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John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu

John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu KG (c. 1431 – 14 April 1471) was a major magnate of fifteenth-century England. He was a younger son of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, and the younger brother of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, the "Kingmaker".

John Neville
Baron Montagu
Earl of Northumberland
Marquess of Montague
Bornc. 1431
Died14 April 1471 (aged c. 40)
Barnet, Hertfordshire, England
BuriedBisham Abbey, Berkshire
Noble familyNeville
Spouse(s)
Isabel Ingoldesthorpe
(m. 1457)
Issue
FatherRichard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury
MotherAlice Montagu, 5th Countess of Salisbury

From an early age, he was involved in fighting for his House, particularly in the feud that sprang up in the 1450s with the Neville family's major regional rivals, the Percy family. John Neville was personally responsible for much of the violence until, with his brothers, they defeated and imprisoned their enemies. This was taking place against the backdrop of a crisis in central government. The king, Henry VI, already known to be a weak ruler, suffered a mental collapse which led to a protectorate headed by John's uncle, Richard, Duke of York. Within two years an armed conflict had broken out, with York openly in rebellion against the king, and his Neville cousins supporting him. John fought with his father and Warwick against the king at the first Battle of St Albans, at which they had the victory.

Following a few years of uneasy peace, the Yorkists' rebellion erupted once again, and John Neville fought alongside his father and elder brother Thomas at the Battle of Blore Heath in September 1459. Although the Earl of Salisbury fought off the Lancastrians, both his sons were captured, and John, with Thomas, spent the next year imprisoned. Following his release in 1460, he took part in the Yorkist government. His father and brother died in battle just after Christmas 1460, and in February the next year, John – now promoted to the peerage as Lord Montagu – and Warwick fought the Lancastrians again at St Albans. John was once again captured and not released until his cousin Edward, York's son, won a decisive victory at Towton in March 1461, and became King Edward IV.

John Neville soon emerged, with Warwick, as representatives of the king's power in the north, which was still politically turbulent, as there were still a large number of Lancastrians on the loose attempting to raise a rebellion against the new regime. As his brother Warwick became more involved in national politics and central government, it devolved to John to finally defeat the last remnants of Lancastrians in 1464. Following these victories, Montagu, in what has been described as a high point for his House, was created Earl of Northumberland. At around the same time, however, his brother Warwick became increasingly dissatisfied with his relationship with the king, and began instigating rebellions against Edward IV in the north, finally capturing him in July 1469. At first, Montagu helped suppress this discontent, and also encouraged Warwick to release Edward. Eventually, however, his brother went into French exile with the king's brother George, Duke of Clarence, in March 1470.

During Warwick's exile, King Edward stripped Montagu of the Earldom of Northumberland, making him Marquis of Montagu instead. John Neville appears to have seen this as a reduction in rank, and accepted it with poor grace. He seems particularly to have complained about the lack of landed estate that his new marquisate brought with it, calling it a "pie's nest". When the Earl of Warwick and Clarence returned, they distracted Edward with a rebellion in the north, which the king ordered Montagu to raise troops to repress in the king's name. Montagu, however, having raised a small army, turned against Edward, almost capturing him at Olney, Buckinghamshire; the king, with his other brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester, fled into exile in Burgundy.

While in exile, Warwick had allied with the old king, Henry VI and his Queen, Margaret of Anjou, Henry was restored to the throne, and Warwick now effectively ruled the kingdom, This return to Lancastrianism did not, however, last long; within the year, Edward and Gloucester had returned. Landing only a few miles from Montagu in Yorkshire – who did nothing to stop them – the Yorkists marched south, raising an army. Montagu followed them, and, meeting up with his brother at Coventry, they confronted Edward over a battlefield at Barnet. John Neville was cut down in the fighting, Warwick died soon after, and within a month Edward had reclaimed his throne and Henry VI and his line was extinguished.

Youth and early career edit

Montagu was the third son of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, and Alice Montacute, 5th Countess of Salisbury, and a younger brother of Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, "the Kingmaker."[1]

John Neville's upbringing and career was entwined with that of the north of England and specifically, the marcher areas, the eastern and western borders between Scotland and England, controlled from Berwick and Carlisle respectively.[2] His early activity there consisted of diplomatic meetings with the Scots, at which he acted as a witness, between 1449 and 1451.[3] He was also one of three men who were instructed, in a letter of 3 February 1449, to not attend the forthcoming parliament and remain in the north guarding the border.[4] He was knighted by King Henry VI at Greenwich on 5 January 1453, alongside Edmund and Jasper Tudor, his brother Thomas Neville, William Herbert, Roger Lewknor, and William Catesby.[5]

 
Middleham Castle today; this was his father's caput.

Feud with the Percys edit

Sir John Neville was from the branch of the Neville family based at Middleham Castle in Yorkshire, rather than that of Westmorland. It has been claimed that he, as a "landless younger son" was partially to blame for his family's long-running feud with the Lancastrian Percy family of Northumberland.[6] The first outburst of violence that took place was a result of the 1 May 1453 royal licence for John Neville's brother, Thomas Neville to marry Maud Stanhope being issued. News of this must have reached the north within the fortnight, for by the twelfth, one of the Earl of Northumberland's younger sons, Thomas Percy, Lord Egremont, began recruiting men.[7] In August 1453, John Neville raided the Percy castle of Topcliffe, possibly with the intention of seizing Egremont.[1] Failing to find him, Neville resorted to threatening the Percy tenantry who were in residence.[8] He and Egremont were subsequently summoned to appear before the Royal Council, a summons which was ignored by both.[9] Feuding continued through summer 1453, and even though they had been instructed to keep the peace, by 27 July, the council was issuing letters to Northumberland and Salisbury regarding their sons. This was followed by more letters to the sons.[10] In Knaresborough, the locals generally aligned themselves with John Neville due to the unpopularity of Sir William Plumpton (the king's man), from whom they began stealing with impunity, which resulted in severe injuries when the Neville brothers demonstrated a "show of force" in January 1454.[11]

John Neville was with his brother's wedding party when Egremont ambushed them on the return from Tattershall Castle. This took place on Heworth Moor on 24 August 1453.[12] The next month, John took a raiding party and ransacked Egremont's Catton manor,[7] "breaking windows and shattering tiles."[13] With his brothers, Thomas and Richard, as well as the Earl of Salisbury, they faced the Earl of Northumberland and his sons at Topcliffe on 20 October 1453, although a peace was then negotiated.[14] The feud continued for much of the next year, and only came to a halt with a battle at Salisbury's manor of Stamford Bridge, near York on 31 October 1454.[15] Thomas and John confronted, and decisively beat, Egremont and Richard Percy, whom the Nevilles captured.[16]

Marriage edit

John Neville married Isabel[note 1] Ingoldsthorpe (c.1441 – 20 May 1476), of Burrough Green and Sawston, Cambridgeshire, on 25 April 1457; Archbishop Thomas Bourchier officiated the marriage at Canterbury Cathedral. Isabel was not only the heiress of her father, Sir Edmund Ingoldsthorpe (who had died on 2 September 1456), but also the heiress of her maternal uncle, John Tiptoft and his Earldom of Worcester.[18] It may have been that Earl of Worcester had engineered the match.[19] A letter to John Paston on 1 May 1457 described how "the Erle [of Warwick's] yonger broþere maryed to Ser Edmund Ynglthorp's doughter upon Seynt Markes Day; the Erle of Worcestre broght aboute the maryage."[20] She was a greater heiress than might have been expected for a youngest son like John. John was granted seven southern manors by his father and mother, the Earl and Countess of Salisbury, for his part.[21][note 2]

John Neville's marriage caused a dispute with Queen Margaret: even though Isabel was over fourteen years old (and therefore of legal age), the Queen claimed that Isabel was still her ward. As a result, Queen Margaret insisted that John pay her a fine for his marriage to Isabel: he was bound to pay her £1,000 in ten instalments.[22]

Wars of the Roses edit

The king had become incapacitated in August 1453,[23] which had led to the Duke of York being appointed protector and controlling the government.[24] By Christmas of 1454, however, King Henry had recovered from his illness, which removed the basis for York's authority.[25] Having reconvened the court at Westminster by mid-April 1455, Henry and a select council of nobles decided to hold a great council at Leicester. York and the Nevilles anticipated that Somerset would bring charges against them at this assembly. John Neville included,[1] they gathered an armed retinue and marched to stop the royal party from reaching Leicester, intercepting them at St Albans.[26]

 
The gate of Chester Castle; John and his brother were imprisoned here for a year.

Although only a small affray, it resulted in the deaths of some important people; viz. the Duke of Somerset, the Earl of Northumberland, and Lord Clifford.[1] It has been suggested that, whilst Somerset might have been targeted by York, the latter too might have been intentionally slain by the Neville brothers.[27] It was John who, after the battle, appears to have been responsible for the victorious Duke of York removing Sir William Skipwith from the household offices the latter held of the Duke.[28] Neville was said to have achieved this by pointing out how Skipwith failed to join York in battle; John Neville subsequently shared in the profits of York's redistribution of Skipwith's ex-offices.[1]

In December 1456, the new Duke of Somerset tried to attack John Neville in London's Cheapside;[29] Somerset had already attempted something similar to John's brother Warwick the previous month. John's encounter, reported contemporary chroniclers, would have become a "skirmish" if the mayor had not intervened.[30] As it had been John who had "spearheaded" the Neville retaliation to the Percies during their feud, Salisbury entered into a bond for Thomas and John's behaviour on 23 March 1458.[31] John, however, continued to receive commissions from the government. He was part of a delegation of twenty-two Ambassadors nominated to discuss breaches of the Truce with Burgundy on 14 May that year,[32] and two months later he was investigating the murder of a royal serjeant. In 1459, he was appointed steward of the Honour of Pontefract.[33]

Reconciliation between the crown and the sons of the dead lords of St Albans on the one half and of York and his Neville allies did not last, however.[34] In mid-September 1459, the Earl of Salisbury, intending to meet York at the latter's castle at Ludlow,[35] marched south from Middleham Castle with his household, retainers, and a force of around five-thousand men.[36] John and Thomas were with him.[1] Salisbury's force was engaged by a much larger royal army under the command of Lord Audley on 23 September at Blore Heath, near Mucklestone, Staffordshire.[37][38] Even though he had numerical superiority[39] the result was a defeat for Audley, who was killed.[35] However at some point John Neville – along with his brother Thomas[1] and their father's retainer James Harrington[40] were captured. This might have occurred in their pursuit of fleeing Lancastrians[41] the next day[40] or alternatively they may have been injured in battle and had been sent home.[42] Either way, captured at Acton Bridge near Tarporley, Cheshire, the four were imprisoned in Chester Castle.[43]

