The Dublin King: The True Story of Lambert Simnel and the Princes in the Tower

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The Dublin King: The True Story of Lambert Simnel and the Princes in the Tower Page 2

by John Ashdown-Hill


  The fifth childhood story to be considered is that of the mysterious boy who seems to have borne the name Lambert Simnel – though one contemporary account by a rather important witness tells us that the boy’s real Christian name was actually John. This boy may have been brought up in Oxford, by his father, who may have been an organ maker – or a baker – or some other kind of tradesman. Possibly the boy was not brought up in Oxford, but was taken there by a clergyman who had evil intentions in respect of Henry VII. Reportedly taken from his menial background (wherever that was) around the end of 1485, at the age of about 8, because he looked so much like the 10-year-old Earl of Warwick (whom most people had probably never seen) – or possibly because he resembled the even older Duke of York – Simnel was then allegedly trained to impersonate a royal prince by an insignificant – but obviously very enterprising – young Oxford priest. One account tells us that this priest was called William Symonds. However, another version of the story reports his name as Richard Simons. According to one source, Symonds/Simons was a prisoner of the Tudor government by the beginning of 1486. Confusingly, other sources report that he was only captured by Henry VII’s forces about fourteen months later, after the Battle of Stoke. It will probably already be apparent that, despite its widespread acceptance, in actuality this official Tudor account of events contains at least as many confusions and potential contradictions as the other versions of the pretender’s story.

  Identifying for certain which of these four – or possibly five – boys was where, when and with whom, is by no means easy. The trail becomes increasingly complex as the story progresses. Nevertheless, a serious attempt to track down the true-life histories and fates of all the boys in question is the only possible way of embarking upon the quest to shed new light on the story of Lambert Simnel and the Dublin King.

  Note

  In the Middle Ages the English calendar operated differently from the one we know today, in that the New Year began not on 1 January but on 25 March (Lady Day).6 Thus events which occurred in the months of January, February or March would have been counted by medieval English writers as occurring in the last months of the previous year. Some foreign writers, however, would have dated them in the modern manner. To avoid any possibility of confusion over year dates, all events which occurred in January, February or March are dated here in the following way:

  February 1486/87

  This means that in terms of the English medieval reckoning, the event in question took place in February, the penultimate month of 1486 – though in terms of the modern calendar we would date this as February, the second month of 1487.

  Notes

  Abbreviations

  CPR

  Calendar of Patent Rolls

  ODNB

  Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

  PROME

  Parliament Rolls of Medieval England

  1. An impostor appeared at the Carmelite friary in Oxford in 1318, claiming to be a son of Edward I, but no one seems to have believed him and he was quickly arrested and executed (A. Crossley & C.R. Elrington eds, VCH, A History of Oxford, vol. 4, The City of Oxford (1979), pp. 3–73. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=22803, accessed 28 August 2013.) In October 1399, after Henry IV had imprisoned Richard II, the deposed king’s chaplain, Richard Maudeleyn, who reportedly resembled him, plotted to impersonate him briefly as part of a plan aimed at reversing the situation – but of course, had it succeeded, the real Richard II, not Maudeleyn, would have resumed the crown. The fifteenth-century case of Ralph Wilford is considered below – but seems not to have been a very serious attempt upon the throne. (VCH, A History of Oxford, pp. 3–73, accessed 28 August 2013.)

  2. The author does not accept that the royal family known as ‘Tudor’ really bore this surname (see J. Ashdown-Hill, Royal Marriage Secrets, Stroud 2013, p. 70 et seq.). Nevertheless, for convenience, the appelation Tudor is used throughout this book without further comment.

  3. See Chapter 2.

  4. As the son and heir of the Duke of Clarence, Warwick’s Yorkist claim was technically invalidated by the 1478 Act of Attainder of Edward IV against his father. However, as we shall see later, there was also another possible way of looking at his situation.

  5. According to Francis Bacon.

  6. In some Continental countries new years did begin on 1 January, and throughout Europe (including in England) gifts called ‘New Year’s Day’ presents were commonly exchanged on 1 January. But in medieval England 1 January had no practical significance in terms of the numbering of the year.

  The Historical Background

  The background to the story of the Dublin King is the episode of English history popularly known as the Wars of the Roses. It is essential to understand the basic outline of this complex struggle for power within the royal family in order to be able to comprehend what took place in 1486–87.

