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  1. Hace 4 días · During the first week of July, Warbeck and his small crew sailed out into the Firth of Clyde and headed south towards Ireland. His activities during this period are difficult to ascertain, but at some point during August he was forced into abandoning any pretence of capturing Cork, and fled to Kinsale harbour where a handful of ships loyal to Henry VII awaited his arrival.

  2. Hace 20 horas · Reformation, taxation and enclosure were causes of the Pilgrimage of Grace in 1536. During the reign of Henry VII rebellions including the Lovell/Stafford rising, the rebellion in favour of Lambert Simnel and the Perkins Warbeck rebellion were all related to the dynastic upheavals of the fifteenth century. it wasn't really just about bloodlines by that…

  3. Hace 2 días · Perhaps it’s the language (compromised by Penn’s efforts to ‘jazz up’ his prose to cater for the popular history market): when Perkin Warbeck, the pretender who had claimed to be Richard, duke of York, the younger of the Princes in the Tower, was executed at Tyburn in 1499, we are told, ‘the ladder was whipped away and he ...

  4. Hace 3 días · London, Routledge, 2007, ISBN: 9780415266208; 336pp.; Price: £45.00. A new book on Henry VII is a major event. The last full-length study of the king and his reign, by S. B. Chrimes, was written in 1972, in a very different historiographical world. At that time, the explosion of interest in later-medieval history was still in its infancy, and ...

  5. Hace 20 horas · His execution in 1495 for complicity in the rising of Perkin Warbeck caused Hunsdon once more to revert to the Crown. In 1503 Henry VII made a life grant of this manor to his mother Margaret Countess of Richmond and her husband the Earl of Derby, elder brother of the late Sir William Stanley. The earl died in 1504 and the countess in 1509.

  6. Hace 1 día · The price for this was a close relationship between kings and priors which sometimes led into conflict, as, for example, when Edward IV tried to influence two prioral elections—that of Langstrother in the period 1468–70, and that of Robert Multon, whose bid failed in the face of the convent’s hostility, in 1474–77—and when Prior John Kendal became involved in the Perkin Warbeck ...

  7. Hace 2 días · The city supported Perkin Warbeck, the pretender to the English throne, when he visited Ireland in 1491–92. The city revolted against Charles I in favor of Oliver Cromwell in 1649. In 1690 Cork was taken by John Churchill, earl of Marlborough, for William of Orange (William III).