John Neville was not released until July 1460. As a result, he was not present at the Yorkists' rout at the Battle of Ludford Bridge, which resulted in his father and brother's exile in Calais. He had still been attainted at the Parliament of Devils in October 1459[44][45] and only restored in August the next year.[46] He was not released until June that year, and remained in London during York's return from exile, and his claiming of the throne.[47] On 1 November 1460,[48] York appointed John the king's Chamberlain for a crown-wearing ceremony at St Paul's Cathedral.[49] He stayed in London as word arrived that Lancastrians were gathering an army in the north;[24] York, Salisbury, and John's brother Thomas marched north to confront them. On 30 December 1460, they went down to a crushing defeat outside York's castle at Sandal, at the Battle of Wakefield where York and Thomas were killed, and Salisbury captured and beheaded the next day.[1]

John Neville appears to have been Lieutenant of the castle of Calais, whilst Warwick served as its Captain.[50] During the Protector's absence that winter, and after York's and Salisbury's death, alongside his brothers Warwick and George (the Chancellor) Neville was part of the head of government.[51]

Elevation to the peerage and war in the north edit

According to Benet's Chronicle, John Neville was elevated to the peerage as Lord Montagu in the January 1461 parliament.[52] It was also at this parliament that he presented a petition, regarding his wife, in which he reiterated that in common law women receive livery of their lands at fourteen years of age, and he requested parliament to reaffirm this.[53] In February he was elected to the Order of the Garter. He was installed on 21 March 1462, when he took his father's choir stall in Windsor Castle's St. George's Chapel.[54]

 
Map for Second Battle of St Albans by Ramsay.

By February 1461 Queen Margaret's army was marching south.[55] Warwick and John, with their "frantically raised" army, collected the King and marched north to confront the Queen's army on the Great North Road.[56] The two armies met on 17 February at the Second Battle of St Albans – this time, just outside the town. In the resulting encounter, Warwick was "outflanked and now outmatched,"[57] whereas John seems to have kept his army together up until the point the King's person was regained by the Lancastrians.[58] Montagu commanded the left flank of the Yorkist army, which itself was subdivided into a group of archers in the town itself, with the majority posted on Bernards Heath,[59] stretching eastwards towards Warwick's vanguard.[60] This "bloody and bitter encounter" saw Warwick and John's army defeated.[61] The Earl escaped;[62] Montagu was captured and sent to York Castle.[1]

It seems probable that he escaped execution after the battle because, as the Milanese Ambassador wrote, "a brother of my lord of Somerset is a prisoner [of Warwick's] at Calais."[63][64]

 
Quartered arms of Sir John Neville, Lord Montagu, KG

As a result of his capture and imprisonment in York, Montagu escaped participation in the biggest and probably bloodiest battle of the Wars of the Roses which took place on 29 March 1461 at Towton in Yorkshire.[65] This decisive Yorkist victory led to Montagu being released the next day, when the son of the Duke of York – and England's de facto new king – Edward IV entered York in triumph.[66] Montagu and Warwick then stayed in the north to attempt the recapture of northern castles still in Lancastrian hands;[67] as John Gillingham has put it, "the unfinished military business would have to be left to the Nevilles."[68] And on 10 May 1461 Montagu was commissioned to raise troops against both the Lancastrian remnants and the king of Scotland.[69] One of Montagu's first actions was to successfully raise the siege of Carlisle, "with prompt action."[70] Carlisle had had its suburbs burnt and been under siege from June[71] by a Scottish-Lancastrian force, but was easily[72] relieved by him,[73] apparently killing 6,000 Scots and Lord Clifford's brother in the process,[74] before Warwick had even arrived.[75]

The military campaign that followed was focused on the recapture of strategically vital castles on the Northumbrian border. Alnwick Castle was commanded by a shell keep, to which extra towers had been added, as well as to the curtain wall, with a solid barbican and gatehouse. Bamburgh Castle was on a high spur ridge with three baileys, a large keep, and fortified gateways. Dunstanburgh Castle stood on a dolerite spur which had the sheer drop of a cliff on one side.[76] Montagu besieged Bamburgh, the most important of these northern bulwarks, due to its distance from London and proximity to Scotland.[77] By 26 December 1462, when the garrison surrendered,[78] they "had been reduced to eating their horses."[79]

Montagu joined Warwick in escorting the chariot of six horses in the funeral cortege conveying the mortal remains of their father and brother from Pontefract Castle to the family mausoleum at Bisham Abbey,[80] on 14–15 February 1463.[81][82] On 6 May he was appointed Warden of the Eastern March; Warwick was his counterpart on the western marches.[1] Later that year, he led an expedition to Norham Castle, which had been besieged by the Scots for the previous eighteen days, and relieved it on 26 July; this was followed by a Chevauchée into Scotland which only ceased when Montagu's force ran out of supplies.[83]

Royal patronage edit

In the meantime though, John received the first royal patronage of the reign, being granted the royal gold and silver mines in Devon and Cornwall worth £110 annually, for life.[84] This was followed by duty payments from York and Kingston upon Hull[85] and manors belonging to the dead Lancastrian Viscount Beaumont.[86] In June 1461 he received the wardship of Edward Tiptoft, the heir of John Tiptoft, during his minority, and also the lands of Lord Clifford (who had died at Ferrybridge in a sharp encounter the night before Towton).[87] Professor A. J. Pollard has noted, ironically, that Neville "had to earn his rewards."[85] In 1462 he was appointed Steward of the Household of the Palatinate of Durham,[88] for which he received around £40 a year. This was twice the salary his legally-trained and "non-noble" successors would receive from the Bishop in later years,[89] and has been described as a "unique post."[90]

Hexham and Hedgeley Moor edit

 
The battle site of Hedgley Moor, where Montagu defeated a Lancastrian army in 1464.

In spite of Montagu's and Warwick's northern successes in the years following Towton, a not-insubstantial Lancastrian army was still active in the area; it had been slowly re-taking castles, like Bamburgh, Langley, Norham, and Prudhoe Castles, between February and March 1464. This threatened Newcastle, a major Yorkist supply centre. Local Lancastrians were returning to their estates, such as the Cliffords, who regained their castle at Skipton Craven[91] with no royal response, military or otherwise. They "virtually controlled most of the country immediately south of the Scottish border", wrote Charles Ross,[92] although very few local gentry directly supported them.[93] The situation was severe enough that in April 1464 he was too occupied with the northern situation to travel to London, and was exempted from attending the Order of the Garter Chapter meeting on the 29th of the month.[94] He has been described as the king's 'resident commander' in the north[95] and a "confident and aggressive commander."[96]

In early 1464, the Lancastrians having coalesced in the East March, the ongoing peace negotiations with the Scots were moved from Newcastle to York.[97] Montagu was sent to escort their embassy through now-unfriendly territory. On his way to pick them up at Norham, he only avoided an ambush near Newcastle,[98] by a small force of eighty spear and bowmen under Sir Humphrey Neville, by changing his route.[97]

The Scottish embassy he eventually collected at Norham had been delayed,[99] and it was on the return journey that the Duke of Somerset with Lords Roos and Hungerford, Sir Richard Turnstall, and Sir Thomas Findern and the bulk of the Lancastrian army (approximately 5,000 men)[91] ambushed Montagu at the Battle of Hedgeley Moor on 25 April 1464. The assault failed, and left Sir Ralph Percy dead on the field.[100]

Montagu, having delivered the Scottish embassy to Newcastle, left there on 14 May,[101] either with Lords Greystoke and Willoughby or picking them up en route[72] with other supporters,[102] to seek out the Lancastrians.[103] The next day, at Hexham – having crossed the Tyne "either at Bulwell or Corbridge"[104] – he attacked the rebels in their camp which was on the south side of Devil's Water river.[105] Montagu, his army swelled with new recruits from Newcastle, and men raised by Montagu's brother, the Archbishop of York, may have had up to 10,000 men.[106] Leading his army "forward at the charge,"[107] Montagu's attack soon became a rout,[108] with the Lancastrian army dissolving and attempting escape over the bridge.[102] Lords Roos, Hungerford, Findern, and Tallboys survived the battle only to be executed, on Montagu's order – and probably in his presence[109] – with the Duke of Somerset in Newcastle.[100] Following Hexham, Montagu ordered the largest number of beheadings the civil wars had yet seen.[110]

Earl of Northumberland edit

In May 1464, Hexham, Langley and Bywell castles surrendered to Montagu.[111] Eight days later, on 27 May, he was created Earl of Northumberland, while Henry Percy was imprisoned in the Tower.[112] The Earldom gave an income of between £700 and £1,000 a year.[113] This, wrote Cora L. Scofield, was his reward for his decisive victories, since the Crown "had played no direct part in them."[114] That summer Montagu recaptured the three Northumberland castles – Dunstanburgh, Alnwick, and Bamburgh – that had been previously lost.[115] Later that year – the "high watermark of his House, the zenith of the Nevilles"[116] – Montagu's brother George was appointed Archbishop of York, with John his Treasurer at his enthronement feast.[114] During the feast, John's wife Isabel, sat at the children's table, supervising Warwick's two daughters and the young Duke of Gloucester.[117]

Later years edit

Following the final crushing of the Lancastrian resistance, Montagu's role focussed on diplomacy and peacekeeping. In June 1465 he was commissioned to contract marriages "between English and Scottish subjects"[118] as well as to treat for perpetual peace with Scotland,[119] as a result of which, Montagu returned the captured Duke of Albany to Scotland, for which he was paid fifty marks.[120] It was during this time (Hicks has suggested around January 1465)[121] that Montagu and Lord Scales were requested by the Duke of Brittany to accompany a force of 3,000 Breton archers[122] supplied by him, for the League of the Public Weal against Louis XI of France. However, due to commitments in the north with Warwick, Montagu ended up taking no part in this campaign.[123]

