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The Princes in the Tower - Did Richard III Murder His Nephews, Edward V & Richard of York? (Paperback)
Loot Price: R274
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The Princes in the Tower - Did Richard III Murder His Nephews, Edward V & Richard of York? (Paperback)
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List price R302
Loot Price R274
Discovery Miles 2 740
You Save R28 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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In the summer of 1483 two boys were taken into the Tower of London
and were never seen again. They were no ordinary boys. One was the
new King of England; the other was his brother, the Duke of York,
and heir presumptive to the throne. Shortly afterwards, their
uncle, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, took the throne as Richard III.
Soon after, rumours began to spread that the princes had been
murdered, and that their murderer was none other than King Richard
himself. Since 1483 the dispute over Richard's guilt or innocence
has never abated. The accusations, which began during his own
lifetime, continued through the Tudor period and beyond, remaining
a source of heated debate to the present day. For much of this time
it has been taken for granted that Richard murdered his nephews to
clear his path to the throne, but there are other suspects. One is
Henry VII, Richard's successor, who is alleged to have discovered
the princes in the Tower following his victory at Bosworth.
Recognising them as the rightful heirs to the throne, he ordered
their deaths. More recently another suspect has come forward:
Henry, Duke of Buckingham, who was motivated by personal and
dynastic ambition. Yet the evidence that the princes were murdered
at all is far from conclusive; could it be that one, or both of the
princes survived? Now, in the wake of the discovery of Richard
III's remains in a car park at Leicester, it is time to revisit the
question of what became of his nephews, the boys known to history
as the Princes in the Tower. This study returns to the original
sources, subjecting them to critical examination and presenting a
ground-breaking new theory about what really happened and why.
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