York's earlier claim, as several nobles opposed to letting Edward's father ascend the throne viewed the Lancastrian actions as a betrayal of the legally established Accord.[13][14]

The country now had two kings — a situation that could not be allowed to persist, especially if Edward were to be formally crowned.[14] Edward offered an amnesty to any Lancastrian supporter who renounced Henry. The move was intended to win over the commoners; his offer did not extend to wealthy Lancastrians (mostly the nobles).[15] The young king summoned and ordered his followers to march towards York to take back his family's city and to depose Henry formally through force of arms.[16] The Yorkist army moved along three routes. Warwick's uncle, Lord Fauconberg, led a group to clear the way to York for the main body, which was led by Edward. The Duke of Norfolk was sent east to raise forces and rejoin Edward before the battle. Warwick's group moved to the west of the main body, through the Midlands, gathering men as they went. On 28 March, the leading elements of the Yorkist army came upon the remains of the crossing in Ferrybridge crossing the River Aire. They were rebuilding the bridge when they were attacked and routed by a band of about 500 Lancastrians, led by Lord Clifford.[17]

Learning of the encounter, Edward led the main Yorkist army to the bridge and was forced into a gruelling battle: although the Yorkists were superior in numbers, the narrow bridge was a bottleneck, forcing them to confront Clifford's men on equal terms. Edward sent Fauconberg and his horsemen to ford the river at Castleford, which should have been guarded by Henry, Earl of Northumberland, but he arrived late, by which time the Yorkists had crossed the ford and were heading to attack the Lancastrians at Ferrybridge from the flank. The Lancastrians retreated but were chased to Dinting Dale, where they were all killed, Clifford being slain by an arrow to his throat. Having cleared the vicinity of enemy forces, the Yorkists repaired the bridge and pressed onwards to camp overnight at Sherburn-in-Elmet. The Lancastrian army marched to Tadcaster, about 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Towton, and made camp.[18] As dawn broke the two rival armies struck camp under dark skies and strong winds.[2][19] Although it was Palm Sunday, a day of holy significance to Christians, the forces prepared for battle and a few documents named the engagement the Battle of Palme Sonday Felde but the name did not gain wide acceptance.[20] Popular opinion favoured naming the battle after the village of Towton because of its proximity and it being the most prominent in the area.[21]

Force compositions

The armies gathered at Towton were among the largest at the time.[22] Contemporary sources (like Gregory's Chronicle) claimed that the soldiers on each side numbered in the hundreds of thousands.[23] These figures are thought to be exaggerated, and modern historians believe that a combined figure of 50,000–65,000 is more likely, between one and two percent of the English population at the time.[24][25][26] An analysis of 50 skeletons found in mass graves between 1996 and 2003 showed most were 24 to 30 years old and many were veterans of previous engagements.[27]

Henry's physical and mental frailty was a major weakness for the Lancastrian cause, and he remained in York with Margaret.[25] In contrast the 18-year-old Edward was a tall and imposing sight in armour and led from the front: his preference for bold offensive tactics determined the Yorkist plan of action for this engagement. His presence and example were crucial to ensuring the Yorkists held together through the long and exhausting struggle.[2]

 
Edward's presence was crucial to Yorkist victory.

Approximately three-quarters of English peers fought in the battle;[25] eight were with the Yorkist army, whereas the Lancastrians had at least nineteen.[28]

Of the other Yorkist leaders, Warwick was absent from the battle, having suffered a leg wound at Ferrybridge.[29] Norfolk was too old to participate and his contingent was commanded by Walter Blount and Robert Horne; this may have been an advantage, since he was regarded as an unpredictable ally.[30] Edward relied heavily on Warwick's uncle, Lord Fauconberg, a veteran of the Anglo-French wars, highly regarded by contemporaries for his military skills.[31] He demonstrated this in a wide range of roles, having captained the Calais garrison,[31] led naval piracy expeditions in the Channel,[32] and commanded the Yorkist vanguard at Northampton.[33]

The senior Lancastrian general was Henry Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, an experienced leader credited with victories at Wakefield and St Albans, although others suggest they were due to Sir Andrew Trollope.[34] Trollope was an extremely experienced and astute commander, who served under Warwick in Calais, before defecting to the Lancastrians at Ludford Bridge in 1459.[35] Other notable Lancastrian leaders included Henry Holland, Duke of Exeter,[36] and northern magnates the Earl of Northumberland,[37] Lord de Ros and Lord Dacre. Another leading Lancastrian, Lord Clifford, had been killed by an arrow in the throat at Ferrybridge.[38]

Deployment

 
Initial deployments: the Yorkists (white) and Lancastrians (red) at Towton

Very few historical sources give detailed accounts of the battle and they do not describe the exact deployments of the armies. The paucity of such primary sources led early historians to adopt Hall's chronicle as their main resource for the engagement, despite its authorship 70 years after the event and questions over the origin of his information. The Burgundian chronicler Jean de Waurin (c. 1398 – c. 1474) was a more contemporary source, but his chronicle was made available to the public only from 1891, and several mistakes in it discouraged historians at that time from using it. Later reconstructions of the battle were based on Hall's version, supplemented by minor details from other sources.[39][40]

The battle took place on a plateau between the villages of Saxton (to the south) and Towton (to the north). The region was agricultural land, with plenty of wide open areas and small roads on which to manoeuvre the armies.[41] Two roads ran through the area: the Old London Road, which connected Towton to the English capital, and a direct road between Saxton and Towton. The steeply banked Cock Beck flowed in an S-shaped course around the plateau from the north to west. The plateau was bisected by the Towton Dale, which ran from the west and extended into the North Acres in the east. Woodlands were scattered along the beck; Renshaw Woods lined the river on the north-western side of the plateau, and south of Towton Dale, Castle Hill Wood grew on the west side of the plateau at a bend in the beck. The area to the north-east of this forest would be known as Bloody Meadow after the battle.[42]

According to Gravett and fellow military enthusiast Trevor James Halsall, Somerset's decision to engage the Yorkist army on this plateau was sound. Defending the ground just before Towton would block any enemy advance towards the city of York, whether they moved along the London–Towton road or an old Roman road to the west. The Lancastrians deployed on the north side of the dale, using the valley as a "protective ditch";[43][44] the disadvantage of this position was that they could not see beyond the southern ridge of the dale.[45] The Lancastrian flanks were protected by marshes; their right was further secured by the steep banks of the Cock Beck. The width of their deployment area did not allow for a longer front line, depriving the Lancastrians of the opportunity to use their numerical superiority.[43] Waurin's account gave rise to the suggestion that Somerset ordered a force of mounted spearmen to conceal itself in Castle Hill Wood, ready to charge into the Yorkist left flank at an opportune time in battle.[46]

The Yorkists appeared as the Lancastrians finished deployment. Line after line of soldiers crested the southern ridge of the dale and formed up in ranks opposite their enemies as snow began to fall. Edward's army was outnumbered and Norfolk's troops had yet to arrive to join them.[47] The Yorkist vanguard was commanded by Lord Fauconberg. Hall names John Wenlock and John Dinham and others as commanders of the Yorkist rearguard.[40][48] Sources variously mention the Duke of Somerset, Trollope, the Earl of Northumberland and the Duke of Exeter as the commanders of the Lancastrian host, but show little agreement as to which portion of the host each of them was assigned.[49]

Fighting

 
Yorkist leader William Neville (on horse) and his archers took advantage of the wind to inflict early damage on the Lancastrians – 19th century drawing

As Somerset was content to stand and let his foes come to him, the opening move of the battle was made by the Yorkists.[50] Noticing the direction and strength of the wind, Fauconberg ordered all Yorkist archers to step forward and unleash a volley of their arrows from what would be the standard maximum range of their longbows. With the wind behind them, the Yorkist missiles travelled farther than usual, plunging deep into the masses of soldiers on the hill slope.

The response from the Lancastrian archers was ineffective as the heavy wind blew snow in their faces. They found it difficult to judge the range and pick out their targets and their arrows fell short of the Yorkist ranks; Fauconberg had ordered his men to retreat after loosing one volley, thus avoiding any casualties. Unable to observe their results, the Lancastrians loosed their arrows until most had been used, leaving a thick, prickly carpet in the ground in front of the Yorkists.[2][51]

 
Bodkin arrows were among the missiles that killed many in the battle.