In 1465 Montagu received the main grant of the Percy Earldom of Northumberland estates,[124] and on 25 March the following year he was granted the constableships and honours of Knaresborough and Pontefract Castles,[125] which Warwick and before him their father had previously held, and also the castles of Tickhill, Snaith, and Dunstanburgh. This was to repay his arrears in back wages from his Wardenship of the East March, from an indenture of 1 June 1463.[126] On the same day he was made Steward of the Duchy of Lancaster (north of the Trent), and it was from the profits of the duchy that his wages were coming from, amounting to approximately £1,000.[127]

Warden of the Marches edit

The Wardens were the military guardians of the border from the late fourteenth century, and their salaries made them the highest-paid among Crown officers, but this was inclusive of the cost of raising troops and maintaining defence. This has also been described as controlling "private armies raised at the Crown's expense."[128] By the mid-fifteenth century, the Wardenship of the East March was the most important of the two northern marcher lordships.[129] Marcher Wardens were granted the right to recruit by their being "explicitly" exempted from the 1468 Statute of Livery, which restrained- or attempted to restrain- retaining.[130] Montagu, however, was allowed to continue retaining in times of peace as well as war.[131] At this point Humphrey Neville was still on the run, and Montagu required troops to be raised on various occasions; in 1467, for example, Beverley sent him troops to deal with Humphrey's resistance.[132]

Warwick's rebellion edit

In 1467, as part of his brother's plan for a closer relationship with the French, John and Isabelle accompanied Warwick in escorting the French King's envoys to Canterbury.[133] However, by this time, it was being rumoured that Warwick was moving towards supporting the House of Lancaster, as a result of dissatisfaction over the king's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville and his pursuit of an anti-French foreign policy. In 1469, Warwick organised Robin of Redesdale's rebellion against Edward IV in Yorkshire[134] and in July that year the king's brother George, Duke of Clarence married Warwick's daughter Isabelle whilst anchored off Calais; this was in direct defiance of the king's own wishes.[135] It seems that Montagu, however, reacted strongly against his brother's machinations,[136] and, unlike him, was satisfied with his current position.[137]

On 27 October 1469, Henry Percy had taken his oath of fealty to the King, and had been released from the Tower.[138] The following year saw the return of Robin of Redesdale and another rebellion on behalf of Warwick.[139] Montagu was forced to come down from the Scottish border to suppress it;[140] this he did, but, one historian has suggested, albeit that he "allowed the leaders to escape ... ensuring that the rebellion could rise again" at a more opportune moment.[141] Almost immediately, Montagu was forced to crush another rebellion, this time led by a Robin of Holderness, but calling for the return of Percy to the Northumberland Earldom.[142] The Redesdale rebels soon reformed into an army big enough to march south and defeat a royal force at the Battle of Edgcote on 24 July 1469.[143][144] King Edward still accepted that Montagu was uninvolved in his brother's rebellion,[110] and in the event, Montagu was the only Neville to accompany the king on his journey from the north back to London.[145]

However, it was while Edward was in York that he ordered the rehabilitation of Henry Percy to his family Earldom on 25/27 March 1470.[146] On the same day John was elevated to the Marquessate of Montagu,[147] and now outranked his brother, an Earl, in the English peerage.[148] Historians have since questioned, however, whether his new title had the gravitas that his previous Earldom had had,[149] and have even suggested that the king was "walking a tightrope" as to whether Montagu would actually accept it or not.[150] To compensate him for the loss of the Percy estates Montagu was granted the lands of the dead Earl of Devon,[151] and Montagu's son, George was created Duke of Bedford. These were substantial estates,[152] providing an income of at least £600 per annum.[151] Montagu was to be the new regional magnate – as he had been in the north – to fill an existing power vacuum.[153]

Rebellion and death edit

Montagu, though, was not happy with the new arrangements, and King Edward has been held responsible for turning Montagu from a friend to an enemy.[154] Warkworth's Chronicle describes him as condemning these grants to him as "a [mag]pyes] nest."[1] Montagu had been on the Scottish border since at least January 1470.[155] Following unrest in Lincolnshire and the subsequent Lincolnshire rebellion, the king marched from London to crush the rising. This he did at the Battle of Empingham. Following the battle, Edward headed north where he was met by Montagu and Northumberland at Doncaster.[156] Warwick and Clarence's involvement in the Lincolnshire uprising had by now been established, and they fled to Calais. Further trouble broke out in the summer of 1470 in the north, with friends and relatives of Warwick in open rebellion.[157] The new Earl of Northumberland was unable to put down these risings, so the king, once again marched north to deal with it personally. Modern historians generally consider that these rebellions were a deliberate trap, instigated by Warwick and Clarence from Calais.[157] On 24 June 1470 the Wardenship of the East March was stripped from Montagu and given to Percy.[1] Edward was still in the north with Percy when he received word that Warwick and Clarence had landed in Dartmouth.[158]

At Doncaster, the king awaited Montagu, who was in the north raising a substantial force in Edward's name.[159] Edward waited; but on 29 September 1470, marching to the King, Montagu declared for Warwick. His last-minute, surprise defection from the king has been called "decisive".[160] The king was trapped; disbanding his army, and with a few followers, he escaped to Bishop's Lynn, sailing for Burgundy on 2 October.[161]

Readeption of Henry VI edit

On 3 October, with Edward IV in exile, Henry VI was released from the Tower and returned to the throne by Warwick. Almost immediately, Montagu was granted the wardship of the executed Earl of Worcester's heir and estates, as well as of the young Lord Clifford. He was reappointed to the Wardenship of the East March, with its salary, on 22 October 1470.[1]

However, Montagu did not profit from the new regime as he probably expected to. He did not regain the Earldom of Northumberland. Further, he lost some of the Courtney lands that had come with his Marquessate to the newly returned Earl of Devon.[162] Montagu had no active role in government, and does not seem to have sat in Council,[163] although he was appointed Chamberlain to the King's Household.[164] Although he was confirmed in command of the new King's forces in the north[165] and in possession of the manor of Wressle on 21 March 1471,[166] he did not regain any other Percy estates. Indeed, it has been suggested that his loyalty might still have been suspected by the newly arrived Lancastrians: having been summoned to the November 1470 parliament, Polydor Virgil states that he had to apologise there for his prior support of Edward.[167] Montagu even had to pay cash for the king's pardon,[168] which he only received after making a lengthy speech, declaring that he had only remained faithful to Edward out of fear.[169]

Montagu, having responsibility for the defence of the north, received various commissions of array, which reflected the government's knowledge that King Edward was equipping a Burgundian-backed fleet in order to re-invade.[170][171] Montagu was to raise men from all across the north.[172] On 14 March 1471, King Edward landed at Ravenspur, on the coast of Yorkshire; he had intended to land in East Anglia, but this had been established as being unsafe.[173] Montagu, it has been suggested, could have "snuffed out" Edward's army almost immediately had he moved fast enough.[173] Montagu was in Pontefract Castle as Edward passed by (where even his castle bailiff deserted him for the returning king, taking the castle's funds with him).[174] Montagu's army, composed of local militias, was probably in the region of several thousand men, between 6,000 and 7,000,[175][176] and increased as he trailed Edward south.[177] Montagu arrived at Coventry, where the Earl of Warwick was camped, in early April 1471;[110] this was probably the day after Clarence had defected back to his brother Edward, and taken his army with him.[178]

Battle of Barnet Heath edit

By 12 April 1471, Montagu, with his brother Warwick and the Duke of Exeter, the Earl of Oxford, and Viscount Beaumont were approaching London with their army.[179]

 
Battle of Barnet, as depicted on a 15th-century Ghent manuscript

Edward, having arrived in London on 11 April and been reunited with his queen,[180] met Montagu and Warwick a few miles north of London, outside the village of Barnet. It is possible that he commanded a smaller army, perhaps of only 9,000 men,[181] and probably no more than 14,000.[182]

The battle on 14 April was a "confused affair" and fought in fog.[183] It has been suggested that it was Montagu who persuaded Warwick to fight on foot at Barnet,[184] leaving the horses tethered at the rear, in order to demonstrate their commitment to the cause by taking the same risks as the common soldier.[185] Montagu probably controlled the central section of Warwick's army,[186] facing Edward's own section, on the Great North Road from Barnet to St. Albans.[187] Warkworth's Chronicle states that Warwick had an army of 20,000 men and that the battle beginning at 0400, lasted until ten o'clock that morning. Contemporaries have favourably described Montagu's martial skill at Barnet. Philippe de Commines called him "a very courageous knight,"[188] and the Burgundian observer Jean de Waurin wrote that, in the thick of the fighting, Montagu was "cutting off arms and heads like a hero of romance."[189]

The Earl of Oxford, commanding the right wing of the Neville army, broke the opposing Yorkist line, under William, Lord Hastings, early in the battle. Oxford's men proceeded to chase the fleeing soldiers, and ended up looting away from the battlefield.[1] Oxford managed to regroup his men, but, returning to the battlefield, as James Ross has put it, "disaster struck". In the time he and his force had been absent, the line of battle had shifted almost ninety degrees, so instead of returning to attack Edward's rear, he crashed into Montagu's section. The fog prevented identification, and Oxford's men fought with Montagu's. Montagu may, one chronicler suggests, have mistakenly seen Oxford's "Streaming star" banner as the king's "Sunne in splendour," and thus believe that the Earl had gone over to York.[186][181] Recently though, one historian has pointed out that, in fact, Oxford had never previously used such a cognizance, and it was more prosaically just a case of men confused by fog.[190]

At some point, possibly around this time, Montagu was killed; he was certainly dead before his brother.[191] The Arrivall chronicler states this occurred "in plain battle,"[192] and in the thick of the fighting, rather than in the rout that later followed.[193]

Aftermath edit

The bodies of Warwick and Montagu were laid out "on the morrow after" and "openly shewed and naked" in St. Paul's, to prevent rumour stating that they had in fact survived the battle;[194] Warkworth too said that the King personally directed this, and arranged for the corpses "to be put in a cart ... to be laid in the church of Paul's, on the pavement, that every man might see them; and so they lay for three or four days"[195] before granting permission to their brother George for their burial at Bisham Priory.[196]

Issue edit

By his wife Isabel Ingoldsthorpe (c.1441-1476), daughter and heiress of Sir Edmund Ingaldsthorpe (d.1456) of Burrough Green and Sawston, Cambridgeshire (who survived him and remarried, on 25 April 1472 (as his second wife), to Sir William Norreys of Yattendon[197]), he had a son and five daughters:[197]

Arms edit

Montagu took for his crest "a griffin issuing from a ducal crown".[41] His coat of arms was the Neville "Gules a saltire argent" with a label "gobony argent and azure crescent" for differencing,[207] as a younger son, being a reference to the arms of Beaufort (Neville arms with label compony of Beaufort, borne as a difference to the paternal Neville arms (Gules, a saltire argent) by the descendants of the second marriage of Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland (d.1425) to Joan Beaufort, a legitimised daughter of John of Gaunt, 4th son of King Edward III). This coat, when he was made Marquis of Montagu, was later augmented with further quarterings.[208]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Isabel Ingoldsthorpe is occasionally also referred to as Elizabeth in Exchequer records.[17]
  2. ^ Although cf. Hick's Warwick the Kingmaker (131), in which he states that it was eight manors.