  The story of the Wars of the Roses started almost a century before the coronation of the Dublin King. It began in about 1390, with controversy over who was the true heir to the throne of the childless reigning monarch of the day, Richard II. The rival contestants were, first, the descendants of Richard II’s senior uncle, Lionel of Antwerp, Duke of Clarence and, second, the family of a younger uncle, John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. As a result of the marriage of Anne Mortimer, great-granddaughter of Lionel, to her cousin, Richard, Earl of Cambridge, the Clarence descendants eventually evolved into what is known as the royal house of York, while John of Gaunt’s descendants were the house of Lancaster.

  Who was the true heir of Richard II?

  Historical attempts at analysing the rights and wrongs of the rival Mortimer/Yorkist and Lancastrian/Tudor claims to the throne are often based on the rather naïve assumption that the basic modern rules governing succession to the English throne also applied in the medieval period. The fact that the modern rules have only recently been altered should warn us against making any such assumption.

  An examination of practice in relation to succession issues during the five centuries from 1000 to 1500 shows that the seizure of power by force, followed by subsequent parliamentary ratification, was not infrequently the basis of a sovereign’s authority during this period. It accounts for the accessions of William I (the Conqueror), King Stephen, King John, Henry IV, Edward IV and Henry VII. The accessions both of Stephen and of Henry II also prove beyond any shadow of doubt that a royal daughter could transmit rights to the throne if there was a lack of royal sons. At the same time, however, the civil war between King Stephen and Henry II’s mother, Stephen’s cousin Matilda, demonstrates that prior to 1500 the right of daughters to succeed to the throne in person remained unclear.

  In 1399 John of Gaunt’s son forcibly resolved the succession issue of his day by deposing, imprisoning and probably ultimately murdering King Richard II, and by seizing the crown for himself, under the royal title of King Henry IV. Thus began the reign of the house of Lancaster, which lasted for sixty-two years.

  Of course, such behaviour invites retaliation. Its effect in this instance was that, from the very beginning of the Lancanstrian era, there were attempts to change the situation in favour of Richard II’s alternative heirs, the descendants of Lionel, Duke of Clarence. The early attempts were unsuccessful, of course, and the house of Lancaster remained on the throne throughout the reigns of Henry IV and Henry V. However, the position of the dynasty was weakened by the death of Henry V, followed by the succession of the third Lancastrian king, his baby son, King Henry VI.

  Henry VI was a weak king even when he grew up. His position was further undermined by a tendency to mental instability, which he inherited from his grandfather, King Charles VI of France. Doubts about the legitimacy of his supposed son and heir also helped to undermine the Lancastrian cause. Thus, after various vicissitudes, which later came to be called the Wars of the Roses, the Yorkist attempts to displace the house of Lancaster were finally successful. First, Parliament decided that the Yorkist line must succeed to the
throne after Henry VI. Then in 1461, after this decision had been contested unsuccessfully by a Lancastrian army, Henry VI was deposed by one of his Yorkist cousins, who founded the Yorkist dynasty and became King Edward IV. Edward IV’s claim to the throne was a strong one, based on three very solid arguments: first, his superior blood right (via his female-line descent from Edward III’s second surviving son); second, his very effective seizure of power; third, the subsequent ratification of his succession by Parliament.

  Ultimately, the death of Henry VI in the Tower of London left the Lancastrian dynasty with no clear heir, and the Yorkist takeover would almost certainly have proved to be a long-term success if Edward IV had had a sensible marriage policy. Unfortunately, by involving himself in two secret weddings, the king laid himself open to the accusation of bigamy. In 1461 he married Eleanor Talbot, daughter of the late first Earl of Shrewsbury,1 but in 1464, while Eleanor was still alive, he also secretly married Elizabeth Woodville. Unfortunately for Edward, since only the second of these two secret marriages produced offspring, those children then became liable to accusations of illegitimacy. Matters came to a head when he died unexpectedly in April 1483.