After the Lancastrians had ceased loosing their arrows, Fauconberg ordered his archers to step forward again to shoot. When they had exhausted their ammunition, the Yorkists plucked arrows off the ground in front of them—arrows loosed by their foes—and continued shooting. Coming under attack without any effective response of its own, the Lancastrian army moved from its position to engage the Yorkists in close combat. Seeing the advancing mass of men, the Yorkist archers shot a few more volleys before retreating behind their ranks of men-at-arms, leaving thousands of arrows in the ground to hinder the Lancastrian attack.[2][52]

As the Yorkists reformed their ranks to receive the Lancastrian charge, their left flank came under attack by the horsemen from Castle Hill Wood mentioned by Waurin. The Yorkist left wing fell into disarray and several men started to flee. Edward had to take command of the left wing to save the situation. By engaging in the fight and encouraging his followers, his example inspired many to stand their ground. The armies clashed and archers shot into the mass of men at short range. The Lancastrians continuously threw fresher men into the fray and gradually the numerically inferior Yorkist army was forced to give ground and retreat up the southern ridge. Gravett thought that the Lancastrian left had less momentum than the rest of its formation, skewing the line of battle such that its western end tilted towards Saxton.[53][54]

The fighting continued for three hours, according to research by English Heritage, a government body in charge of conservation of historic sites.[2][54] It was indecisive until the arrival of Norfolk's men. Marching up the Old London Road, Norfolk's contingent was hidden from view until they crested the ridge and attacked the Lancastrian left flank.[54][55] The Lancastrians continued to give fight but the advantage had shifted to the Yorkists. By the end of the day, the Lancastrian line had broken up, as small groups of men began fleeing for their lives.[2] Polydore Vergil, chronicler for Henry VII of England, claimed that combat lasted for a total of 10 hours.[56]

Rout

 
At the crucial moment, Norfolk's troops arrived, helping the Yorkists (white) overcome the Lancastrians (red).

The tired Lancastrians flung off their helmets and armour to run faster. Without such protection, they were much more vulnerable to the attacks of the Yorkists. Norfolk's troops were much fresher and faster. Fleeing across what would later become known as Bloody Meadow, many Lancastrians were cut down from behind or were slain after they had surrendered. Before the battle, both sides had issued the order to give no quarter and the Yorkists were in no mood to spare anyone after the long, gruelling fight.[57] A number of Lancastrians, such as Trollope, also had substantial bounties on their heads.[15] Gregory's chronicle stated 42 knights were killed after they were taken prisoner.[2]

Archaeological findings in the late 20th century shed light on the final moments of the battle. In 1996 workmen at a construction site in the village of Towton uncovered a mass grave, which archaeologists believed to contain the remains of men who were slain during or after the battle in 1461. The bodies showed severe injuries to their upper torsos; arms and skulls were cracked or shattered.[58] One exhumed specimen, known as Towton 25, had the front of his skull bisected: a weapon had slashed across his face, cutting a deep wound that split the bone. The skull was also pierced by another deep wound, a horizontal cut from a blade across the back.[59]

The Lancastrians lost more troops in their rout than from the battlefield. Men struggling across the Cock Beck were dragged down by currents and drowned. Those floundering were stepped on and pushed under water by their comrades behind them as they rushed to get away from the Yorkists. As the Lancastrians struggled across the beck Yorkist archers rode to high vantage points and shot arrows at them. The dead began to pile up and the chronicles state that the Lancastrians eventually fled across these "bridges" of bodies.[2][60] The chase continued northwards across the River Wharfe, which was larger than Cock Beck. A bridge over the river collapsed under the flood of men and many drowned trying to cross. Those who hid in Tadcaster and York were hunted down and killed.[61]

A newsletter dated 4 April 1461 reported a widely circulated figure of 28,000 casualties in the battle, which Charles Ross and other historians believe was exaggerated. The number was taken from the heralds' estimate of the dead and appeared in letters from Edward and the Bishop of Salisbury, Richard Beauchamp.[2][62] Letters from an ambassador and a merchant from the duchy of Milan broke this number down into 8,000 dead for the Yorkists and 20,000 for the Lancastrians;[63] in contrast, bishops Nicholas O'Flanagan (Elphin) and Francesco Coppini reported only 800 dead Yorkists.[64] Other contemporary sources gave higher numbers, ranging from 30,000 to 38,000; Hall quoted an exact figure of 36,776.[2][62] An exception was the Annales rerum anglicarum, which stated the Lancastrians had 9,000 casualties, an estimate Ross and Wolffe found to be more believable.[2][3] A more recent analysis of the sources and archaeological evidence, which posits accounts of Towton were combined with those of the actions of Ferrybridge and Dintingdale, suggests total casualty figures in the range 2,800 - 3,800.[65]

The Lancastrian nobility sustained heavy losses. The Earl of Northumberland, lords Welles, Mauley, and Dacre, and Sir Andrew Trollope fell in battle, while the earls of Devon and Wiltshire were afterwards taken and executed.[3] Lord Dacre was said to have been killed by an archer who was perched in a "bur tree" (a local term for an elder).[66] In contrast, the Yorkists lost only one notable member of the gentry, Horne, at Towton.[38]

Aftermath

 
Towton Cross: a memorial for the Battle of Towton

On receiving news of his army's defeat, Henry fled into exile in Scotland with his wife and son. They were later joined by Somerset, Ros, Exeter, and the few Lancastrian nobles who escaped from the battlefield. The Battle of Towton severely reduced the power of the House of Lancaster in England; the linchpins of their power at court (Northumberland, Clifford, Ros, and Dacre) had either died or fled the country, ending the house's domination over the north of England.[67] Edward further exploited the situation, naming 14 Lancastrian peers as traitors.[68] Approximately 96 Lancastrians of the rank of knight and below were also attainted: 24 of them members of parliament.[69]

The new king preferred winning over his enemies to his cause; the nobles he attainted either died in the battle or had refused to submit to him. The estates of a few of these nobles were confiscated by the crown but the rest were untouched, remaining in the care of their families.[68] Edward also pardoned many of those he attainted after they submitted to his rule.[70]

Although Henry was at large in Scotland with his son, the battle put an end (for the time being) to disputes over the country's state of leadership since the Act of Accord. The English people were assured that there was now one true king; Edward.[67][71] He turned his attention to consolidating his rule over the country, winning over the people and putting down the rebellions raised by the few remaining Lancastrian diehards.[72] He knighted several of his supporters and elevated several of his gentry supporters to the peerage; Fauconberg was made the Earl of Kent.[73] Warwick benefited from Edward's rule after the battle.[74] He received parts of Northumberland's and Clifford's holdings,[75] and was made "the king's lieutenant in the North and admiral of England."[76] Edward bestowed on him many offices of power and wealth, further enhancing the earl's considerable influence and riches.[77]

By 1464, the Yorkists had "wiped out all effective Lancastrian resistance in the north of England."[78] Edward's reign was not interrupted until 1470;[55] by then, his relationship with Warwick had deteriorated to such an extent that the earl defected to the Lancastrians and forced Edward to flee England, restoring Henry to the throne.[79] The interruption of Yorkist rule was brief, as Edward regained his throne after defeating Warwick and his Lancastrian cohorts at the Battle of Barnet in 1471.[80]

Literature

 
Shakespeare used the Battle of Towton to illustrate the ills of civil war; in 3 Henry VI, Act 2, Scene 5, a father finds he has killed his son, while a son finds he has killed his own father.

In the sixteenth century William Shakespeare wrote a number of dramatisations of historic figures. The use of history as a backdrop, against which the familiar characters act out Shakespeare's drama, lends a sense of realism to his plays.[81] Shakespeare wrote a three-part play about Henry VI, relying heavily on Hall's chronicle as a source.[82] His vision of the Battle of Towton (Henry VI, Part 3, Act 2, Scene 5), touted as the "bloodiest" engagement in the Wars of the Roses,[71][83] became a set piece about the "terror of civil war, a national terror that is essentially familial".[81] Historian Bertram Wolffe said it was thanks to Shakespeare's dramatisation of the battle that the weak and ineffectual Henry was at least remembered by English society, albeit for his pining to have been born a shepherd rather than a king.[84]

Shakespeare's version of the battle presents a notable scene that comes immediately after Henry's soliloquy. Henry witnesses the laments of two soldiers in the battle. One slays his opponent in hope of plunder, only to find the victim is his son; the other kills his enemy, who turns out to be his father. Both killers have acted out of greed and fell into a state of deep grieving after discovering their misdeeds.[85] Shakespearian scholar Arthur Percival Rossiter names the scene as the most notable of the playwright's written "rituals". The delivery of the event follows the pattern of an opera: after a long speech, the actors alternate among one another to deliver single-line asides to the audience.[86] In this scene of grief, in a reversal of the approach adopted in his later historical plays, Shakespeare uses anonymous fictional characters to illustrate the ills of civil war while a historical king reflects on their fates.[81] Michael Hattaway, Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield, comments that Shakespeare intended to show Henry's sadness over the war, to elicit the same emotion among the audience and to expose Henry's ineptitude as king.[87]

The Battle of Towton was re-examined by Geoffrey Hill in his poem "Funeral Music" (1968). Hill presents the historical event through the voices of its combatants, looking at the turmoil of the era through their eyes.[88][89] The common soldiers grouse about their physical discomforts and the sacrifices that they had made for the ideas glorified by their leaders.[90] They share their superiors' determination to seek the destruction of their opponents, even at the cost of their lives.[91] Hill depicts the participants' belief that the event was pre-destined and of utmost importance as a farce; the world went about its business regardless of the Battle of Towton.[92]

An episode in C.J. Sansom's historical novel "Sovereign", set in 1541, sixty years after the battle, concerns a Towton farmer appealing to King Henry VIII to be compensated for the time and effort he has to spend on turning over to the Church the skeletons discovered nearly every day on his land.