References edit

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External links edit

Peerage of England
Preceded by Baron Montagu
1461 – 25 March 1470
Extinct
New creation Marquess of Montagu
25 March 1470 – 14 April 1471
Vacant
Title last held by
Henry Percy, 3rd Earl
as holder until 1461
Earl of Northumberland
27 May 1464 – 25 March 1470
Succeeded by

john, neville, marquess, montagu, this, article, lead, section, long, please, read, length, guidelines, help, move, details, into, article, body, october, 2020, 1431, april, 1471, major, magnate, fifteenth, century, england, younger, richard, neville, earl, sa. This article s lead section may be too long Please read the length guidelines and help move details into the article s body October 2020 John Neville 1st Marquess of Montagu KG c 1431 14 April 1471 was a major magnate of fifteenth century England He was a younger son of Richard Neville 5th Earl of Salisbury and the younger brother of Richard Neville Earl of Warwick the Kingmaker John NevilleBaron MontaguEarl of NorthumberlandMarquess of MontagueBornc 1431Died14 April 1471 aged c 40 Barnet Hertfordshire EnglandBuriedBisham Abbey BerkshireNoble familyNevilleSpouse s Isabel Ingoldesthorpe m 1457 wbr IssueGeorge Neville Duke of BedfordAnne NevilleElizabeth NevilleMargaret NevilleLucy NevilleIsabel NevilleFatherRichard Neville 5th Earl of SalisburyMotherAlice Montagu 5th Countess of SalisburyFrom an early age he was involved in fighting for his House particularly in the feud that sprang up in the 1450s with the Neville family s major regional rivals the Percy family John Neville was personally responsible for much of the violence until with his brothers they defeated and imprisoned their enemies This was taking place against the backdrop of a crisis in central government The king Henry VI already known to be a weak ruler suffered a mental collapse which led to a protectorate headed by John s uncle Richard Duke of York Within two years an armed conflict had broken out with York openly in rebellion against the king and his Neville cousins supporting him John fought with his father and Warwick against the king at the first Battle of St Albans at which they had the victory Following a few years of uneasy peace the Yorkists rebellion erupted once again and John Neville fought alongside his father and elder brother Thomas at the Battle of Blore Heath in September 1459 Although the Earl of Salisbury fought off the Lancastrians both his sons were captured and John with Thomas spent the next year imprisoned Following his release in 1460 he took part in the Yorkist government His father and brother died in battle just after Christmas 1460 and in February the next year John now promoted to the peerage as Lord Montagu and Warwick fought the Lancastrians again at St Albans John was once again captured and not released until his cousin Edward York s son won a decisive victory at Towton in March 1461 and became King Edward IV John Neville soon emerged with Warwick as representatives of the king s power in the north which was still politically turbulent as there were still a large number of Lancastrians on the loose attempting to raise a rebellion against the new regime As his brother Warwick became more involved in national politics and central government it devolved to John to finally defeat the last remnants of Lancastrians in 1464 Following these victories Montagu in what has been described as a high point for his House was created Earl of Northumberland At around the same time however his brother Warwick became increasingly dissatisfied with his relationship with the king and began instigating rebellions against Edward IV in the north finally capturing him in July 1469 At first Montagu helped suppress this discontent and also encouraged Warwick to release Edward Eventually however his brother went into French exile with the king s brother George Duke of Clarence in March 1470 During Warwick s exile King Edward stripped Montagu of the Earldom of Northumberland making him Marquis of Montagu instead John Neville appears to have seen this as a reduction in rank and accepted it with poor grace He seems particularly to have complained about the lack of landed estate that his new marquisate brought with it calling it a pie s nest When the Earl of Warwick and Clarence returned they distracted Edward with a rebellion in the north which the king ordered Montagu to raise troops to repress in the king s name Montagu however having raised a small army turned against Edward almost capturing him at Olney Buckinghamshire the king with his other brother Richard Duke of Gloucester fled into exile in Burgundy While in exile Warwick had allied with the old king Henry VI and his Queen Margaret of Anjou Henry was restored to the throne and Warwick now effectively ruled the kingdom This return to Lancastrianism did not however last long within the year Edward and Gloucester had returned Landing only a few miles from Montagu in Yorkshire who did nothing to stop them the Yorkists marched south raising an army Montagu followed them and meeting up with his brother at Coventry they confronted Edward over a battlefield at Barnet John Neville was cut down in the fighting Warwick died soon after and within a month Edward had reclaimed his throne and Henry VI and his line was extinguished Contents 1 Youth and early career 1 1 Feud with the Percys 2 Marriage 3 Wars of the Roses 4 Elevation to the peerage and war in the north 4 1 Royal patronage 5 Hexham and Hedgeley Moor 5 1 Earl of Northumberland 6 Later years 6 1 Warden of the Marches 6 2 Warwick s rebellion 7 Rebellion and death 7 1 Readeption of Henry VI 7 2 Battle of Barnet Heath 8 Aftermath 9 Issue 9 1 Arms 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksYouth and early career editMontagu was the third son of Richard Neville 5th Earl of Salisbury and Alice Montacute 5th Countess of Salisbury and a younger brother of Richard Neville 16th Earl of Warwick the Kingmaker 1 John Neville s upbringing and career was entwined with that of the north of England and specifically the marcher areas the eastern and western borders between Scotland and England controlled from Berwick and Carlisle respectively 2 His early activity there consisted of diplomatic meetings with the Scots at which he acted as a witness between 1449 and 1451 3 He was also one of three men who were instructed in a letter of 3 February 1449 to not attend the forthcoming parliament and remain in the north guarding the border 4 He was knighted by King Henry VI at Greenwich on 5 January 1453 alongside Edmund and Jasper Tudor his brother Thomas Neville William Herbert Roger Lewknor and William Catesby 5 nbsp Middleham Castle today this was his father s caput Feud with the Percys edit Main article Percy Neville feud Sir John Neville was from the branch of the Neville family based at Middleham Castle in Yorkshire rather than that of Westmorland It has been claimed that he as a landless younger son was partially to blame for his family s long running feud with the Lancastrian Percy family of Northumberland 6 The first outburst of violence that took place was a result of the 1 May 1453 royal licence for John Neville s brother Thomas Neville to marry Maud Stanhope being issued News of this must have reached the north within the fortnight for by the twelfth one of the Earl of Northumberland s younger sons Thomas Percy Lord Egremont began recruiting men 7 In August 1453 John Neville raided the Percy castle of Topcliffe possibly with the intention of seizing Egremont 1 Failing to find him Neville resorted to threatening the Percy tenantry who were in residence 8 He and Egremont were subsequently summoned to appear before the Royal Council a summons which was ignored by both 9 Feuding continued through summer 1453 and even though they had been instructed to keep the peace by 27 July the council was issuing letters to Northumberland and Salisbury regarding their sons This was followed by more letters to the sons 10 In Knaresborough the locals generally aligned themselves with John Neville due to the unpopularity of Sir William Plumpton the king s man from whom they began stealing with impunity which resulted in severe injuries when the Neville brothers demonstrated a show of force in January 1454 11 John Neville was with his brother s wedding party when Egremont ambushed them on the return from Tattershall Castle This took place on Heworth Moor on 24 August 1453 12 The next month John took a raiding party and ransacked Egremont s Catton manor 7 breaking windows and shattering tiles 13 With his brothers Thomas and Richard as well as the Earl of Salisbury they faced the Earl of Northumberland and his sons at Topcliffe on 20 October 1453 although a peace was then negotiated 14 The feud continued for much of the next year and only came to a halt with a battle at Salisbury s manor of Stamford Bridge near York on 31 October 1454 15 Thomas and John confronted and decisively beat Egremont and Richard Percy whom the Nevilles captured 16 Marriage editJohn Neville married Isabel note 1 Ingoldsthorpe c 1441 20 May 1476 of Burrough Green and Sawston Cambridgeshire on 25 April 1457 Archbishop Thomas Bourchier officiated the marriage at Canterbury Cathedral Isabel was not only the heiress of her father Sir Edmund Ingoldsthorpe who had died on 2 September 1456 but also the heiress of her maternal uncle John Tiptoft and his Earldom of Worcester 18 It may have been that Earl of Worcester had engineered the match 19 A letter to John Paston on 1 May 1457 described how the Erle of Warwick s yonger brothere maryed to Ser Edmund Ynglthorp s doughter upon Seynt Markes Day the Erle of Worcestre broght aboute the maryage 20 She was a greater heiress than might have been expected for a youngest son like John John was granted seven southern manors by his father and mother the Earl and Countess of Salisbury for his part 21 note 2 John Neville s marriage caused a dispute with Queen Margaret even though Isabel was over fourteen years old and therefore of legal age the Queen claimed that Isabel was still her ward As a result Queen Margaret insisted that John pay her a fine for his marriage to Isabel he was bound to pay her 1 000 in ten instalments 22 Wars of the Roses editMain article Wars of the Roses The king had become incapacitated in August 1453 23 which had led to the Duke of York being appointed protector and controlling the government 24 By Christmas of 1454 however King Henry had recovered from his illness which removed the basis for York s authority 25 Having reconvened the court at Westminster by mid April 1455 Henry and a select council of nobles decided to hold a great council at Leicester York and the Nevilles anticipated that Somerset would bring charges against them at this assembly John Neville included 1 they gathered an armed retinue and marched to stop the royal party from reaching Leicester intercepting them at St Albans 26 nbsp The gate of Chester Castle John and