  THE IMMEDIATE FAMILY OF EDWARD IV

  Notionally Edward IV’s heir was his eldest son, Edward, Prince of Wales, the elder of the so-called ‘Princes in the Tower’. Following his father’s death, in April 1483, this Prince of Wales was initially proclaimed king as Edward V. However, the subsequent revelation of Edward IV’s bigamy provoked a new controversy between those members of the nobility, such as Lord Hastings, who were prepared to hush up the young king’s technical illegitimacy, and those, like the Duke of Buckingham, who believed that it should not be suppressed, and who insisted that the order of succession should be altered, either to maintain the principle of absolute legitimacy upon which the Yorkist claim to the throne had always been based, or perhaps to ensure the exclusion from any position of power of the parvenu and upstart Woodville family.

  The immediate outcome of Hastings’ opposition was his execution. Then, on the basis of the evidence of Edward IV’s bigamy (and the consequential illegitimacy of his children by Elizabeth Woodville), coupled with the fact that George, Duke of Clarence had been attainted and executed in 1478, thereby excluding his children from the succession, the throne was offered to Edward IV’s only surviving brother, the Duke of Gloucester, who thus became King Richard III. Since a Parliament had not, at that stage, formally been opened, the offer of the crown to Richard III was made initially by the Three Estates of the Realm – those noblemen, bishops and abbots, and representatives of the commons, who were in London waiting for the opening of Parliament. However, the following year, when a full Parliament was sitting, the offer was formally encapsulated in legislation, citing both the evidence of bigamy, and also the offer made to Richard III the previous summer.

  As at every stage since the usurpation of Henry IV in 1399, the new change in the order of succession to the throne was not universally accepted. In France there was a remote descendant of John of Gaunt living in exile. The French, always happy to undermine the existing government in England, supported this obscure claimant, and to their – and probably his own – surprise, in August 1485 at the Battle of Bosworth, he suddenly found himself King of England, with the royal title of Henry VII.

  Henry rapidly repealed the parliamentary decision which had declared Edward IV’s children bastards. This was done in order that he himself could marry Edward IV’s eldest daughter, Elizabeth of York, whom he wished to present to the nation as the Yorkist heiress. In this way he hoped that his marriage would be seen as having brought to an end the rivalry between the houses of Lancaster and York.

  The heirs of Edward IV in 1483.

  As a result of Henry VII’s action, the legal position regarding the Yorkist succession reverted to what it had been during the reign of Edward IV. By rescinding the decision which had declared Edward’s Woodville marriage bigamous and its children illegitimate, Henry restored his bride, Elizabeth of York, to the position of a legitimate princess, which she had enjoyed during the lifetime of her late father. It was also now possible for Henry to claim that Richard III had been a usurper.

  Unfortunately, if Elizabeth’s legitimacy had been restored, so had that of her two brothers. Arguably, therefore, from the Tudor viewpoint, the rightful Yorkist claimant was now either Edward V or Richard, Duke of York – if either of them was still alive. Whether those Yorkists who had supported the late King Richard III would also have seen things in that way is perhaps more questionable. They may still have perceived the sons of Edward IV as bastards, in which case they would presumably have been seeking a new Yorkist leader from among the other surviving nephews of Richard III.

  Fortuitously from Henry VII’s point of view, Edward IV’s two sons appeared, in the meantime, to have been lost from sight. Thus, they were not on hand as immediate contenders for the throne. Now that the legal situation in the autumn of 1485 has been explained, some readers may feel that the boys’ absence was so much to Henry VII’s advantage that it is very tempting to believe that either Henry himself or one of his leading supporters was behind their disappearance. However, Henry VII’s apparent uncertainty as to what had become of his young brothers-in-law constitutes quite a strong argument against this. The possible fate of the so-called princes will be considered in more detail later.

  Meanwhile, from the Yorkist viewpoint, Henry’s repeal of the Act of Titulus Regius of 1484 had done absolutely nothing to restore the claim to the throne of the children of the Duke of Clarence, since their father’s attainder had not been reversed. Thus it might appear that the official legal position in Tudor eyes should logically have been that the 8-year-old Earl of Warwick and his elder sister represented no real threat.

  However, there was also an alternative Lancastrian viewpoint. Ironically, according to this the Earl of Warwick was the rightful Lancastrian heir to the throne. This complex argument will also be explored in greater detail later. For the moment, suffice it to say that the new king was obviously taking no risks with potential rivals. He rounded up all the young Yorkist heirs that he could find, and made sure that they were placed under very careful supervision. Later, many of them were to be more permanently removed from the political arena by means of execution, either by Henry VII himself, or by his son Henry VIII.