Legacy

 
Re-enactors from the Towton Battlefield Society observe a moment of silence in memory of the dead of the battle.

Obtaining an accurate figure for casualties has been complicated: remains were either moved or used by farmers as fertiliser, and corpses were generally stripped of clothing and non-perishable items before burial. However some survived when later buildings were constructed over their graves; the first were uncovered in 1996 and excavations have so far uncovered more than 50 skeletons from the battle. An analysis of their injuries shows the brutality of the contest, including extensive post-mortem mutilations.[93]

15th-century documents confirm some casualties were reburied in graveyards at Saxton and a chapel constructed for the purpose by Richard III in 1484.[94] His death at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485 meant the building was never completed and eventually collapsed.[95] In 1929 stones allegedly from the chapel were used to create the Towton Cross, also known as Lord Dacre's Cross, which commemorates those who died in the battle.[96]

Lord Dacre was buried at the church of All Saints in Saxton and his tomb was reported in the late 19th century to be well maintained, although several of its panels had been weathered away.[97] The tree from which Dacre's killer was supposed to have shot his arrow had been cut down by the late 19th century.[98] In 2010 fragments from what are some of the earliest known handguns found in Britain were discovered on the battlefield.[99]

Views of the Wars of the Roses in general and of the battle as a charnel house were formed by Shakespeare and endured for centuries.[83] However at the start of the 21st century the battle was no longer prominent in the public consciousness. Journalists lamented that people were ignorant of the Battle of Towton and of its significance.[100] According to English Heritage the battle was of the "greatest importance": it was one of the largest, if not the largest, fought in England and resulted in the replacement of one royal dynasty by another.[54] Hill expressed a different opinion. Although impressed with the casualty figures touted by the chroniclers, he believed the battle brought no monumental changes to the lives of the English people.[101]

The Battle of Towton was associated with a tradition previously upheld in the village of Tysoe, Warwickshire. For several centuries a local farmer had scoured a hill figure, the Red Horse of Tysoe, each year, as part of the terms of his land tenancy. Although the origins of the tradition have never been conclusively identified, it was locally claimed this was done to commemorate the Earl of Warwick's inspirational deed of slaying his horse to show his resolve to stand and fight with the common soldiers.[102][103] The tradition died in 1798 when the Inclosure Acts implemented by the English government redesignated the common land on which the equine figure was located as private property.[102][103] The scouring was revived during the early 20th century but has since stopped.[104][105]

Notes

  1. ^ Contemporary sources claim over 100,000 on each side, modern estimates suggest 75,000 in total as the upper limit, over 3% of the English population at the time [1]
  2. ^ Based on total casualties of 9,000 to 13,000, 1/3 Yorkist [1]

References

  1. ^ a b Dean 2015, p. 35.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ross 1997, p. 37.
  3. ^ a b c Wolffe 2001, p. 332.
  4. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 7.
  5. ^ a b Wolffe 2001, p. 289.
  6. ^ Ross 1997, pp. 11–18.
  7. ^ Carpenter 2002, p. 147.
  8. ^ Hicks 2002, p. 211.
  9. ^ Wolffe 2001, pp. 324–327.
  10. ^ Ross 1997, pp. 7, 33.
  11. ^ Harriss 2005, p. 538.
  12. ^ Ross 1997, pp. 29–32.
  13. ^ Hicks 2002, pp. 216–217.
  14. ^ a b Wolffe 2001, pp. 330–331.
  15. ^ a b Ross 1997, p. 35.
  16. ^ Wolffe 2001, pp. 332–333.
  17. ^ Hicks 2002, pp. 218–219.
  18. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 32–39.
  19. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 47.
  20. ^ Morgan 2000, pp. 38, 40.
  21. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 44.
  22. ^ English Heritage 1995, p. 1.
  23. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 25.
  24. ^ Ross 1997, p. 36.
  25. ^ a b c Wolffe 2001, p. 331.
  26. ^ Sadler 2011, p. 78.
  27. ^ Scott 2010, p. 24.
  28. ^ Goodman 1990, p. 51.
  29. ^ Penn 2019, p. 46.
  30. ^ Carpenter 2002, p. 126,156.
  31. ^ a b Goodman 1990, p. 165.
  32. ^ Hicks 2002, pp. 147, 240.
  33. ^ Hicks 2002, p. 179.
  34. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 20–21.
  35. ^ Goodman 1990, p. 166.
  36. ^ Ross 1997, p. 17.
  37. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 20.
  38. ^ a b Ross 1997, p. 38.
  39. ^ English Heritage 1995, pp. 2–5.
  40. ^ a b Gravett 2003, pp. 50–51.
  41. ^ English Heritage 1995, p. 2.
  42. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 44–46.
  43. ^ a b Halsall 2000, p. 41.
  44. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 46.
  45. ^ Halsall 2000, p. 42.
  46. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 59.
  47. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 49–50.
  48. ^ English Heritage 1995, p. 4.
  49. ^ English Heritage 1995, pp. 3, 4–5.
  50. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 52–53.
  51. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 53–56.
  52. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 56–57.
  53. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 60–61, 65.
  54. ^ a b c d English Heritage 1995, p. 6.
  55. ^ a b Harriss 2005, p. 644.
  56. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 68.
  57. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 50, 69–73.
  58. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 85–89.
  59. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 37, 88.
  60. ^ Gravett 2003, pp. 72–73.
  61. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 73.
  62. ^ a b Gravett 2003, pp. 79–80.
  63. ^ Hinds 1912, pp. 68, 73.
  64. ^ Hinds 1912, pp. 65, 81.
  65. ^ Sutherland 2009, pp. 21–24.
  66. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 77.
  67. ^ a b Ross 1997, pp. 37–38.
  68. ^ a b Carpenter 2002, p. 159.
  69. ^ Ross 1997, p. 67.
  70. ^ Ross 1997, pp. 67–68.
  71. ^ a b Carpenter 2002, p. 149.
  72. ^ Ross 1997, pp. 41–63.
  73. ^ Carpenter 2002, p. 148.
  74. ^ Ross 1997, p. 70.
  75. ^ Carpenter 2002, p. 158.
  76. ^ Hicks 2002, p. 221.
  77. ^ Ross 1997, pp. 70–71.
  78. ^ Wolffe 2001, pp. 335–337.
  79. ^ Hicks 2002, pp. 281, 292, 296.
  80. ^ Ross 1997, p. 171.
  81. ^ a b c Berlin 2000, p. 139.
  82. ^ Edelman 1992, p. 39.
  83. ^ a b Saccio 2000, p. 141.
  84. ^ Wolffe 2001, p. 3.
  85. ^ Warren 2003, p. 236.
  86. ^ Hattaway & Shakespeare 1993, pp. 32–34.
  87. ^ Hattaway & Shakespeare 1993, p. 34.
  88. ^ Sherry 1987, pp. 86–87.
  89. ^ Wainwright 2005, p. 7.
  90. ^ Sherry 1987, pp. 88.
  91. ^ Wainwright 2005, p. 18.
  92. ^ Wainwright 2005, pp. 19, 37.
  93. ^ Sutherland & Schmidt 2003, pp. 15–25.
  94. ^ Sutherland & Schmidt 2003, p. 17.
  95. ^ NHLE 1000040.
  96. ^ Gravett 2003, p. 51.
  97. ^ Fallow 1889, pp. 303–305.
  98. ^ Ransome 1889, p. 463.
  99. ^ Catton 2010.
  100. ^ Gill 2008; Kettle 2007
  101. ^ Wainwright 2005, p. 83.
  102. ^ a b Harris 1935.
  103. ^ a b Salzman 1949, p. 175.
  104. ^ Askew 1935.
  105. ^ Gibson 1936, p. 180.