his brother were imprisoned here for a year Although only a small affray it resulted in the deaths of some important people viz the Duke of Somerset the Earl of Northumberland and Lord Clifford 1 It has been suggested that whilst Somerset might have been targeted by York the latter too might have been intentionally slain by the Neville brothers 27 It was John who after the battle appears to have been responsible for the victorious Duke of York removing Sir William Skipwith from the household offices the latter held of the Duke 28 Neville was said to have achieved this by pointing out how Skipwith failed to join York in battle John Neville subsequently shared in the profits of York s redistribution of Skipwith s ex offices 1 In December 1456 the new Duke of Somerset tried to attack John Neville in London s Cheapside 29 Somerset had already attempted something similar to John s brother Warwick the previous month John s encounter reported contemporary chroniclers would have become a skirmish if the mayor had not intervened 30 As it had been John who had spearheaded the Neville retaliation to the Percies during their feud Salisbury entered into a bond for Thomas and John s behaviour on 23 March 1458 31 John however continued to receive commissions from the government He was part of a delegation of twenty two Ambassadors nominated to discuss breaches of the Truce with Burgundy on 14 May that year 32 and two months later he was investigating the murder of a royal serjeant In 1459 he was appointed steward of the Honour of Pontefract 33 Reconciliation between the crown and the sons of the dead lords of St Albans on the one half and of York and his Neville allies did not last however 34 In mid September 1459 the Earl of Salisbury intending to meet York at the latter s castle at Ludlow 35 marched south from Middleham Castle with his household retainers and a force of around five thousand men 36 John and Thomas were with him 1 Salisbury s force was engaged by a much larger royal army under the command of Lord Audley on 23 September at Blore Heath near Mucklestone Staffordshire 37 38 Even though he had numerical superiority 39 the result was a defeat for Audley who was killed 35 However at some point John Neville along with his brother Thomas 1 and their father s retainer James Harrington 40 were captured This might have occurred in their pursuit of fleeing Lancastrians 41 the next day 40 or alternatively they may have been injured in battle and had been sent home 42 Either way captured at Acton Bridge near Tarporley Cheshire the four were imprisoned in Chester Castle 43 John Neville was not released until July 1460 As a result he was not present at the Yorkists rout at the Battle of Ludford Bridge which resulted in his father and brother s exile in Calais He had still been attainted at the Parliament of Devils in October 1459 44 45 and only restored in August the next year 46 He was not released until June that year and remained in London during York s return from exile and his claiming of the throne 47 On 1 November 1460 48 York appointed John the king s Chamberlain for a crown wearing ceremony at St Paul s Cathedral 49 He stayed in London as word arrived that Lancastrians were gathering an army in the north 24 York Salisbury and John s brother Thomas marched north to confront them On 30 December 1460 they went down to a crushing defeat outside York s castle at Sandal at the Battle of Wakefield where York and Thomas were killed and Salisbury captured and beheaded the next day 1 John Neville appears to have been Lieutenant of the castle of Calais whilst Warwick served as its Captain 50 During the Protector s absence that winter and after York s and Salisbury s death alongside his brothers Warwick and George the Chancellor Neville was part of the head of government 51 Elevation to the peerage and war in the north editAccording to Benet s Chronicle John Neville was elevated to the peerage as Lord Montagu in the January 1461 parliament 52 It was also at this parliament that he presented a petition regarding his wife in which he reiterated that in common law women receive livery of their lands at fourteen years of age and he requested parliament to reaffirm this 53 In February he was elected to the Order of the Garter He was installed on 21 March 1462 when he took his father s choir stall in Windsor Castle s St George s Chapel 54 nbsp Map for Second Battle of St Albans by Ramsay By February 1461 Queen Margaret s army was marching south 55 Warwick and John with their frantically raised army collected the King and marched north to confront the Queen s army on the Great North Road 56 The two armies met on 17 February at the Second Battle of St Albans this time just outside the town In the resulting encounter Warwick was outflanked and now outmatched 57 whereas John seems to have kept his army together up until the point the King s person was regained by the Lancastrians 58 Montagu commanded the left flank of the Yorkist army which itself was subdivided into a group of archers in the town itself with the majority posted on Bernards Heath 59 stretching eastwards towards Warwick s vanguard 60 This bloody and bitter encounter saw Warwick and John s army defeated 61 The Earl escaped 62 Montagu was captured and sent to York Castle 1 It seems probable that he escaped execution after the battle because as the Milanese Ambassador wrote a brother of my lord of Somerset is a prisoner of Warwick s at Calais 63 64 nbsp Quartered arms of Sir John Neville Lord Montagu KGAs a result of his capture and imprisonment in York Montagu escaped participation in the biggest and probably bloodiest battle of the Wars of the Roses which took place on 29 March 1461 at Towton in Yorkshire 65 This decisive Yorkist victory led to Montagu being released the next day when the son of the Duke of York and England s de facto new king Edward IV entered York in triumph 66 Montagu and Warwick then stayed in the north to attempt the recapture of northern castles still in Lancastrian hands 67 as John Gillingham has put it the unfinished military business would have to be left to the Nevilles 68 And on 10 May 1461 Montagu was commissioned to raise troops against both the Lancastrian remnants and the king of Scotland 69 One of Montagu s first actions was to successfully raise the siege of Carlisle with prompt action 70 Carlisle had had its suburbs burnt and been under siege from June 71 by a Scottish Lancastrian force but was easily 72 relieved by him 73 apparently killing 6 000 Scots and Lord Clifford s brother in the process 74 before Warwick had even arrived 75 The military campaign that followed was focused on the recapture of strategically vital castles on the Northumbrian border Alnwick Castle was commanded by a shell keep to which extra towers had been added as well as to the curtain wall with a solid barbican and gatehouse Bamburgh Castle was on a high spur ridge with three baileys a large keep and fortified gateways Dunstanburgh Castle stood on a dolerite spur which had the sheer drop of a cliff on one side 76 Montagu besieged Bamburgh the most important of these northern bulwarks due to its distance from London and proximity to Scotland 77 By 26 December 1462 when the garrison surrendered 78 they had been reduced to eating their horses 79 Montagu joined Warwick in escorting the chariot of six horses in the funeral cortege conveying the mortal remains of their father and brother from Pontefract Castle to the family mausoleum at Bisham Abbey 80 on 14 15 February 1463 81 82 On 6 May he was appointed Warden of the Eastern March Warwick was his counterpart on the western marches 1 Later that year he led an expedition to Norham Castle which had been besieged by the Scots for the previous eighteen days and relieved it on 26 July this was followed by a Chevauchee into Scotland which only ceased when Montagu s force ran out of supplies 83 Royal patronage edit In the meantime though John received the first royal patronage of the reign being granted the royal gold and silver mines in Devon and Cornwall worth 110 annually for life 84 This was followed by duty payments from York and Kingston upon Hull 85 and manors belonging to the dead Lancastrian Viscount Beaumont 86 In June 1461 he received the wardship of Edward Tiptoft the heir of John Tiptoft during his minority and also the lands of Lord Clifford who had died at Ferrybridge in a sharp encounter the night before Towton 87 Professor A J Pollard has noted ironically that Neville had to earn his rewards 85 In 1462 he was appointed Steward of the Household of the Palatinate of Durham 88 for which he received around 40 a year This was twice the salary his legally trained and non noble successors would receive from the Bishop in later years 89 and has been described as a unique post 90 Hexham and Hedgeley Moor editMain articles Battle of Hedgeley Moor and Battle of Hexham nbsp The battle site of Hedgley Moor where Montagu defeated a Lancastrian army in 1464 In spite of Montagu s and Warwick s northern successes in the years following Towton a not insubstantial Lancastrian army was still active in the area it had been slowly re taking castles like Bamburgh Langley Norham and Prudhoe Castles between February and March 1464 This threatened Newcastle a major Yorkist supply centre Local Lancastrians were returning to their estates such as the Cliffords who regained their castle at Skipton Craven 91 with no royal response military or otherwise They virtually controlled most of the country immediately south of the Scottish border wrote Charles Ross 92 although very few local gentry directly supported them 93 The situation was severe enough that in April 1464 he was too occupied with the northern situation to travel to London and was exempted from attending the Order of the Garter Chapter meeting on the 29th of the month 94 He has been described as the king s resident commander in the north 95 and a confident and aggressive commander 96 In early 1464 the Lancastrians having coalesced in the East March the ongoing peace negotiations with the Scots were moved from Newcastle to York 97 Montagu was sent to escort their embassy through now unfriendly territory On his way to pick them up at Norham he only avoided an ambush near Newcastle 98 by a small force of eighty spear and bowmen under Sir Humphrey Neville by changing his route 97 The Scottish embassy he eventually collected at Norham had been delayed 99 and it was on the return journey that the Duke of Somerset with Lords Roos and Hungerford Sir Richard Turnstall and Sir Thomas Findern and the bulk of the Lancastrian army approximately 5 000 men 91 ambushed Montagu at the Battle of Hedgeley Moor on 25 April 1464 The assault failed and left Sir Ralph Percy dead on the field 100 Montagu having delivered the Scottish embassy to Newcastle left there on 14 May 101 either with Lords Greystoke and Willoughby or picking them up en route 72 with other supporters 102 to seek out the Lancastrians 103 The next