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'Lots of people remember their history lessons from school
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'as dates and battles, kings and queens, facts and figures.
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'But the story of our past is open to interpretation
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'and much of British history is a carefully edited
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'and even deceitful version of events.'
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You might think that history is just a record of what happened.
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Actually, it's not like that at all.
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As soon as you do a little digging,
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you discover that it's more like a tapestry of different stories,
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woven together by whoever was in power at the time.
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In this series,
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I'm going to debunk some of the biggest fibs in British history.
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In the 17th century,
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politicians and artists helped turn a foreign invasion
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into the triumphal tale of Britain's glorious revolution.
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Hello. Woohoo!
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'In the 19th century, a British government coup in India...'
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GUNSHOT
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'..was rebranded by the Victorians
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'as the civilising triumph of the Empire.
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'And in this episode,
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'I'll find out how the story of the Wars of the Roses was invented
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'by the Tudors to justify their power.
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'And then immortalised by the greatest storyteller of them all.
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'Shakespeare presented this
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'as the darkest chapter in the nation's history.'
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Now is the winter of our discontent.
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Two rival dynasties, the House of Lancaster and the House of York,
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were locked in battle for the crown of England.
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This was the real-life Game of Thrones.
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Brothers fought against brothers.
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Anointed kings were deposed.
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And innocent children were murdered.
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Never before had the country experienced
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such treachery and bloodshed.
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In 1485, a wicked king, Richard III, was slain.
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And Henry Tudor took the throne.
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Henry's victory would herald the ending of the Middle Ages
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and the founding of the great Tudor dynasty.
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It was to be England's salvation.
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Or so the story goes.
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With history, the line between fact and fiction often gets blurred.
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In 1455, the village of Stubbins, in Lancashire,
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was the scene of a legendary battle
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in the Wars of the Roses.
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The fighting began with volleys of arrows, but then, to their horror,
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both sides realised that they'd run out of ammunition.
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In desperation, the Lancastrians grabbed some makeshift weapons -
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they happened to have a supply of their local delicacy,
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black puddings from Bury.
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And with these, they pelted the Yorkists.
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But, as luck would have it,
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the Yorkists had their own supply of missiles -
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Yorkshire puddings.
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With which they bombarded the Lancastrians.
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Now, most disappointingly,
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this 15th century food fight never really happened.
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It's a local legend that was conjured up as long ago as 1983.
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But what the Battle of Stubbins Bridge does tell us is that,
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although the dates and the details might be hazy,
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the Wars of the Roses are still alive and well
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in what you might call our national memory.
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What you think you know about the Wars of the Roses though
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and what really happened
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are two quite different things.
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According to the history books,
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the Wars of the Roses is the story of the fatal rivalry
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between the House of Lancaster and the House of York,
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between the red rose and the white.
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But the saga of a country divided by 30 years of bloody wars
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and deadly hate was largely invented by the Tudors,
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then spun into the dynasty's foundation myth
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by the greatest storyteller of all, William Shakespeare.
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And there is a firm basis for this tale
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of devastating national conflict.
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On a single day in 1461, the bloodshed was only too real.
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In the middle of a snowstorm, on the 29th of March, in Towton, Yorkshire,
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the Lancastrian and Yorkist forces clashed head-to-head.
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The result was utter carnage.
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The Lancastrians started out the day pretty well,
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but then the tide began to turn against them.
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They were chased by the Yorkists down this steep and icy slope,
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the blizzard was still blowing,
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and that little river at the bottom was flooded,
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so they couldn't get any further.
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This meant that the Yorkists came down the hill
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and started massacring them.
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So many men died that their blood stained the snow red.
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This became known as the Bloody Meadow.
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A century later,
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William Shakespeare would depict the battle as a medieval Armageddon,
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where fathers slaughtered their own sons
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and sons murdered their own fathers.
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Towton had come to symbolise a country torn apart by war.
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The scale of the killing was so great that there's been nothing else
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quite as bad in the whole of our history.
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On the first day of the Battle of the Somme, in July 1916,
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19,000 British soldiers were killed.
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But here at Towton, contemporary reports talk about 28,000 dead.