Sources

Books

  • Berlin, Normand (2000) [1993]. O'Neill's Shakespeare. Michigan, United States: University of Michigan Press. doi:10.3998/mpub.14276. ISBN 978-0-472-10469-7.
  • Brooke, Richard (1857). "The Field of the Battle of Towton". Visits to Fields of Battle in England. London, United Kingdom: John Russell Smith. pp. 81–129.
  • Carpenter, Christine (2002) [1997]. The Wars of the Roses: Politics and the constitution in England, c. 1437–1509. New York, United States: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31874-7.
  • Edelman, Charles (1992). "The Wars of the Roses: 2 and 3 Henry VI, Richard III". Brawl Ridiculous: Swordfighting in Shakespeare's Plays. Manchester, United Kingdom: Manchester University Press. pp. 69–89. ISBN 978-0-7190-3507-4.
  • Goodman, Anthony (19 July 1990) [1981]. "Local Revolts and Nobles' Struggles, 1469–71". The Wars of the Roses: Military Activity and English Society, 1452–97. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. pp. 66–85. ISBN 978-0-415-05264-1.
  • Gravett, Christopher (2003). (PDF). Campaign. Vol. 120. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing (published 20 April 2003). ISBN 978-1-84176-513-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2013.
  • Harriss, G.L. (2005). Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461. New Oxford History of England. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press (published 27 January 2005). ISBN 978-0-19-822816-5.
  • Hattaway, Michael & Shakespeare, William (1993). "The Play: 'What Should be the Meaning of All Those Foughten Fields?'". The Third Part of King Henry VI. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. pp. 9–35. ISBN 0-521-37705-6.
  • Hicks, Michael (2002) [1998]. Warwick the Kingmaker. Oxford, United Kingdom: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-631-23593-0.
  • Markham, Clements (1906). "The Crowning Victory of Towton". Richard III: His Life and Character. London, United Kingdom: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Penn, Thomas (2019). The Brothers York. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-1846146909.
  • Ross, Charles (1997) [1974]. Edward IV. English Monarchs series (revised ed.). Connecticut, United States: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07372-0.
  • Saccio, Peter (2000) [1977]. Shakespeare's English Kings: History, Chronicle, and Drama. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512319-0.
  • Sadler, John (2011). Towton: The Battle of Palm Sunday Field 1461. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-84415-965-9.
  • Salzman, Louis Francis, ed. (1949). "Parishes—Tysoe". A History of the County of Warwick. Vol. 5. London, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 175–182.
  • Santiuste, David (2010). Edward IV and the Wars of the Roses. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-84415-930-7.
  • Sherry, Vincent B. (1987). "King Log: Thorny Craft". The Uncommon Tongue: The Poetry and Criticism of Geoffrey Hill. Michigan, United States: University of Michigan Press. pp. 81–125. ISBN 0-472-10084-X.
  • Wainwright, Jeffrey (2005). Acceptable Words: Essays on the Poetry of Geoffrey Hill. Manchester, United Kingdom: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-6754-5.
  • Wolffe, Bertram (2001) [1981]. Henry VI. English Monarchs series (Yale ed.). New Haven, CT, US: Yale University Press (published 10 June 2001). ISBN 978-0-300-08926-4.

Essays and journals

  • Askew, H. (1 June 1935). "The Tysoe Red Horse". Notes and Queries (PDF, subscription required). Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. 168: 394. doi:10.1093/nq/CLXVIII.jun01.394e. ISSN 1471-6941.
  • Dean, Sidney (2015). "Bloody Sunday: The Battle of Towton". Medieval Warfare. 5 (3): 28–35. JSTOR 48578453.
  • Fallow, Thomas McCall (January 1889). "The Dacre Tomb in Saxton Churchyard". The Yorkshire Archaeological and Topographical Journal. London, United Kingdom: Yorkshire Archaeological and Topographical Association. 10: 303–308. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  • Fiorato, Veronica (2007). "The Context of the Discovery". Blood Red Roses: The Archaeology of a Mass Grave from the Battle of Towton AD 1461 (Second revised ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxbow. ISBN 978-1-84217-289-6.
  • Gibson, Strickland (1936). "Francis Wise, B. D" (PDF). Oxoniensia. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society. 1: 173–195. ISSN 0308-5562. Retrieved 17 December 2010.  
  • Halsall, Trevor James (2000). "Geological Constraints on Battlefield Tactics: Examples in Britain from the Middle Ages to the Civil Wars". In Rose, Edward P. F.; Nathanail, C. Paul (eds.). Geology and Warfare: Examples of the Influence of Terrain and Geologists on Military Operations. Bath, United Kingdom: Geological Society of London. pp. 32–59. ISBN 1-86239-065-7.
  • Harris, Mary Dormer (18 May 1935). "The Tysoe Red Horse". Notes and Queries. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. 168: 349. doi:10.1093/nq/CLXVIII.may18.349a. ISSN 1471-6941.
  • Hinds, Allen B., ed. (1912). Calendar of State Papers and Manuscripts in the Archives and Collections of Milan 1385–1618. London: Stationery Office.
  • Morgan, Philip (2000). "The Naming of Battlefields in the Middle Ages". In Dunn, Diana (ed.). War and Society in Medieval and Early Modern. Liverpool, United Kingdom: Liverpool University Press. pp. 34–52. ISBN 0-85323-885-5.
  • Ransome, Cyril (July 1889). "The Battle of Towton". The English Historical Review. 4: 460–466. doi:10.1093/ehr/IV.XV.460. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  • Scott, Douglas Dowell (2010). "Military Medicine in the Pre-Modern Era: Using Forensic Techniques in the Archaeological Investigation of Military Remains". The Historical Archaeology of Military Sites: Method and Topic. Texas, United States: Texas A&M University Press. pp. 21–29. ISBN 978-1-60344-207-7.
  • Styles, Philip (2002) [1964]. "The Commonwealth". In Nicoll, John Ramsay Allardyce (ed.). Shakespeare Survey. Shakespeare Criticism. Vol. 17. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. pp. 103–119. ISBN 0-521-52353-2.
  • Sutherland, Tim (2009). (PDF). Journal of Conflict Archaeology. 5 (1): 1–25. doi:10.1163/157407709x12634580640173. ISSN 1574-0773. S2CID 159544440. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2019.
  • Sutherland, TL; Schmidt, A (2003). "The Towton Battlefield Archaeological Survey Project:An Integrated Approach to Battlefield Archaeology". Landscapes. 4 (2). JSTOR 3805936.
  • Warren, Roger (2003) [1984]. "An Aspect of Dramatic Technique in Henry VI". In Alexander, Catherine M. S. (ed.). Shakespeare Criticism. The Cambridge Shakespeare Library. Vol. 2. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-82433-8.

Newspaper articles

  • Catton, Richard (22 November 2010). "'Unique' battlefield gun discovery on Towton battlefield". York Press. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  • Gill, A.A. (24 August 2008). "Towton, the Bloodbath that Changed the Course of Our History". The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 3 January 2011. Retrieved 25 November 2010.
  • Kettle, Martin (25 August 2007). . The Guardian. p. 33. Archived from the original on 5 April 2010. Retrieved 25 November 2010.

Online sources

Further reading

  • Goodwin, George (2011). "The Battle of Towton". History Today. Vol. 61, no. 5.

External links

  • Towton Battlefield Society
  • "Battle of Towton". The Battlefields Trust.

