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  1. Vor 2 Tagen · In 1487 the Yorkists used a boy – Lambert Simnel - to pose as Warwick. When that failed they found another boy in 1491, Perkin Warbeck, who claimed he was the younger of the princes in the Tower, smuggled abroad after his brother’s murder. It was 1497 before Perkin Warbeck was captured. Henry Tudor kept him alive so that he might publicly ...

  2. Vor 2 Tagen · Yes, this happened in history, although it was proven to be a man called Perkin Warbeck. The series itself is loosely based on history. Don’t take the story as fact. There is no proof that some events happened, such as the events on Elizabeth and Henry’s wedding night.

  3. 11. Juli 2024 · Perkin Warbeck, after his landing in Cornwall, in the year 1498, assembled, at Bodmin, a force of 3000 men, with which he advanced to attack Exeter. In 1550, the Cornish rebels, under the command of Humphry Arundell, who were much favoured by the townsmen of Bodmin, encamped at Castle Kynock, near this town, and marched thence to the siege of ...

  4. Vor 6 Tagen · Lady Catherine Gordon, the widow of Perkin Warbeck, owned a "great pomander of gold" which she would have worn suspended by a chain from her belt or girdle. Accounts of Mary disrobing for her execution mention a chain of pomander beads, or her wearing a pomander necklace with an "Agnus Dei".

  5. 12. Juli 2024 · He supported Perkin Warbeck in his rebellion and was tried at Guildhall, London, on 30 January 1495 for treason. He was sentenced to be hung, drawn, and quartered—'which said Catastrophe did put a period to the greatness of this antient Familie', as Sir William Dugdale observes.

  6. Vor 4 Tagen · William de la Pole (1450) – beheaded at sea, possibly by order of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York. James Fiennes, 1st Baron Saye and Sele (1450) – beheaded in London by rebels led by Jack Cade. James Tuchet, 5th Baron Audley (1459) – executed after Battle of Blore Heath for being a Lancastrian.

  7. Vor 6 Tagen · The same author reminds us that as Perkin Warbeck met his adherents near about the same spot, the same scene must have occurred here again during the reign of Henry VII. It may not be out of place to record here the fact that at Hayes, not far from the sources of the Ravensbourne, was the favourite seat of the great Lord Chatham ...