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That's 1% of the entire population killed on a single day.
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20 years ago, Bradford University's archaeology department
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revealed the true barbarity of the fighting
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when they uncovered the remains of 43 men killed at Towton.
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George, we've got five skulls of people here on the table.
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How was this gentleman finished off here?
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It's kind of square.
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That is with a horseman's hammer.
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But this particular skull has another sign of extreme violence
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inflicted with a pole axe.
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The head was forced down into the spine,
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so the skull has actually shown signs of splitting.
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This sort of desecration of the body,
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that's actually robbing them of life in the next life.
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You are disfiguring them and they can't be resurrected.
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This battle is truly horrendously brutal,
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but is it the norm for the Wars of the Roses?
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No. It was exceptional. Certainly, in the enormous number
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of people who fought and died at Towton.
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I think people might have the impression that they were just
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fighting for decade after decade after decade,
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but within this period, how many battles actually were there?
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Well, there were skirmishes but, in terms of real battles,
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around about eight.
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The feud between the Houses of Lancaster and York did fester for
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three decades, but the idea that this was a period utterly ravaged
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by all-out war, well, that's just historical fiction.
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Yes, Towton was a truly brutal battle, but it was also unique.
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The other battles in the Wars of the Roses
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had much lower death tolls.
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And the idea that the country was totally consumed by war is wrong.
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Some historians argue that,
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out of the 32 years of the Wars of the Roses,
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the fighting only lasted for a total of 13 weeks.
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That would mean that there were months, years, even a whole decade,
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when England was at peace.
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The reason we talk of this era
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as the Wars of the Roses isn't an accident.
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It's the story told by the winning side,
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the history the Tudors wanted us to remember.
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It began with their account of the battle
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that brought the war to an end -
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the Battle of Bosworth.
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The Lancastrian Henry Tudor
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emerged as a victorious hero
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who had ended 30 years of bloodshed.
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He'd saved the nation
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from a villainous tyrant -
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the Yorkist King Richard III.
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'The Tudors made sure Bosworth would be remembered as the ultimate clash
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'between the forces of good and evil.
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'Helped along by William Shakespeare,
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'who relished their juicy tale,
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'the battle has been so mythologized
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'that it's hard to sort fact from fiction.'
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Historians used to think that the Battle of Bosworth took place
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about two miles away, over there, up on top of the hill,
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but over the last ten years,
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all sorts of interesting finds have been emerging from the fields
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immediately here.
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That's things like parts of 15th-century swords
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and badges
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and about 40 of these fantastically deadly-looking cannonballs.
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The battle must have taken place here.
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Now, despite this confusion about its location, a myth, a legend
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has grown up about exactly what happened that day.
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It's one of our great national stories
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and it goes something like this.
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'King Richard III goes into battle wearing a crown,
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'symbol of what's at stake that day.'
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Richard declares, "This day I will die as King or I will win."
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And even his enemies admit that he fights courageously.
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'Richard gets within a sword's length of Henry Tudor,
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'but the enemy forces overwhelm him.
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'In desperation, he cries out,
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'"My horse, my horse, my kingdom for a horse!"'
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And then he's killed with a blow to the head
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and he loses his crown.
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'After Henry's victory,
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'Richard's crown is discovered in a hawthorn bush.
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'And Henry is crowned with it on the battlefield.'
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Now, how much of this really happened?
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It's impossible to say.
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But the reason that this is the story we know
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is because it's the one Henry wanted us to remember.
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Henry wanted to make everyone aware of his decisive victory
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on the battlefield, but that was the easy part.
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In a nation divided,
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Henry's enemies still believed that he was a usurper,
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who had stolen the crown from the anointed King Richard III.
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Henry needed to legitimise his new reign,
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so when his first parliament met a few months after Bosworth,
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he made sure that it was his version of events that was recorded.
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One telling detail that Henry had written
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into the records of Parliament
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was that his reign had begun on the 21st of August 1485.
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Now, this is a bit odd because the Battle of Bosworth
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wasn't until the 22nd of August 1485.
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Was this a slip of the quill?
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No, it was deliberate.