day at Hexham having crossed the Tyne either at Bulwell or Corbridge 104 he attacked the rebels in their camp which was on the south side of Devil s Water river 105 Montagu his army swelled with new recruits from Newcastle and men raised by Montagu s brother the Archbishop of York may have had up to 10 000 men 106 Leading his army forward at the charge 107 Montagu s attack soon became a rout 108 with the Lancastrian army dissolving and attempting escape over the bridge 102 Lords Roos Hungerford Findern and Tallboys survived the battle only to be executed on Montagu s order and probably in his presence 109 with the Duke of Somerset in Newcastle 100 Following Hexham Montagu ordered the largest number of beheadings the civil wars had yet seen 110 Earl of Northumberland edit In May 1464 Hexham Langley and Bywell castles surrendered to Montagu 111 Eight days later on 27 May he was created Earl of Northumberland while Henry Percy was imprisoned in the Tower 112 The Earldom gave an income of between 700 and 1 000 a year 113 This wrote Cora L Scofield was his reward for his decisive victories since the Crown had played no direct part in them 114 That summer Montagu recaptured the three Northumberland castles Dunstanburgh Alnwick and Bamburgh that had been previously lost 115 Later that year the high watermark of his House the zenith of the Nevilles 116 Montagu s brother George was appointed Archbishop of York with John his Treasurer at his enthronement feast 114 During the feast John s wife Isabel sat at the children s table supervising Warwick s two daughters and the young Duke of Gloucester 117 Later years editFollowing the final crushing of the Lancastrian resistance Montagu s role focussed on diplomacy and peacekeeping In June 1465 he was commissioned to contract marriages between English and Scottish subjects 118 as well as to treat for perpetual peace with Scotland 119 as a result of which Montagu returned the captured Duke of Albany to Scotland for which he was paid fifty marks 120 It was during this time Hicks has suggested around January 1465 121 that Montagu and Lord Scales were requested by the Duke of Brittany to accompany a force of 3 000 Breton archers 122 supplied by him for the League of the Public Weal against Louis XI of France However due to commitments in the north with Warwick Montagu ended up taking no part in this campaign 123 In 1465 Montagu received the main grant of the Percy Earldom of Northumberland estates 124 and on 25 March the following year he was granted the constableships and honours of Knaresborough and Pontefract Castles 125 which Warwick and before him their father had previously held and also the castles of Tickhill Snaith and Dunstanburgh This was to repay his arrears in back wages from his Wardenship of the East March from an indenture of 1 June 1463 126 On the same day he was made Steward of the Duchy of Lancaster north of the Trent and it was from the profits of the duchy that his wages were coming from amounting to approximately 1 000 127 Warden of the Marches edit The Wardens were the military guardians of the border from the late fourteenth century and their salaries made them the highest paid among Crown officers but this was inclusive of the cost of raising troops and maintaining defence This has also been described as controlling private armies raised at the Crown s expense 128 By the mid fifteenth century the Wardenship of the East March was the most important of the two northern marcher lordships 129 Marcher Wardens were granted the right to recruit by their being explicitly exempted from the 1468 Statute of Livery which restrained or attempted to restrain retaining 130 Montagu however was allowed to continue retaining in times of peace as well as war 131 At this point Humphrey Neville was still on the run and Montagu required troops to be raised on various occasions in 1467 for example Beverley sent him troops to deal with Humphrey s resistance 132 Warwick s rebellion edit In 1467 as part of his brother s plan for a closer relationship with the French John and Isabelle accompanied Warwick in escorting the French King s envoys to Canterbury 133 However by this time it was being rumoured that Warwick was moving towards supporting the House of Lancaster as a result of dissatisfaction over the king s marriage to Elizabeth Woodville and his pursuit of an anti French foreign policy In 1469 Warwick organised Robin of Redesdale s rebellion against Edward IV in Yorkshire 134 and in July that year the king s brother George Duke of Clarence married Warwick s daughter Isabelle whilst anchored off Calais this was in direct defiance of the king s own wishes 135 It seems that Montagu however reacted strongly against his brother s machinations 136 and unlike him was satisfied with his current position 137 On 27 October 1469 Henry Percy had taken his oath of fealty to the King and had been released from the Tower 138 The following year saw the return of Robin of Redesdale and another rebellion on behalf of Warwick 139 Montagu was forced to come down from the Scottish border to suppress it 140 this he did but one historian has suggested albeit that he allowed the leaders to escape ensuring that the rebellion could rise again at a more opportune moment 141 Almost immediately Montagu was forced to crush another rebellion this time led by a Robin of Holderness but calling for the return of Percy to the Northumberland Earldom 142 The Redesdale rebels soon reformed into an army big enough to march south and defeat a royal force at the Battle of Edgcote on 24 July 1469 143 144 King Edward still accepted that Montagu was uninvolved in his brother s rebellion 110 and in the event Montagu was the only Neville to accompany the king on his journey from the north back to London 145 However it was while Edward was in York that he ordered the rehabilitation of Henry Percy to his family Earldom on 25 27 March 1470 146 On the same day John was elevated to the Marquessate of Montagu 147 and now outranked his brother an Earl in the English peerage 148 Historians have since questioned however whether his new title had the gravitas that his previous Earldom had had 149 and have even suggested that the king was walking a tightrope as to whether Montagu would actually accept it or not 150 To compensate him for the loss of the Percy estates Montagu was granted the lands of the dead Earl of Devon 151 and Montagu s son George was created Duke of Bedford These were substantial estates 152 providing an income of at least 600 per annum 151 Montagu was to be the new regional magnate as he had been in the north to fill an existing power vacuum 153 Rebellion and death editMontagu though was not happy with the new arrangements and King Edward has been held responsible for turning Montagu from a friend to an enemy 154 Warkworth s Chronicle describes him as condemning these grants to him as a mag pyes nest 1 Montagu had been on the Scottish border since at least January 1470 155 Following unrest in Lincolnshire and the subsequent Lincolnshire rebellion the king marched from London to crush the rising This he did at the Battle of Empingham Following the battle Edward headed north where he was met by Montagu and Northumberland at Doncaster 156 Warwick and Clarence s involvement in the Lincolnshire uprising had by now been established and they fled to Calais Further trouble broke out in the summer of 1470 in the north with friends and relatives of Warwick in open rebellion 157 The new Earl of Northumberland was unable to put down these risings so the king once again marched north to deal with it personally Modern historians generally consider that these rebellions were a deliberate trap instigated by Warwick and Clarence from Calais 157 On 24 June 1470 the Wardenship of the East March was stripped from Montagu and given to Percy 1 Edward was still in the north with Percy when he received word that Warwick and Clarence had landed in Dartmouth 158 At Doncaster the king awaited Montagu who was in the north raising a substantial force in Edward s name 159 Edward waited but on 29 September 1470 marching to the King Montagu declared for Warwick His last minute surprise defection from the king has been called decisive 160 The king was trapped disbanding his army and with a few followers he escaped to Bishop s Lynn sailing for Burgundy on 2 October 161 Readeption of Henry VI edit Main article Readeption of King Henry VI On 3 October with Edward IV in exile Henry VI was released from the Tower and returned to the throne by Warwick Almost immediately Montagu was granted the wardship of the executed Earl of Worcester s heir and estates as well as of the young Lord Clifford He was reappointed to the Wardenship of the East March with its salary on 22 October 1470 1 However Montagu did not profit from the new regime as he probably expected to He did not regain the Earldom of Northumberland Further he lost some of the Courtney lands that had come with his Marquessate to the newly returned Earl of Devon 162 Montagu had no active role in government and does not seem to have sat in Council 163 although he was appointed Chamberlain to the King s Household 164 Although he was confirmed in command of the new King s forces in the north 165 and in possession of the manor of Wressle on 21 March 1471 166 he did not regain any other Percy estates Indeed it has been suggested that his loyalty might still have been suspected by the newly arrived Lancastrians having been summoned to the November 1470 parliament Polydor Virgil states that he had to apologise there for his prior support of Edward 167 Montagu even had to pay cash for the king s pardon 168 which he only received after making a lengthy speech declaring that he had only remained faithful to Edward out of fear 169 Montagu having responsibility for the defence of the north received various commissions of array which reflected the government s knowledge that King Edward was equipping a Burgundian backed fleet in order to re invade 170 171 Montagu was to raise men from all across the north 172 On 14 March 1471 King Edward landed at Ravenspur on the coast of Yorkshire he had intended to land in East Anglia but this had been established as being unsafe 173 Montagu it has been suggested could have snuffed out Edward s army almost immediately had he moved fast enough 173 Montagu was in Pontefract Castle as Edward passed by where even his castle bailiff deserted him for the returning king taking the castle s funds with him 174 Montagu s army composed of local militias was probably in the region of several thousand men between 6 000 and 7 000 175 176 and increased as he trailed Edward south 177 Montagu arrived at Coventry where the Earl of Warwick was camped in early April 1471 110 this was probably the day after Clarence had defected back to his brother Edward and taken his army with him 178 Battle of Barnet Heath edit Main article Battle of Barnet By 12 April 1471 Montagu with his brother Warwick and the Duke