battle, towton, took, place, march, 1461, during, wars, roses, near, towton, north, yorkshire, dubious, distinction, being, probably, largest, bloodiest, battle, english, soil, fought, hours, between, estimated, soldiers, snowstorm, palm, sunday, yorkist, army. The Battle of Towton took place on 29 March 1461 during the Wars of the Roses near Towton in North Yorkshire and has the dubious distinction of being probably the largest and bloodiest battle on English soil 4 Fought for ten hours between an estimated 50 000 soldiers in a snowstorm on Palm Sunday the Yorkist army achieved a decisive victory over their Lancastrian opponents As a result Edward IV deposed the Lancastrian Henry VI and secured the English throne Battle of TowtonPart of the Wars of the RosesThe Battle of Towton Richard Caton Woodville Jr 1922 Date29 March 1461LocationNear Towton Yorkshire United Kingdom53 50 10 N 01 16 25 W 53 83611 N 1 27361 W 53 83611 1 27361 Coordinates 53 50 10 N 01 16 25 W 53 83611 N 1 27361 W 53 83611 1 27361ResultYorkist victoryBelligerentsHouse of YorkHouse of LancasterCommanders and leadersEdward IVEarl of WarwickBaron FauconbergDuke of NorfolkDuke of SomersetDuke of ExeterEarl of Northumberland Sir Andrew Trollope Strength50 000 60 000 a Casualties and losses3 000 to 4 500 dead b 6 000 to 8 500 dead 2 3 Henry VI succeeded his father Henry V when he was nine months old in 1422 but was a weak ineffectual and mentally unsound ruler which encouraged the nobles to scheme for control over him The situation deteriorated in the 1450s into a civil war between his Beaufort relatives and Queen Margaret of Anjou on one side with those of his cousin Richard Duke of York on the other In October 1460 Parliament passed the Act of Accord naming York as Henry s successor but neither the queen nor her Lancastrian allies would accept the disinheritance of her son Edward of Westminster Prince of Wales They raised a large army who defeated and killed York and his second son Edmund at Wakefield in December Financed by the City of London his son and heir Edward found enough backing to denounce Henry and declare himself king The Battle of Towton was to affirm the victor s right through force of arms to rule over England On reaching the battlefield the Yorkists found themselves heavily outnumbered since part of their force under the Duke of Norfolk had yet to arrive The Yorkist leader Lord Fauconberg turned the tables by ordering his archers to take advantage of the strong wind to outrange their enemies The one sided missile exchange with Lancastrian arrows falling short of the Yorkist ranks provoked the Lancastrians into abandoning their defensive positions The ensuing hand to hand combat lasted hours exhausting the combatants The arrival of Norfolk s men reinvigorated the Yorkists and encouraged by Edward they routed their foes Many Lancastrians were killed while fleeing some trampled one another and others drowned in the rivers which are said to have run red with blood for several days Several high ranking prisoners were also executed The strength of the House of Lancaster was severely reduced as a result of this battle Henry fled the country and many of his most powerful followers were dead or in exile after the engagement leaving a new king Edward IV to rule England In 1929 the Towton Cross was erected on the battlefield to commemorate the event Various archaeological remains and mass graves related to the battle have been found in the area centuries after the engagement Contents 1 Setting 2 Force compositions 3 Deployment 4 Fighting 5 Rout 6 Aftermath 7 Literature 8 Legacy 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 11 1 Books 11 2 Essays and journals 11 3 Newspaper articles 11 4 Online sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksSetting EditFurther information Wars of the Roses Towton Wakefield Northampton Mortimer s Cross St Albans London Yorkclass notpageimage Locations Battle of Towton other battles other places In 1461 England was in the sixth year of the Wars of the Roses a series of civil wars between the houses of York and Lancaster over the English throne The Lancastrians backed the reigning King of England Henry VI a weak and indecisive man who suffered from intermittent bouts of madness 5 The leader of the Yorkists was initially Richard Duke of York who resented the dominance of a small number of aristocrats favoured by the king principally his close relatives the Beaufort family Fuelled by rivalries between influential supporters of both factions York s attempts to displace Henry s favourites from power led to war 5 6 After capturing Henry at the Battle of Northampton in 1460 the duke who was of royal blood issued his claim to the throne Even York s closest supporters among the nobility were reluctant to usurp the dynasty the nobles passed by a majority vote the Act of Accord which ruled that the duke and his heirs would succeed to the throne upon Henry s death 7 8 The Queen of England Margaret of Anjou refused to accept an arrangement that deprived her son Edward of Westminster of his birthright She had fled to Scotland after the Yorkist victory at Northampton there she began raising an army promising her followers the freedom to plunder on the march south through England Her Lancastrian supporters also mustered in the north of England preparing for her arrival York marched with his army to meet this threat but he was lured into a trap at the Battle of Wakefield and killed The duke and his second son Edmund Earl of Rutland were decapitated by the Lancastrians and their heads were impaled on spikes atop the Micklegate Bar a gatehouse of the city of York 9 The leadership of the House of York passed to the duke s heir Edward 10 The armies of York white and Lancaster red move towards Towton The victors of Wakefield were joined by Margaret s army and marched south plundering settlements along the way They liberated Henry after defeating the Yorkist army of Richard Neville Earl of Warwick in the Second Battle of St Albans and continued pillaging on their way to London The city of London refused to open its gates to Henry and Margaret for fear of being looted The Lancastrian army was short of supplies and had no adequate means to replenish them When Margaret learned that Richard of York s eldest son Edward Earl of March and his army had won the Battle of Mortimer s Cross in Herefordshire and were marching towards London she withdrew the Lancastrians to York 11 12 Warwick and the remnants of his army marched from St Albans to join Edward s men and the Yorkists were welcomed into London Having lost custody of Henry the Yorkists needed a justification to continue the rebellion against the king and his Lancastrian followers On 4 March Warwick proclaimed the young Yorkist leader as King Edward IV The proclamation gained greater acceptance than Richard of York s earlier claim as several nobles opposed to letting Edward s father ascend the throne viewed the Lancastrian actions as a betrayal of the legally established Accord 13 14 The country now had two kings a situation that could not be allowed to persist especially if Edward were to be formally crowned 14 Edward offered an amnesty to any Lancastrian supporter who renounced Henry The move was intended to win over the commoners his offer did not extend to wealthy Lancastrians mostly the nobles 15 The young king summoned and ordered his followers to march towards York to take back his family s city and to depose Henry formally through force of arms 16 The Yorkist army moved along three routes Warwick s uncle Lord Fauconberg led a group to clear the way to York for the main body which was led by Edward The Duke of Norfolk was sent east to raise forces and rejoin Edward before the battle Warwick s group moved to the west of the main body through the Midlands gathering men as they went On 28 March the leading elements of the Yorkist army came upon the remains of the crossing in Ferrybridge crossing the River Aire They were rebuilding the bridge when they were attacked and routed by a band of about 500 Lancastrians led by Lord Clifford 17 Learning of the encounter Edward led the main Yorkist army to the bridge and was forced into a gruelling battle although the Yorkists were superior in numbers the narrow bridge was a bottleneck forcing them to confront Clifford s men on equal terms Edward sent Fauconberg and his horsemen to ford the river at Castleford which should have been guarded by Henry Earl of Northumberland but he arrived late by which time the Yorkists had crossed the ford and were heading to attack the Lancastrians at Ferrybridge from the flank The Lancastrians retreated but were chased to Dinting Dale where they were all killed Clifford being slain by an arrow to his throat Having cleared the vicinity of enemy forces the Yorkists repaired the bridge and pressed onwards to camp overnight at Sherburn in Elmet The Lancastrian army marched to Tadcaster about 2 miles 3 2 km north of Towton and made camp 18 As dawn broke the two rival armies struck camp under dark skies and strong winds 2 19 Although it was Palm Sunday a day of holy significance to Christians the forces prepared for battle and a few documents named the engagement the Battle of Palme Sonday Felde but the name did not gain wide acceptance 20 Popular opinion favoured naming the battle after the village of Towton because of its proximity and it being the most prominent in the area 21 Force compositions EditThe armies gathered at Towton were among the largest at the time 22 Contemporary sources like Gregory s Chronicle claimed that the soldiers on each side numbered in the hundreds of thousands 23 These figures are thought to be exaggerated and modern historians believe that a combined figure of 50 000 65 000 is more likely between one and two percent of the English population at the time 24 25 26 An analysis of 50 skeletons found in mass graves between 1996 and 2003 showed most were 24 to 30 years old and many were veterans of previous engagements 27 Henry s physical and mental frailty was a major weakness for the Lancastrian cause and he remained in York with Margaret 25 In contrast the 18 year old