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Henry was claiming that he'd already been king, even before the battle,
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so he wasn't a usurper stealing the crown,
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he was just taking what was rightfully his.
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He cunningly realised that his success didn't just lie
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in victory on the battlefield, it also lay in the way that the
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history of the Wars of the Roses would be written.
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Henry's next move was equally cunning.
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On the 18th of January 1486, Henry VII married Elizabeth of York,
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daughter of Edward IV.
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Henry would present his match as the start of a glorious new chapter
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in the nation's history.
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Henry realised that picking the right wife was important
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but that telling the right story about the marriage was even more so.
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The story that he wanted to tell was that this was one of the
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most important marriages in history.
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Here he was, a Lancastrian, marrying Elizabeth, a Yorkist,
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they were going to heal the nation.
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They had once been bitter rivals
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but now, they were loving bedfellows.
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But his cunning storytelling had another advantage too.
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It glossed over the very inconvenient fact that
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an awful lot of people thought
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that he had no right to the throne at all.
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Henry hoped that his marriage to Elizabeth
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would be seen as a fresh start.
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It would also divert attention away from his less than royal lineage.
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This is a genealogical roll, showing the kings of England,
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going right back into the mists of time.
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It goes back as far as Brutus,
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the mythical king 1,000 years before the Romans.
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You can't even see Brutus because he's still rolled up,
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we couldn't fit the whole thing onto the table.
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And as you come down this end, towards me,
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you move forwards into the period of the Wars of the Roses.
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These circles contain pictures of all the different kings,
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most of them called Edward.
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This one's called Rex Ted,
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which pleases me.
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As we get down here, we have some Henrys.
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Henry VI.
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Here is another Edward.
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Here is Richard III and then,
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the main red line peters out.
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Where is the next king, Henry VII?
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Well, he's been squished in at the side
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as the husband of Elizabeth of York.
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So, where has he popped up from?
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This black line tells us.
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It goes back to Henry's grandmother, Catherine,
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who was a proper Queen of England,
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but her second husband, Henry's grandfather,
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was this chap, Owen Tudor,
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a servitor in camera,
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that means a chamber servant.
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Or in other words, a bit of rough.
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00:15:47,960 --> 00:15:52,080
This family tree reveals Henry's dirty secret.
256
00:15:53,360 --> 00:15:57,880
The fact that his claim to the throne was decidedly dodgy.
257
00:15:57,880 --> 00:16:01,480
It won't surprise you to learn that the scroll belonged to a family who
258
00:16:01,480 --> 00:16:04,360
didn't like Henry, the De La Poles.
259
00:16:04,360 --> 00:16:06,600
They were plotting against him.
260
00:16:06,600 --> 00:16:10,240
The document also explains why he had to marry Elizabeth.
261
00:16:10,240 --> 00:16:12,440
She really was royal.
262
00:16:12,440 --> 00:16:14,480
She was the daughter of a king,
263
00:16:14,480 --> 00:16:18,800
whereas Henry himself was just the grandson of a servant.
264
00:16:18,800 --> 00:16:22,360
But this isn't the tale that Henry would tell us if he were here.
265
00:16:22,360 --> 00:16:27,160
He didn't present his marriage as a matter of political expediency,
266
00:16:27,160 --> 00:16:31,640
he described it as an extraordinary act of reconciliation.
267
00:16:35,600 --> 00:16:40,240
Henry made his marriage, the union of the Houses of York and Lancaster,
268
00:16:40,240 --> 00:16:44,200
into the centrepiece of a super successful propaganda campaign
269
00:16:44,200 --> 00:16:47,840
to secure his new dynastic ambitions.
270
00:16:47,840 --> 00:16:52,880
This really beautiful book is a medieval anthology of poetry,
271
00:16:52,880 --> 00:16:56,600
prose and advice for educating a prince.
272
00:16:56,600 --> 00:17:00,880
But it's best known for its wonderful illustrations.
273
00:17:00,880 --> 00:17:04,560
Including this one of the Tower of London.
274
00:17:04,560 --> 00:17:07,760
This particular picture has a coat of arms
275
00:17:07,760 --> 00:17:10,960
and these two creatures
276
00:17:10,960 --> 00:17:12,720
are very curly haired lions.