of Exeter the Earl of Oxford and Viscount Beaumont were approaching London with their army 179 nbsp Battle of Barnet as depicted on a 15th century Ghent manuscriptEdward having arrived in London on 11 April and been reunited with his queen 180 met Montagu and Warwick a few miles north of London outside the village of Barnet It is possible that he commanded a smaller army perhaps of only 9 000 men 181 and probably no more than 14 000 182 The battle on 14 April was a confused affair and fought in fog 183 It has been suggested that it was Montagu who persuaded Warwick to fight on foot at Barnet 184 leaving the horses tethered at the rear in order to demonstrate their commitment to the cause by taking the same risks as the common soldier 185 Montagu probably controlled the central section of Warwick s army 186 facing Edward s own section on the Great North Road from Barnet to St Albans 187 Warkworth s Chronicle states that Warwick had an army of 20 000 men and that the battle beginning at 0400 lasted until ten o clock that morning Contemporaries have favourably described Montagu s martial skill at Barnet Philippe de Commines called him a very courageous knight 188 and the Burgundian observer Jean de Waurin wrote that in the thick of the fighting Montagu was cutting off arms and heads like a hero of romance 189 The Earl of Oxford commanding the right wing of the Neville army broke the opposing Yorkist line under William Lord Hastings early in the battle Oxford s men proceeded to chase the fleeing soldiers and ended up looting away from the battlefield 1 Oxford managed to regroup his men but returning to the battlefield as James Ross has put it disaster struck In the time he and his force had been absent the line of battle had shifted almost ninety degrees so instead of returning to attack Edward s rear he crashed into Montagu s section The fog prevented identification and Oxford s men fought with Montagu s Montagu may one chronicler suggests have mistakenly seen Oxford s Streaming star banner as the king s Sunne in splendour and thus believe that the Earl had gone over to York 186 181 Recently though one historian has pointed out that in fact Oxford had never previously used such a cognizance and it was more prosaically just a case of men confused by fog 190 At some point possibly around this time Montagu was killed he was certainly dead before his brother 191 The Arrivall chronicler states this occurred in plain battle 192 and in the thick of the fighting rather than in the rout that later followed 193 Aftermath editThe bodies of Warwick and Montagu were laid out on the morrow after and openly shewed and naked in St Paul s to prevent rumour stating that they had in fact survived the battle 194 Warkworth too said that the King personally directed this and arranged for the corpses to be put in a cart to be laid in the church of Paul s on the pavement that every man might see them and so they lay for three or four days 195 before granting permission to their brother George for their burial at Bisham Priory 196 Issue editBy his wife Isabel Ingoldsthorpe c 1441 1476 daughter and heiress of Sir Edmund Ingaldsthorpe d 1456 of Burrough Green and Sawston Cambridgeshire who survived him and remarried on 25 April 1472 as his second wife to Sir William Norreys of Yattendon 197 he had a son and five daughters 197 George Neville Duke of Bedford c 1461 1483 eldest son and heir It appears that Montagu had wanted to marry George to Anne Holland heiress of Henry Holland 3rd Duke of Exeter however by 1466 she had already married Thomas Grey 1st Marquess of Dorset 198 He died without issue having been stripped of his dukedom in 1478 199 Anne Neville eldest daughter who married Sir William Stonor of Stonor in Pyrton Oxfordshire a grandson of William de la Pole 1st Duke of Suffolk 197 Elizabeth Neville who married firstly Thomas Scrope 6th Baron Scrope of Masham a dedicated Yorkist 200 and secondly Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead 197 Margaret Neville who married firstly Sir John Mortimer died before 12 November 1504 201 only son of Sir Hugh Mortimer and Eleanor Cornwall 202 203 secondly Charles Brandon 1st Duke of Suffolk marriage annulled 1507 and thirdly Robert Downes Gentleman 197 204 Lucy Neville died 1534 who married firstly Sir Thomas FitzWilliam of Aldwark North Yorkshire and secondly Sir Anthony Browne After 1485 her loyalty to the Tudors was always deeply suspect and she was noted in official reports as one who loves not the King Henry VII 197 Isabel Neville who married firstly Sir William Huddleston of Millom Cumberland 205 an important regional family and old allies of the Nevilles 206 and secondly Sir William Smythe of Elford in Staffordshire 197 Arms edit Montagu took for his crest a griffin issuing from a ducal crown 41 His coat of arms was the Neville Gules a saltire argent with a label gobony argent and azure crescent for differencing 207 as a younger son being a reference to the arms of Beaufort Neville arms with label compony of Beaufort borne as a difference to the paternal Neville arms Gules a saltire argent by the descendants of the second marriage of Ralph Neville 1st Earl of Westmorland d 1425 to Joan Beaufort a legitimised daughter of John of Gaunt 4th son of King Edward III This coat when he was made Marquis of Montagu was later augmented with further quarterings 208 Notes edit Isabel Ingoldsthorpe is occasionally also referred to as Elizabeth in Exchequer records 17 Although cf Hick s Warwick the Kingmaker 131 in which he states that it was eight manors References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Horrox 2004b Tuck 1985 p 44 Griffiths 1981 p 403 Nicolas 1837 p 65 Griffiths 1981 p 699 Wolffe 1981 p 268 a b Pollard 1990 p 256 Storey 1966 p 129 Nicolas 1837 p xlii Nicolas 1837 p xlvii Wilcock 2004 p 60 Griffiths 1968 p 597 Griffiths 1968 p 603 Storey 1966 p 132 Wolffe 1981 p 274 Storey 1966 p 149 Selden Society 1933 pp 138 40 Hicks 1998 p 130 Pollard 2007 p 34 Davis 2004 p 172 Hicks 1986 p 323 Hicks 1998 pp 130 31 Wagner 2001 p 113 a b Watts 2004 Hicks 2010 p 107 Carpenter 1997 pp 134 35 Armstrong 1960 p 46 Lander 1976 p 210 n 34 Goodwin 2011 p 93 Griffiths 1981 p 800 Griffiths 1968 p 628 Hicks 1998 p 150 Somerville 1953 p 514 Pollard 2004 a b Carpenter 1997 p 145 Hicks 2010 p 143 Gillingham 1990 p 103 Simons 1966 p 38 Harriss 2006 p 639 a b Pollard 1990 p 272 a b Simons 1966 p 53 Hicks 1998 p 163 Clayton 1980 p 118 Wolffe 1981 p 320 amp n 33 Ross 1981 p 320 Nicolas 1837 p 306 Hicks 1998 p 211 Kendall 1957 p 73 Pollard 2007 p 44 Scofield 1923 p 112 n 1 Kendall 1957 p 74 Benet 1972 p 69 Wedgwood 1936 p 269 St John Hope 1901 p 68 Cron 1999 p 598 Pollard 2007 pp 46 47 Sadler 2011 p 69 Kendall 1957 p 84 Haigh 1997 p 48 Haigh 1996 p 132 Ross 1986 p 51 Carpenter 1997 p 148 Hinds 1912 p 51 Burley Elliot amp Watson 2013 p 79 Goodwin 2011 p 1 Davis 2004 p 165 Scofield 1923 pp 186 67 Gillingham 1990 p 136 Booth 1997 p 77 Pollard 1990 p 229 Summerson 1996 p 90 a b Ross 1974 p 60 Gillingham 1990 p 138 Summerson 1996 p 89 Hicks 1998 p 238 Sadler 2006 p 349 Jacob 1993 p 529 Goodman 1990 p 61 N C H C 1893 p 45 Hicks 1980 p 25 Scofield 1923 p 269 Pollard 2007 p 53 Gillingham 1990 p 147 Nicolas 1837 p 19 a b Pollard 1990 p 287 Ross 1974 p 72 Ross 1974 p 156 n Pollard 1990 p 123 Storey 1972 p 141 Pollard 1990 p 162 a b Gillingham 1990 p 151 Ross 1974 p 59 Gillingham 1990 p 142 Hicks 1998 p 245 Carpenter 1997 p 161 Storey 1966 p 158 a b Scofield 1923 p 329 Goodman 1990 p 63 Pollard 2007 p 54 a b Hicks 1998 p 246 Wolffe 1981 p 336 a b Haigh 1997 p 80 Thornley 1920 p 25 Haigh 1997 p 124 Sadler 2011 p 127 N C H C 1896 p 155 Sadler 2006 p 365 Goodman 1990 p 64 Haigh 1997 p 85 a b c Santiuste 2011 p 79 N C H C 1893 p 47 Castor 2004 p 228 Lander 1981 p 229 a b Scofield 1923 p 334 Sadler 2006 p 374 Sadler 2011 p 163 Hicks 2011 p 60 Roskell 1956 p 476 Hardy 1873 p 696 Somerville 1953 p 236 n 5 Hicks 1998 p 262 Jacob 1993 p 536 Scofield 1923 p 350 N C H C 1893 p 105 Somerville 1953 p 517 Rose 2011 p 53 Arnold 1984 p 136 n 56 Gillingham 1990 pp 29 30 Griffiths 1981 p 812 Hicks 2000 p 395 Hicks 1991 p 22 R C H M 1900 p 142 Kendall 1957 p 208 Hicks 1998 pp 264 65 Hicks 1980 pp 42 45 Hicks 1998 p 265 Hicks 1998 pp 265 66 Hardy 1873 p 699 Scofield 1923 p 488 Haigh 1997 p 190 Haigh 1997 p 197 Goodman 1990 p 67 Ross 1974 p 145 Evans Graham 2019 The Battle of Edgcote 1469 Re evaluating the evidence Northamptonshire Battlefields Society pp 44 48 ISBN 9781794611078 Bagley 1948 p 193 Santiuste 2011 p 95 Davis 2004 p 433 Hicks 2010 p 195 Gillingham 1990 p 175 Pollard 1990 p 310 a b Hicks 1980 p 59 Carpenter 1997 p 176 Ross 1986 p 82 Hicks 2010 p 202 Thornley 1920 p 33 Hicks 1980 p 74 a b Gillingham 1990 p 182 Ross 1974 p 152 Goodman 1990 p 250 n 28 Gillingham 1990 p 185 Ross 1981 p 18 Hicks 1998 p 297 Jacob 1993 p 561 Scattergood 1971 p 199 Scofield 1923 p 543 Hardy 1873 p 701 Ross 1974 p 58 Neillands 1992 p 144 Scofield 1923 p 555 Gillingham 1990 p 18 Scofield 1923 p 560 Ross 1974 p 157 a b Ross 1974 pp 161 63 Horrox 1991 p 43 Weiss 1972 p 506 Goodman 1990 p 75 Pollard 2007 p 123 Gillingham 1990 p 193 Ross 1974 p 167 Horrox 2004a a b J A Giles 1845 p 124 Pugh 1972 p 127 DeVries France amp Rogers 2015 p 194 197 Scofield 1923 p 571 Kendall 1957 p 319 a b Kendall 1977 p 96 Haigh 1997 p 120 Gillingham 1990 p 200 Santiuste 2011 p 120 Ross 2011 p 67 Ross 1974 p 168 J A Giles 1845 p 125 Jacob 1993 p 568 J A Giles 1845 p 67 J A Giles 1845 p 12 Pollard 2007 p 73 a b c d e f g Richardson 2011 pp 452 54 Hicks 2004 Hicks 1986 pp 321 325 326 Attreed 1983 p 1021 Cokayne 1953 p 458 Anonymous 1878 p 62 V C H 1924 Gunn 1988 p 86 Booth 2003 p 104 Horrox 1991 p 38 Burke 1864 p 727 Marcombe 2012 pp 124 25 Bibliography edit Anonymous 1878 The Picards or Pychards of Stradewy now Tretower castle and Scethrog Brecknockshire amp c London Golding and Lawrence OCLC 234194859 Armstrong C A J 1960 Politics and the Battle of St Albans 1455 Historical Research 33 1 72 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2281 1960 tb02226 x OCLC 300188139 Arnold C 1984 The Commission of the Peace for the West Riding of Yorkshire 1437 1509 In A J Pollard ed Property and Politics Essays in Later Medieval English History Gloucester Palgrave Macmillan pp 116 38 ISBN 978 0 7546 6294 5 Attreed L C 1983 An Indenture between Richard Duke of Gloucester and the Scrope Family of Masham and Upsall Speculum 58 OCLC 26041360 Bagley J J 1948 Margaret of Anjou Queen of England 1st ed London Herbert Jenkins Limited OCLC 186320570 Benet J 1972 G L Harriss ed John Benet s Chronicle for the Years 1400 to 1462 Camden Vol 24 Fourth ser ed London Royal Historical Society OCLC 2363180 Booth P 1997 Landed Society In Cumberland and Westmorland c 1440 1485 The Politics of The Wars of the Roses Doctoral thesis University of Leicester Booth P 2003 Men Behaving Badly The West March towards Scotland and the Percy Neville Feud In Clark L ed Authority and Subversion The Fifteenth Century