It doesn't pay to read too many books FF, clutters the mind and upsets the prejudices!! I have not read Ross or Kendall but I have read:
Hancock: Richard II and the Murder in the Tower
Ashdown-Hill [A Riccardian]: Eleanor the Secret Queen and The Last Days of RIchard III [2 versions, one before the dig and one after]
Josephine Tey: The Daughter of Time [doesn't think much of Thomas More!]
Markham [1906] for an earlier view of things: Richard III: His life and character...
not to mention a couple of Philippa Gregory's novels [to give a bit more colour!] - eg The White Queen [Elizabeth Woodville] and the Red Queen [Margaret Beaufort]. The much acclaimed Thomas Penn's Winter King says very little about the princes except to cover the pretenders Simnel and Warbeck. One might have thought that there was a case to at least address in a definitive life of Henry VII if not to resolve the fate of the princes for the sake of completeness. Maybe Penn thought that the case was closed?
Result: more confusion than clarity. They have nearly all read the available documents but do not always concur on interpretation. Surprise, surprise.
You mention Edward II - now there is another disputed deposition. Was he killed in 1327/8 or did he survive, wander around Europe, meet his son EIII in Flanders and then end up in Italy!?! Who is really in the tomb at Gloucester? Ian Mortimer's books The Perfect King and The Greatest Traitor are well worth a read if you want a change from RIII!!
Hancock: Richard II and the Murder in the Tower
Ashdown-Hill [A Riccardian]: Eleanor the Secret Queen and The Last Days of RIchard III [2 versions, one before the dig and one after]
Josephine Tey: The Daughter of Time [doesn't think much of Thomas More!]
Markham [1906] for an earlier view of things: Richard III: His life and character...
not to mention a couple of Philippa Gregory's novels [to give a bit more colour!] - eg The White Queen [Elizabeth Woodville] and the Red Queen [Margaret Beaufort]. The much acclaimed Thomas Penn's Winter King says very little about the princes except to cover the pretenders Simnel and Warbeck. One might have thought that there was a case to at least address in a definitive life of Henry VII if not to resolve the fate of the princes for the sake of completeness. Maybe Penn thought that the case was closed?
Result: more confusion than clarity. They have nearly all read the available documents but do not always concur on interpretation. Surprise, surprise.
You mention Edward II - now there is another disputed deposition. Was he killed in 1327/8 or did he survive, wander around Europe, meet his son EIII in Flanders and then end up in Italy!?! Who is really in the tomb at Gloucester? Ian Mortimer's books The Perfect King and The Greatest Traitor are well worth a read if you want a change from RIII!!
Comment