Edward was a tall and imposing sight in armour and led from the front his preference for bold offensive tactics determined the Yorkist plan of action for this engagement His presence and example were crucial to ensuring the Yorkists held together through the long and exhausting struggle 2 Edward s presence was crucial to Yorkist victory Approximately three quarters of English peers fought in the battle 25 eight were with the Yorkist army whereas the Lancastrians had at least nineteen 28 Of the other Yorkist leaders Warwick was absent from the battle having suffered a leg wound at Ferrybridge 29 Norfolk was too old to participate and his contingent was commanded by Walter Blount and Robert Horne this may have been an advantage since he was regarded as an unpredictable ally 30 Edward relied heavily on Warwick s uncle Lord Fauconberg a veteran of the Anglo French wars highly regarded by contemporaries for his military skills 31 He demonstrated this in a wide range of roles having captained the Calais garrison 31 led naval piracy expeditions in the Channel 32 and commanded the Yorkist vanguard at Northampton 33 The senior Lancastrian general was Henry Beaufort Duke of Somerset an experienced leader credited with victories at Wakefield and St Albans although others suggest they were due to Sir Andrew Trollope 34 Trollope was an extremely experienced and astute commander who served under Warwick in Calais before defecting to the Lancastrians at Ludford Bridge in 1459 35 Other notable Lancastrian leaders included Henry Holland Duke of Exeter 36 and northern magnates the Earl of Northumberland 37 Lord de Ros and Lord Dacre Another leading Lancastrian Lord Clifford had been killed by an arrow in the throat at Ferrybridge 38 Deployment Edit Initial deployments the Yorkists white and Lancastrians red at Towton Very few historical sources give detailed accounts of the battle and they do not describe the exact deployments of the armies The paucity of such primary sources led early historians to adopt Hall s chronicle as their main resource for the engagement despite its authorship 70 years after the event and questions over the origin of his information The Burgundian chronicler Jean de Waurin c 1398 c 1474 was a more contemporary source but his chronicle was made available to the public only from 1891 and several mistakes in it discouraged historians at that time from using it Later reconstructions of the battle were based on Hall s version supplemented by minor details from other sources 39 40 The battle took place on a plateau between the villages of Saxton to the south and Towton to the north The region was agricultural land with plenty of wide open areas and small roads on which to manoeuvre the armies 41 Two roads ran through the area the Old London Road which connected Towton to the English capital and a direct road between Saxton and Towton The steeply banked Cock Beck flowed in an S shaped course around the plateau from the north to west The plateau was bisected by the Towton Dale which ran from the west and extended into the North Acres in the east Woodlands were scattered along the beck Renshaw Woods lined the river on the north western side of the plateau and south of Towton Dale Castle Hill Wood grew on the west side of the plateau at a bend in the beck The area to the north east of this forest would be known as Bloody Meadow after the battle 42 According to Gravett and fellow military enthusiast Trevor James Halsall Somerset s decision to engage the Yorkist army on this plateau was sound Defending the ground just before Towton would block any enemy advance towards the city of York whether they moved along the London Towton road or an old Roman road to the west The Lancastrians deployed on the north side of the dale using the valley as a protective ditch 43 44 the disadvantage of this position was that they could not see beyond the southern ridge of the dale 45 The Lancastrian flanks were protected by marshes their right was further secured by the steep banks of the Cock Beck The width of their deployment area did not allow for a longer front line depriving the Lancastrians of the opportunity to use their numerical superiority 43 Waurin s account gave rise to the suggestion that Somerset ordered a force of mounted spearmen to conceal itself in Castle Hill Wood ready to charge into the Yorkist left flank at an opportune time in battle 46 The Yorkists appeared as the Lancastrians finished deployment Line after line of soldiers crested the southern ridge of the dale and formed up in ranks opposite their enemies as snow began to fall Edward s army was outnumbered and Norfolk s troops had yet to arrive to join them 47 The Yorkist vanguard was commanded by Lord Fauconberg Hall names John Wenlock and John Dinham and others as commanders of the Yorkist rearguard 40 48 Sources variously mention the Duke of Somerset Trollope the Earl of Northumberland and the Duke of Exeter as the commanders of the Lancastrian host but show little agreement as to which portion of the host each of them was assigned 49 Fighting Edit Yorkist leader William Neville on horse and his archers took advantage of the wind to inflict early damage on the Lancastrians 19th century drawing As Somerset was content to stand and let his foes come to him the opening move of the battle was made by the Yorkists 50 Noticing the direction and strength of the wind Fauconberg ordered all Yorkist archers to step forward and unleash a volley of their arrows from what would be the standard maximum range of their longbows With the wind behind them the Yorkist missiles travelled farther than usual plunging deep into the masses of soldiers on the hill slope The response from the Lancastrian archers was ineffective as the heavy wind blew snow in their faces They found it difficult to judge the range and pick out their targets and their arrows fell short of the Yorkist ranks Fauconberg had ordered his men to retreat after loosing one volley thus avoiding any casualties Unable to observe their results the Lancastrians loosed their arrows until most had been used leaving a thick prickly carpet in the ground in front of the Yorkists 2 51 Bodkin arrows were among the missiles that killed many in the battle After the Lancastrians had ceased loosing their arrows Fauconberg ordered his archers to step forward again to shoot When they had exhausted their ammunition the Yorkists plucked arrows off the ground in front of them arrows loosed by their foes and continued shooting Coming under attack without any effective response of its own the Lancastrian army moved from its position to engage the Yorkists in close combat Seeing the advancing mass of men the Yorkist archers shot a few more volleys before retreating behind their ranks of men at arms leaving thousands of arrows in the ground to hinder the Lancastrian attack 2 52 As the Yorkists reformed their ranks to receive the Lancastrian charge their left flank came under attack by the horsemen from Castle Hill Wood mentioned by Waurin The Yorkist left wing fell into disarray and several men started to flee Edward had to take command of the left wing to save the situation By engaging in the fight and encouraging his followers his example inspired many to stand their ground The armies clashed and archers shot into the mass of men at short range The Lancastrians continuously threw fresher men into the fray and gradually the numerically inferior Yorkist army was forced to give ground and retreat up the southern ridge Gravett thought that the Lancastrian left had less momentum than the rest of its formation skewing the line of battle such that its western end tilted towards Saxton 53 54 The fighting continued for three hours according to research by English Heritage a government body in charge of conservation of historic sites 2 54 It was indecisive until the arrival of Norfolk s men Marching up the Old London Road Norfolk s contingent was hidden from view until they crested the ridge and attacked the Lancastrian left flank 54 55 The Lancastrians continued to give fight but the advantage had shifted to the Yorkists By the end of the day the Lancastrian line had broken up as small groups of men began fleeing for their lives 2 Polydore Vergil chronicler for Henry VII of England claimed that combat lasted for a total of 10 hours 56 Rout Edit At the crucial moment Norfolk s troops arrived helping the Yorkists white overcome the Lancastrians red The tired Lancastrians flung off their helmets and armour to run faster Without such protection they were much more vulnerable to the attacks of the Yorkists Norfolk s troops were much fresher and faster Fleeing across what would later become known as Bloody Meadow many Lancastrians were cut down from behind or were slain after they had surrendered Before the battle both sides had issued the order to give no quarter and the Yorkists were in no mood to spare anyone after the long gruelling fight 57 A number of Lancastrians such as Trollope also had substantial bounties on their heads 15 Gregory s chronicle stated 42 knights were killed after they were taken prisoner 2 Archaeological findings in the late 20th century shed light on the final moments of the battle In 1996 workmen at a construction site in the village of Towton uncovered a mass grave which archaeologists believed to contain the remains of men who were slain during or after the battle in 1461 The bodies showed severe injuries to their upper torsos arms and skulls were cracked or shattered 58 One exhumed specimen known as Towton 25 had the front of his skull bisected a weapon had slashed across his face cutting a deep wound that split the bone The skull was also pierced by another deep wound a horizontal cut from a blade across the back 59 The Lancastrians lost more troops in their rout than from the battlefield Men struggling across the Cock Beck were dragged down by currents and drowned Those floundering were stepped on and pushed under water by their comrades behind them as they rushed to get away from the Yorkists As the Lancastrians struggled across the beck Yorkist archers rode to high vantage points and shot arrows at them The dead