277
00:17:12,720 --> 00:17:15,120
They are black now because they've tarnished.
278
00:17:15,120 --> 00:17:16,520
But they were once silver
279
00:17:16,520 --> 00:17:20,120
and they were the silver lions of King Edward IV.
280
00:17:20,120 --> 00:17:23,040
They show that this book was once in his library.
281
00:17:26,160 --> 00:17:29,960
'The Yorkist King Edward won the throne in 1471
282
00:17:29,960 --> 00:17:33,800
'after defeating his Lancastrian opponents.'
283
00:17:33,800 --> 00:17:39,040
This time in the border, we have got red and white roses,
284
00:17:39,040 --> 00:17:42,920
representing the House of Lancaster and the House of York
285
00:17:42,920 --> 00:17:47,560
and their rivalry in progress at the time, the Wars of the Roses.
286
00:17:47,560 --> 00:17:50,840
The odd thing though about this illustration is that,
287
00:17:50,840 --> 00:17:54,360
during the actual time of the Wars of the Roses,
288
00:17:54,360 --> 00:17:57,080
when this manuscript was first produced,
289
00:17:57,080 --> 00:18:01,000
the red rose had nothing at all to do with the House of Lancaster.
290
00:18:01,000 --> 00:18:03,440
The border was changed,
291
00:18:03,440 --> 00:18:07,920
it was added in at a later date by Henry VII himself.
292
00:18:07,920 --> 00:18:10,480
He was the one who adopted the red rose
293
00:18:10,480 --> 00:18:12,880
as the House of Lancaster's symbol.
294
00:18:12,880 --> 00:18:15,640
And now, look at this.
295
00:18:15,640 --> 00:18:18,000
Adopting the red rose for Lancaster
296
00:18:18,000 --> 00:18:20,000
was only the first stage of
297
00:18:20,000 --> 00:18:24,640
Henry's iconographical plan because now he could combine it
298
00:18:24,640 --> 00:18:27,320
with the white rose of his wife, Elizabeth of York,
299
00:18:27,320 --> 00:18:30,560
to create the multicoloured Tudor rose.
300
00:18:30,560 --> 00:18:34,160
Normally, the inner petals are white and the outer petals are red.
301
00:18:34,160 --> 00:18:38,400
This one happens to be quartered, but you get the general idea.
302
00:18:38,400 --> 00:18:40,720
It's red and white together.
303
00:18:40,720 --> 00:18:46,160
And so this new Tudor rose became the symbol of the new Tudor dynasty
304
00:18:46,160 --> 00:18:48,720
and it was such a powerful symbol
305
00:18:48,720 --> 00:18:52,640
that it allowed Henry VII to completely revise history.
306
00:18:55,200 --> 00:18:58,040
The rose became Henry VII's logo,
307
00:18:58,040 --> 00:19:03,200
shorthand for the story of how he'd heroically united a divided nation.
308
00:19:03,200 --> 00:19:07,200
Over time, he made it the universally recognised symbol
309
00:19:07,200 --> 00:19:08,600
of Tudor might.
310
00:19:10,360 --> 00:19:13,280
'Across the country, from books to buildings,
311
00:19:13,280 --> 00:19:15,360
'Tudor roses started to bloom.
312
00:19:17,440 --> 00:19:21,080
'In Cambridge, Henry made King's College Chapel
313
00:19:21,080 --> 00:19:22,600
'into the backdrop
314
00:19:22,600 --> 00:19:26,360
'for one of the most overwhelming displays of Tudor propaganda.'
315
00:19:28,120 --> 00:19:31,120
Anna, this chapel was begun by Henry VI
316
00:19:31,120 --> 00:19:32,960
but he didn't finish it, did he?
317
00:19:32,960 --> 00:19:36,000
Well, the chapel had been being built for quite some time
318
00:19:36,000 --> 00:19:38,600
but then the Wars of the Roses happened,
319
00:19:38,600 --> 00:19:41,920
resources got diverted and so, when Henry VII became king,
320
00:19:41,920 --> 00:19:43,320
it was unfinished.