  In spite of his careful precautions, about a year after winning the crown Henry VII found himself confronting one possible Yorkist contender for the throne. The claimant was a boy who was recognised by those members of the house of York who were free to express their opinions, as a young but very high-ranking prince of that dynasty. Whoever he really was, all the surviving accounts speak quite well of him. They tell us that ‘the child … was handsome, intelligent and of courtly manners. … Lambertus erat vultu membrisque decorus [Lambert was handsome of face and limbs],’ says John Herd. ‘Puer aspectu decoro et docile [a boy of dignified appearance, and teachable],’ writes Ware. ‘Of a gentle nature and pregnant wit,’ says the Book of Howth.2

  Precisely who this boy really was, and what was his true life history, comprises the central subject matter of this book. One fact, however, is beyond dispute: the boy was crowned as King of England at Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin. As for which royal name and number this Dublin King used, various answers have been offered by previous writers. In reality, though, the true position (like so many aspects of the Dublin King’s story) has not been clear. The relevant surviving evidence on this point will therefore be very carefully reviewed in due course. Before that, however, the fascinating quest for the true identity of the Dublin King has to begin by exploring all the possible – and conflicting – accounts of the boy’s childhood.

  Notes

  Abbreviations

  CPR

  Calendar of Patent Rolls

  ODNB

  Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

  PROME

  Parliament Rolls of Medieval England
r />   1. For the evidence relating to this case, see J. Ashdown-Hill, Eleanor the Secret Queen, Stroud 2009, and Ashdown-Hill, Royal Marriage Secrets, Chapter 9.

  2. M.T. Hayden, ‘Lambert Simnel in Ireland’, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, 4 (1915), p. 625.

  PART 1

  Possible Childhoods of the Dublin King

  1

  Richard, Duke of York

  About fifteen years after the death of King Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth, Bernard André (1450–1522), a French Augustinian friar and poet from Toulouse, who is also sometimes referred to under the Latin form of his surname as Andreas, and who was employed by Henry VII, wrote a history of the new king’s reign. This is often called by its abbreviated Latin title, Historia Henrici Septimi. André’s history of Henry VII offered the following account of the rebellion of 1487:

  While the dire death of King Edward’s sons was still a fresh wound, behold, some seditious fellows devised another new crime, and so that they might cloak their fiction with some misrepresentation, in their evilmindedness they gave out that some base-born boy, the son of a baker or tailor, was the son of Edward IV. Their boldness had them in its grip to the point that out of the hatred they had conceived for their king they had no fear of God or Man. Thus, in accordance with the scheme they had hatched, rumor had it that Edward’s second son had been crowned king in Ireland. And when this rumor was brought to the king, in his wisdom he elicited all the facts from the men who had informed him: namely, he sagely discerned how and by whom the boy had been brought there, where he had been raised, where he had lingered for such a long time, what friends he had, and many other things of the same kind. In accordance with the variety of developments, various messengers were sent out, and finally [ — ],1 who said that he could easily divine whether the boy was what he claimed to be, crossed over to Ireland. But the lad, schooled with evil art by men who were familiar with Edward’s days, very readily replied to all the herald’s questions. In the end (not to make a long story of it), thanks to the false instructions of his sponsors, he was believed to be Edward’s son by a number of Henry’s emissaries, who were prudent men, and he was so strongly supported that a large number had no hesitation to die for his sake. Now see the sequel. In those days such was the ignorance of even prominent men, such was their blindness (not to mention pride and malice), that the Earl of Lincoln [ — ] had no hesitation in believing. And, inasmuch as he was thought to be a scion of Edward’s stock, the Lady Margaret, formerly the consort of Charles, the most recent Duke of Burgundy, wrote him a letter of summons. By stealth he quickly made his way to her, with only a few men party to such a great act of treason. To explain the thing briefly with a few words, the Irish and the northern Englishmen were provoked to this uprising by the aid and advice of the aforementioned woman. Therefore, having assembled an expedition of both Germans and Irishmen, always aided by the said Lady, they soon crossed over to England, and landed on its northern shore.2

 

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