Vol III Woodbridge Boydell Press pp 95 116 ISBN 978 1 84383 025 2 Burke B 1864 The General Armory of England Scotland Ireland and Wales Comprising a Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present Time London Harrison amp sons OCLC 535476828 Burley P Elliot M Watson H 2013 The Battles of St Albans repr ed Barnsley Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 569 9 Carpenter C 1997 The Wars of the Roses Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521318747 Castor H 2004 Blood and Roses The Paston Family in the Fifteenth Century Chatham Faber amp Faber ISBN 0571216706 Clayton D 1980 The Involvement Of The Gentry In The Political Administrative And Judicial Affairs Of The County Palatine Of Chester 1442 85 Doctoral thesis University of Liverpool Cokayne G E 1953 White G H ed The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol 12 ii London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Cron B M 1999 Margaret of Anjou and the Lancastrian March on London 1461 The Ricardian 11 OCLC 11995669 Davis N 2004 Paston Letters and Papers Vol II repr ed Oxford Early English Texts Society ISBN 0197224229 DeVries K France J Rogers C J 2015 Journal of Medieval Military History Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 1 78327 057 6 J A Giles ed 1845 The Chronicles of the White Rose of York A Series of Historical Fragments Proclamations Letters and Other Contemporary Documents Relating to the Reign of King Edward the Fourth repr ed London J Bohn Gillingham J 1990 The Wars of the Roses Peace and Conflict in 15th Century England London ed Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0297820161 Goodman Anthony 1990 The Wars of the Roses Military Activity and English Society 1452 97 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 05264 1 Goodwin G 2011 Fatal Colours Towton 1461 England s Most Brutal Battle London Orion ISBN 978 0 297 86072 3 Griffiths R A 1968 Local Rivalries and National Politics The Percies the Nevilles and the Duke of Exeter 1452 55 Speculum 43 597 Griffiths R A 1981 The Reign of Henry VI Berkeley ISBN 0750937777 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gunn S J 1988 Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk c1484 1545 Oxford p 86 ISBN 0631157816 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Haigh P A 1996 The Battle of Wakefield 30 December 1460 Stroud Sutton ISBN 978 0 7509 1342 3 Haigh P A 1997 Military Campaigns of the Wars of the Roses repr ed Stroud Sutton Publishing ISBN 978 0 938289 90 6 Hardy T D 1873 Syllabus in English of the documents relating to England and other kingdoms contained in the collection known as Rymer s Foedera London Longman s Green amp co Harriss G L 2006 Shaping the Nation England 1360 1461 The New Oxford History of England paperback ed Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 921119 7 Hicks M A 1980 False Fleeting Perjur d Clarence George Duke of Clarence 1449 78 2nd ed Gloucester Alan sutton ISBN 978 1 873041 13 0 Hicks M A 1986 What Might Have Been George Neville Duke of Bedford 1465 83 His Identity and Significance PDF The Ricardian 7 95 321 326 Hicks M A 1991 The 1468 Statute of Livery Historical Research 64 15 28 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2281 1991 tb01780 x OCLC 300188139 Hicks M A 1998 Warwick the Kingmaker Padstowe ISBN 0631235930 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hicks M A 2000 Bastard Feudalism Overmighty Subjects and Idols of the Multitude during the Wars of the Roses History 85 OCLC 905268465 Hicks M A 2004 Henry Holland Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 50223 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hicks M A 2010 The Wars of the Roses Yale ISBN 9780300114232 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hicks M A 2011 Anne Neville Queen to Richard III England s Forgotten Queens London History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 6887 7 Hinds A B 1912 Calendar of State Papers and Manuscripts in the Archives and Collections of Milan 1385 1618 London H M S O Horrox R 1991 Richard III A Study of Service Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 40726 7 Horrox R 2004a Edward IV 1442 1483 king of England and lord of Ireland Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8520 Subscription or UK public library membership required Horrox R 2004b Neville John Marquess Montagu c 1431 1471 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19946 Subscription or UK public library membership required Jacob E F 1993 The Fifteenth Century 1399 1485 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285286 1 Kendall P M 1957 Warwick the Kingmaker repr ed Aylesbury Allen amp Unwin Kendall P M 1977 Richard III repr ed Aylesbury Allen amp Unwin Lander J R 1976 The Crown and the Aristocracy in England 1450 1509 Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies 8 OCLC 819020579 Lander J R 1981 Government and Community England 1450 1509 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 35794 5 Marcombe D 2012 Politics and Patrimony during the Wars of the Roses The Probable Sheriff s Seal of Sir John Neville of Liversedge Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 84 OCLC 827767417 N C H C 1893 History of Northumberland Vol I Newcastle upon Tyne Northumberland County History Committee N C H C 1896 History of Northumberland Vol III Newcastle upon Tyne Northumberland County History Committee Neillands R 1992 The Wars of the Roses London Cassell ISBN 978 1 78022 595 1 Nicolas H 1837 Proceedings and Ordinances of the Privy Council Vol VII London Pollard A J 1990 North Eastern England During the Wars of the Roses Lay Society War and Politics 1450 1500 Oxford ISBN 0198200870 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pollard A J 2004 Neville Richard fifth earl of Salisbury 1400 1460 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19954 Subscription or UK public library membership required Pollard A J 2007 Warwick the Kingmaker Politics Power and Fame London ISBN 184725182X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pugh T B 1972 Magnates Knights and Gentry In Chrimes S B Ross C D Griffiths R A eds Fifteenth century England 1399 1509 Studies in Politics and Society pp 86 128 ISBN 978 0 0649 1126 9 R C H M 1900 Report on the Manuscripts of the Corporation of Beverley Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts London H M Stationery Office Richardson D 2011 Everingham K G ed Magna Carta Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Vol I 2nd ed Salt Lake City pp 452 4 ISBN 1449966373 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Rose S 2011 A Twelfth Century Honour in a Fifteenth Century World The honour of Pontefract In L Clark ed The Fifteenth Century English and Continental Perspectives The Fifteenth Century Vol IX Woodbridge Boydell and Brewer ISBN 978 1843836070 Roskell J S 1956 Sir James Strangeways of West Harlsey and Whorlton Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 39 OCLC 827767417 Ross C D 1974 Edward IV English Monarchs Series Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02781 7 Ross C D 1981 Richard III Yale English Monarchs 1st ed London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22974 5 Ross C D 1986 The Wars of the Roses A Concise History repr ed Singapore Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 27407 1 Ross J 2011 The Foremost Man of the Kingdom John de Vere Thirteenth Earl of Oxford 1442 1513 Woodbridge Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 978 1 78327 005 7 Sadler J 2011 Towton The Battle of Palmsunday Field 1461 Barnsley Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 978 1 84415 965 9 Sadler J 2006 Border Fury England and Scotland at War 1296 1568 Harlow Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 86527 8 Santiuste D 2011 Edward IV and the Wars of the Roses Barnsley Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 978 1 84884 549 7 Scattergood V J 1971 Politics and Poetry in the Fifteenth Century 1399 1485 History and Literature 1st ed London Blanford Press Scofield C L 1923 The Life and Reign of Edward the Fourth King of England and France and Lord of Ireland Vol I 1st ed London Longmans Green Selden Society 1933 Select Cases in the Exchequer chamber 1377 1461 London Selden Society Simons E N 1966 The Reign of Edward IV London Barnes amp Noble Somerville R 1953 History of the Duchy of Lancaster 1265 1603 Vol I 1st ed London Chancellor and Council of the Duchy of Lancaster St John Hope W H 1901 The Stall Plates of the Knights of the Order of the Garter 1348 1485 London A Constable and Company Limited Storey R L 1966 The End of the House of Lancaster Stroud ISBN 0862992907 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Storey R L 1972 The North of England In Chrimes S B Ross C D Griffiths R A eds Fifteenth century England 1399 1509 Studies in Politics and Society pp 86 128 ISBN 978 0 0649 1126 9 Summerson H 1996 Carlisle and the English West March in the Later Middle Ages In A J Pollard ed The North of England in the Age of Richard III Stroud Alan Sutton ISBN 978 0 7509 0609 8 Tuck J A 1985 War and Society in the Medieval North Northern History 21 Thornley I D 1920 England Under the Yorkists 1460 1485 1st ed London Longmans V C H 1924 Parishes Martley with Hillhampton britishhistoryonline ac uk A History of the County of Worcester Vol IV Victoria County History pp 289 297 Retrieved 16 September 2013 Wagner J A 2001 Encyclopedia of the Wars of the Roses ABC CLIO pp 113 ISBN 978 1 85109 358 8 Watts J 2004 Richard of York third duke of York 1411 1460 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23503 Subscription or UK public library membership required Wedgwood J C 1936 History of Parliament 1439 1509 London H M Stationery Office Wilcock R 2004 Local Disorder in the Honour of Knaresborough c 1438 1461 and The National Context Northern History 41 OCLC 474760681 Weiss M 1972 A Power in the North The Percies in the Fifteenth Century Historical Journal 19 OCLC 473322780 Wolffe B P 1981 Henry VI London ISBN 0300089260 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links edit John Neville earl of Northumberland Encyclopaedia Britannica 20 July 1998 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Northumberland John Neville Earl of c 1430 1471 Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed Cambridge University Press Tait J 1894 Neville John Marquis of Montagu and Earl of Northumberland d 1471 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 40 London Smith Elder amp Co Peerage of EnglandPreceded byAlice Montacute Baron Montagu1461 25 March 1470 ExtinctNew creation Marquess of Montagu25 March 1470 14 April 1471VacantTitle last held byHenry Percy 3rd Earlas holder until 1461 Earl of Northumberland27 May 1464 25 March 1470 Succeeded byHenry Percy 4th Earl Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Neville 1st Marquess of Montagu amp oldid 1180657212, 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