began to pile up and the chronicles state that the Lancastrians eventually fled across these bridges of bodies 2 60 The chase continued northwards across the River Wharfe which was larger than Cock Beck A bridge over the river collapsed under the flood of men and many drowned trying to cross Those who hid in Tadcaster and York were hunted down and killed 61 A newsletter dated 4 April 1461 reported a widely circulated figure of 28 000 casualties in the battle which Charles Ross and other historians believe was exaggerated The number was taken from the heralds estimate of the dead and appeared in letters from Edward and the Bishop of Salisbury Richard Beauchamp 2 62 Letters from an ambassador and a merchant from the duchy of Milan broke this number down into 8 000 dead for the Yorkists and 20 000 for the Lancastrians 63 in contrast bishops Nicholas O Flanagan Elphin and Francesco Coppini reported only 800 dead Yorkists 64 Other contemporary sources gave higher numbers ranging from 30 000 to 38 000 Hall quoted an exact figure of 36 776 2 62 An exception was the Annales rerum anglicarum which stated the Lancastrians had 9 000 casualties an estimate Ross and Wolffe found to be more believable 2 3 A more recent analysis of the sources and archaeological evidence which posits accounts of Towton were combined with those of the actions of Ferrybridge and Dintingdale suggests total casualty figures in the range 2 800 3 800 65 The Lancastrian nobility sustained heavy losses The Earl of Northumberland lords Welles Mauley and Dacre and Sir Andrew Trollope fell in battle while the earls of Devon and Wiltshire were afterwards taken and executed 3 Lord Dacre was said to have been killed by an archer who was perched in a bur tree a local term for an elder 66 In contrast the Yorkists lost only one notable member of the gentry Horne at Towton 38 Aftermath Edit Towton Cross a memorial for the Battle of Towton On receiving news of his army s defeat Henry fled into exile in Scotland with his wife and son They were later joined by Somerset Ros Exeter and the few Lancastrian nobles who escaped from the battlefield The Battle of Towton severely reduced the power of the House of Lancaster in England the linchpins of their power at court Northumberland Clifford Ros and Dacre had either died or fled the country ending the house s domination over the north of England 67 Edward further exploited the situation naming 14 Lancastrian peers as traitors 68 Approximately 96 Lancastrians of the rank of knight and below were also attainted 24 of them members of parliament 69 The new king preferred winning over his enemies to his cause the nobles he attainted either died in the battle or had refused to submit to him The estates of a few of these nobles were confiscated by the crown but the rest were untouched remaining in the care of their families 68 Edward also pardoned many of those he attainted after they submitted to his rule 70 Although Henry was at large in Scotland with his son the battle put an end for the time being to disputes over the country s state of leadership since the Act of Accord The English people were assured that there was now one true king Edward 67 71 He turned his attention to consolidating his rule over the country winning over the people and putting down the rebellions raised by the few remaining Lancastrian diehards 72 He knighted several of his supporters and elevated several of his gentry supporters to the peerage Fauconberg was made the Earl of Kent 73 Warwick benefited from Edward s rule after the battle 74 He received parts of Northumberland s and Clifford s holdings 75 and was made the king s lieutenant in the North and admiral of England 76 Edward bestowed on him many offices of power and wealth further enhancing the earl s considerable influence and riches 77 By 1464 the Yorkists had wiped out all effective Lancastrian resistance in the north of England 78 Edward s reign was not interrupted until 1470 55 by then his relationship with Warwick had deteriorated to such an extent that the earl defected to the Lancastrians and forced Edward to flee England restoring Henry to the throne 79 The interruption of Yorkist rule was brief as Edward regained his throne after defeating Warwick and his Lancastrian cohorts at the Battle of Barnet in 1471 80 Literature Edit Shakespeare used the Battle of Towton to illustrate the ills of civil war in 3 Henry VI Act 2 Scene 5 a father finds he has killed his son while a son finds he has killed his own father In the sixteenth century William Shakespeare wrote a number of dramatisations of historic figures The use of history as a backdrop against which the familiar characters act out Shakespeare s drama lends a sense of realism to his plays 81 Shakespeare wrote a three part play about Henry VI relying heavily on Hall s chronicle as a source 82 His vision of the Battle of Towton Henry VI Part 3 Act 2 Scene 5 touted as the bloodiest engagement in the Wars of the Roses 71 83 became a set piece about the terror of civil war a national terror that is essentially familial 81 Historian Bertram Wolffe said it was thanks to Shakespeare s dramatisation of the battle that the weak and ineffectual Henry was at least remembered by English society albeit for his pining to have been born a shepherd rather than a king 84 Shakespeare s version of the battle presents a notable scene that comes immediately after Henry s soliloquy Henry witnesses the laments of two soldiers in the battle One slays his opponent in hope of plunder only to find the victim is his son the other kills his enemy who turns out to be his father Both killers have acted out of greed and fell into a state of deep grieving after discovering their misdeeds 85 Shakespearian scholar Arthur Percival Rossiter names the scene as the most notable of the playwright s written rituals The delivery of the event follows the pattern of an opera after a long speech the actors alternate among one another to deliver single line asides to the audience 86 In this scene of grief in a reversal of the approach adopted in his later historical plays Shakespeare uses anonymous fictional characters to illustrate the ills of civil war while a historical king reflects on their fates 81 Michael Hattaway Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield comments that Shakespeare intended to show Henry s sadness over the war to elicit the same emotion among the audience and to expose Henry s ineptitude as king 87 The Battle of Towton was re examined by Geoffrey Hill in his poem Funeral Music 1968 Hill presents the historical event through the voices of its combatants looking at the turmoil of the era through their eyes 88 89 The common soldiers grouse about their physical discomforts and the sacrifices that they had made for the ideas glorified by their leaders 90 They share their superiors determination to seek the destruction of their opponents even at the cost of their lives 91 Hill depicts the participants belief that the event was pre destined and of utmost importance as a farce the world went about its business regardless of the Battle of Towton 92 An episode in C J Sansom s historical novel Sovereign set in 1541 sixty years after the battle concerns a Towton farmer appealing to King Henry VIII to be compensated for the time and effort he has to spend on turning over to the Church the skeletons discovered nearly every day on his land Legacy Edit Re enactors from the Towton Battlefield Society observe a moment of silence in memory of the dead of the battle Obtaining an accurate figure for casualties has been complicated remains were either moved or used by farmers as fertiliser and corpses were generally stripped of clothing and non perishable items before burial However some survived when later buildings were constructed over their graves the first were uncovered in 1996 and excavations have so far uncovered more than 50 skeletons from the battle An analysis of their injuries shows the brutality of the contest including extensive post mortem mutilations 93 15th century documents confirm some casualties were reburied in graveyards at Saxton and a chapel constructed for the purpose by Richard III in 1484 94 His death at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485 meant the building was never completed and eventually collapsed 95 In 1929 stones allegedly from the chapel were used to create the Towton Cross also known as Lord Dacre s Cross which commemorates those who died in the battle 96 Lord Dacre was buried at the church of All Saints in Saxton and his tomb was reported in the late 19th century to be well maintained although several of its panels had been weathered away 97 The tree from which Dacre s killer was supposed to have shot his arrow had been cut down by the late 19th century 98 In 2010 fragments from what are some of the earliest known handguns found in Britain were discovered on the battlefield 99 Views of the Wars of the Roses in general and of the battle as a charnel house were formed by Shakespeare and endured for centuries 83 However at the start of the 21st century the battle was no longer prominent in the public consciousness Journalists lamented that people were ignorant of the Battle of Towton and of its significance 100 According to English Heritage the battle was of the greatest importance it was one of the largest if not the largest fought in England and resulted in the replacement of one royal dynasty by another 54 Hill expressed a different opinion Although impressed with the casualty figures touted by the chroniclers he believed the battle brought no monumental changes to the lives of the English people 101 The Battle of Towton was associated with a tradition previously upheld in the village of Tysoe Warwickshire For several centuries a local farmer had scoured a hill figure the Red Horse of Tysoe each year as part of the terms of his land tenancy Although the origins of the tradition have never been conclusively identified it was locally claimed this was done to commemorate the Earl of Warwick s inspirational deed of slaying his horse to show his resolve to stand and fight with the common soldiers 102 103 The tradition died in 1798 when the Inclosure Acts implemented by the English government redesignated the common land on which the equine figure was located as private property 102 103 The scouring was revived during the early 20th century but has since stopped 104 105 Notes Edit Contemporary sources claim over 100 000 on each side modern estimates suggest 75 000 in total as the upper limit over 3 of the English population at the time 1 Based on total casualties of 9 000 to 13 000 1 3 Yorkist 1 References Edit a b Dean 2015 p 35 a b c d e f g h i j k l Ross 1997 p 37 a b c Wolffe 2001 p 332 Gravett 2003 p 7 a b Wolffe 2001 p 289 Ross 1997 pp 11 18 Carpenter 2002 p 147 Hicks 2002 p 211 Wolffe 2001 pp 324 327 Ross 1997 pp 7 33 Harriss 2005 p 538 Ross 1997 pp 29 32 Hicks 2002 pp 216 217 a b Wolffe 2001 pp 330 331 a b Ross 1997 p 35 Wolffe 2001 pp 332 333 Hicks 2002 pp 218 219 Gravett 2003 pp 32 39 Gravett 2003 p 47 Morgan 2000 pp 38 40 Gravett 2003 p 44 English Heritage 1995 p 1 Gravett 2003 p 25 Ross 1997 p 36 a b c Wolffe 2001 p 331 Sadler 2011 p 78 Scott 2010 p 24 Goodman 1990 p 51 Penn 2019 p 46 Carpenter 2002 p 126 156 a b Goodman 1990 p 165 Hicks 2002 pp 147 240 Hicks 2002 p 179 Gravett 2003 pp 20 21 Goodman 1990 p 166 Ross 1997 p 17 Gravett 2003 p 20 a b Ross 1997 p 38 English Heritage 1995 pp 2 5 a b Gravett 2003 pp 50 51 English Heritage 1995 p 2 Gravett 2003 pp 44 46 a b Halsall 2000 p 41 Gravett 2003 p 46 Halsall 2000 p 42 Gravett 2003 p 59 Gravett 2003 pp 49 50 English Heritage 1995 p 4 English Heritage 1995 pp 3 4 5 Gravett 2003 pp 52 53 Gravett 2003 pp 53 56 Gravett 2003 pp 56 57 Gravett 2003 pp 60 61 65 a b c d English Heritage 1995 p 6 a b Harriss 2005 p 644 Gravett 2003 p 68 Gravett 2003 pp 50 69 73 Gravett 2003 pp 85 89 Gravett 2003 pp 37 88 Gravett 2003 pp 72 73 Gravett 2003 p 73 a b Gravett 2003 pp 79 80 Hinds 1912 pp 68 73 Hinds 1912 pp 65 81 Sutherland 2009 pp 21 24 Gravett 2003 p 77 a b Ross 1997 pp 37 38 a b Carpenter 2002 p 159 Ross 1997 p 67 Ross 1997 pp 67 68 a b Carpenter 2002 p 149 Ross 1997 pp 41 63 Carpenter 2002 p 148 Ross 1997 p 70 Carpenter 2002 p 158 Hicks 2002 p 221 Ross 1997 pp 70 71 Wolffe 2001 pp 335 337 Hicks 2002 pp 281 292 296 Ross 1997 p 171 a b c Berlin 2000 p 139 Edelman 1992 p 39 a b Saccio 2000 p 141 Wolffe 2001 p 3 Warren 2003 p 236 Hattaway amp Shakespeare 1993 pp 32 34 Hattaway amp Shakespeare 1993 p 34 Sherry 1987 pp 86 87 Wainwright 2005 p 7 Sherry 1987 pp 88 Wainwright 2005 p 18 Wainwright 2005 pp 19 37 Sutherland amp Schmidt 2003 pp 15 25 Sutherland amp Schmidt 2003 p 17 NHLE 1000040 Gravett 2003 p 51 Fallow 1889 pp 303 305 Ransome 1889 p 463 Catton 2010 Gill 2008 Kettle 2007 Wainwright 2005 p 83 a b Harris 1935 a b Salzman 1949 p 175 Askew 1935 Gibson 1936 p 180 Sources EditBooks Edit Berlin Normand 2000 1993 O Neill s Shakespeare Michigan United States University of Michigan Press doi 10 3998 mpub 14276 ISBN 978 0 472 10469 7 Brooke Richard 1857 The Field of the Battle of Towton Visits to Fields of Battle in England London United Kingdom John Russell Smith pp 81 129 Carpenter Christine 2002 1997 The Wars of the Roses Politics and the constitution in England c 1437 1509 New York United States Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31874 7 Edelman Charles 1992 The Wars of the Roses 2 and 3 Henry VI Richard III Brawl Ridiculous Swordfighting in Shakespeare s Plays Manchester United Kingdom Manchester University Press pp 69 89 ISBN 978 0 7190 3507 4 Goodman Anthony 19 July 1990 1981 Local Revolts and Nobles Struggles 1469 71 The Wars of the Roses Military Activity and English Society 1452 97 London United Kingdom Routledge pp 66 85 ISBN 978 0 415 05264 1 Gravett Christopher 2003 Towton 1461 England s Bloodiest Battle PDF Campaign Vol 120 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing published 20 April 2003 ISBN 978 1 84176 513 6 Archived from the original PDF on 8 August 2013 Harriss G L 2005 Shaping the Nation England 1360 1461 New Oxford History of England Oxford UK Clarendon Press published 27 January 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 822816 5 Hattaway Michael amp Shakespeare William 1993 The Play What Should be the Meaning of All Those Foughten Fields The Third Part of King Henry VI Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press pp 9 35 ISBN 0 521 37705 6 Hicks Michael 2002 1998 Warwick the Kingmaker Oxford United Kingdom Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 23593 0 Markham Clements 1906 The Crowning Victory of Towton Richard III His Life and Character London United Kingdom Smith Elder amp Co Penn Thomas 2019 The Brothers York Allen Lane ISBN 978 1846146909 Ross Charles 1997 1974 Edward IV English Monarchs series revised ed Connecticut United States Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 07372 0 Saccio Peter 2000 1977 Shakespeare s English Kings History Chronicle and Drama Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512319 0 Sadler John 2011 Towton The Battle of Palm Sunday Field 1461 Barnsley Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 978 1 84415 965 9 Salzman Louis Francis ed 1949 Parishes Tysoe A History of the County of Warwick Vol 5 London United Kingdom Oxford University Press pp 175 182 Santiuste David 2010 Edward IV and the Wars of the Roses Barnsley Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 978 1 84415 930 7 Sherry Vincent B 1987 King Log Thorny Craft The Uncommon Tongue The Poetry and Criticism of Geoffrey Hill Michigan United States University of Michigan Press pp 81 125 ISBN 0 472 10084 X Wainwright Jeffrey 2005 Acceptable Words Essays on the Poetry of Geoffrey Hill Manchester United Kingdom Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 6754 5 Wolffe Bertram 2001 1981 Henry VI English Monarchs series Yale ed New Haven CT US Yale University Press published 10 June 2001 ISBN 978 0 300 08926 4 Essays and journals Edit Askew H 1 June 1935 The Tysoe Red Horse Notes and Queries PDF subscription required Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press 168 394 doi 10 1093 nq CLXVIII jun01 394e ISSN 1471 6941 Dean Sidney 2015 Bloody Sunday The Battle of Towton Medieval Warfare 5 3 28 35 JSTOR 48578453 Fallow Thomas McCall January 1889 The Dacre Tomb in Saxton Churchyard The Yorkshire Archaeological and Topographical Journal London United Kingdom Yorkshire Archaeological and Topographical Association 10 303 308 Retrieved 14 December 2010 Fiorato Veronica 2007 The Context of the Discovery Blood Red Roses The Archaeology of a Mass Grave from the Battle of Towton AD 1461 Second revised ed Oxford United Kingdom Oxbow ISBN 978 1 84217 289 6 Gibson Strickland 1936 Francis Wise B D PDF Oxoniensia Oxford United Kingdom Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society 1 173 195 ISSN 0308 5562 Retrieved 17 December 2010 Halsall Trevor James 2000 Geological Constraints on Battlefield Tactics Examples in Britain from the Middle Ages to the Civil Wars In Rose Edward P F Nathanail C Paul eds Geology and Warfare Examples of the Influence of Terrain and Geologists on Military Operations Bath United Kingdom Geological Society of London pp 32 59 ISBN 1 86239 065 7 Harris Mary Dormer 18 May 1935 The Tysoe Red Horse Notes and Queries Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press 168 349 doi 10 1093 nq CLXVIII may18 349a ISSN 1471 6941 Hinds Allen B ed 1912 Calendar of State Papers and Manuscripts in the Archives and Collections of Milan 1385 1618 London Stationery Office Morgan Philip 2000 The Naming of Battlefields in the Middle Ages In Dunn Diana ed War and Society in Medieval and Early Modern Liverpool United Kingdom Liverpool University Press pp 34 52 ISBN 0 85323 885 5 Ransome Cyril July 1889 The Battle of Towton The English Historical Review 4 460 466 doi 10 1093 ehr IV XV 460 Retrieved 11 November 2010 Scott Douglas Dowell 2010 Military Medicine in the Pre Modern Era Using Forensic Techniques in the Archaeological Investigation of Military Remains The Historical Archaeology of Military Sites Method and Topic Texas United States Texas A amp M University Press pp 21 29 ISBN 978 1 60344 207 7 Styles Philip 2002 1964 The Commonwealth In Nicoll John Ramsay Allardyce ed Shakespeare Survey Shakespeare Criticism Vol 17 Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press pp 103 119 ISBN 0 521 52353 2 Sutherland Tim 2009 Killing Time Challenging the Common Perceptions of Three Medieval Conflicts Ferrybridge Dintingdale and Towton The Largest Battle on British Soil PDF Journal of Conflict Archaeology 5 1 1 25 doi 10 1163 157407709x12634580640173 ISSN 1574 0773 S2CID 159544440 Archived from the original PDF on 4 June 2019 Sutherland TL Schmidt A 2003 The Towton Battlefield Archaeological Survey Project An Integrated Approach to Battlefield Archaeology Landscapes 4 2 JSTOR 3805936 Warren Roger 2003 1984 An Aspect of Dramatic Technique in Henry VI In Alexander Catherine M S ed Shakespeare Criticism The Cambridge Shakespeare Library Vol 2 Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 82433 8 Newspaper articles Edit Catton Richard 22 November 2010 Unique battlefield gun discovery on Towton battlefield York Press Retrieved 22 May 2020 Gill A A 24 August 2008 Towton the Bloodbath that Changed the Course of Our History The Sunday Times Archived from the original on 3 January 2011 Retrieved 25 November 2010 Kettle Martin 25 August 2007 Our Most Brutal Battle has been Erased from Memory The Guardian p 33 Archived from the original on 5 April 2010 Retrieved 25 November 2010 Online sources Edit English Heritage Battlefield Report Towton 1461 PDF English Heritage 1995 Archived from the original PDF on 8 July 2018 Retrieved 21 May 2010 Historic England Battle of Towton 1461 Grade II 1000040 National Heritage List for England retrieved 22 May 2020Further reading EditGoodwin George 2011 The Battle of Towton History Today Vol 61 no 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Towton Towton Battlefield Society Battle of Towton The Battlefields Trust Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Towton amp oldid 1147140795, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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