321
00:19:43,320 --> 00:19:46,440
It looked nothing like this, none of this beautiful vaulted ceiling.
322
00:19:46,440 --> 00:19:49,440
It was makeshift, it had a sort of timber ceiling,
323
00:19:49,440 --> 00:19:52,760
and it was very much a sort of work in progress and really was much more
324
00:19:52,760 --> 00:19:54,680
of a sort of blight on the landscape
325
00:19:54,680 --> 00:19:57,680
than anything that made a great statement of power.
326
00:19:59,960 --> 00:20:02,760
'But in 1508, Henry VII gave the chapel
327
00:20:02,760 --> 00:20:05,160
'a much-needed cash injection.'
328
00:20:05,160 --> 00:20:07,560
Now, this is a bit different, isn't it?
329
00:20:07,560 --> 00:20:09,480
'Henry died the following year
330
00:20:09,480 --> 00:20:13,560
'but his financial backing ensured that the chapel was completed
331
00:20:13,560 --> 00:20:16,800
'and decorated according to his Tudor vision.'
332
00:20:16,800 --> 00:20:18,280
It's fantastic. I mean,
333
00:20:18,280 --> 00:20:21,840
it's the story really of Henry VII's journey to the throne.
334
00:20:21,840 --> 00:20:23,280
It's his claim to the throne.
335
00:20:23,280 --> 00:20:26,440
We have the greyhound, which is the symbol of Margaret Beaufort,
336
00:20:26,440 --> 00:20:27,480
his mother.
337
00:20:27,480 --> 00:20:31,720
We have the dragon, highlighting Henry's Welsh descent.
338
00:20:31,720 --> 00:20:34,720
And we have, of course, Tudor roses everywhere.
339
00:20:34,720 --> 00:20:36,440
They look like they are on steroids.
340
00:20:36,440 --> 00:20:38,880
What kind of chemicals have they been treated with
341
00:20:38,880 --> 00:20:41,400
to make them so juicy and enormous? They look like cabbages.
342
00:20:41,400 --> 00:20:43,160
It's Tudor chemicals, isn't it?
343
00:20:43,160 --> 00:20:45,760
It's the sort of vitality, the virility of the Tudors.
344
00:20:45,760 --> 00:20:48,080
And, of course, above the Tudor rose, you see the crown,
345
00:20:48,080 --> 00:20:51,480
so again, it's underlying, these are now royal symbols.
346
00:20:51,480 --> 00:20:56,000
This is Henry saying, "Game over. Now it's the Tudors all the way."
347
00:20:56,000 --> 00:20:59,680
And really, I would argue it's almost like one of the first sort of
348
00:20:59,680 --> 00:21:02,200
ubiquitous brands that people across the country,
349
00:21:02,200 --> 00:21:03,480
you know, identify with.
350
00:21:03,480 --> 00:21:06,840
They know the Tudor brand, they know the Tudor rose.
351
00:21:06,840 --> 00:21:10,400
It's all about propaganda, it's all about myth-making, but I think,
352
00:21:10,400 --> 00:21:13,880
you know, we are still talking about it, so it was hugely successful.
353
00:21:15,240 --> 00:21:19,840
'With control of the crown, Henry also controlled the narrative.
354
00:21:19,840 --> 00:21:23,200
'In the emerging Tudor tale of the Wars of the Roses,
355
00:21:23,200 --> 00:21:27,480
'Henry was the conquering hero and, not surprisingly,
356
00:21:27,480 --> 00:21:30,040
'the historians during his reign all agreed.'
357
00:21:31,160 --> 00:21:34,480
This book is called The History Of The Kings Of England.
358
00:21:34,480 --> 00:21:39,360
'And it's the work of an exceptionally unreliable narrator.'
359
00:21:39,360 --> 00:21:40,720
It is written by John Rous,
360
00:21:40,720 --> 00:21:44,480
who was an antiquary and historian. And he is writing it
361
00:21:44,480 --> 00:21:46,520
during the reign of Richard III
362
00:21:46,520 --> 00:21:51,520
but he actually finishes it after Henry VII has become king.
363
00:21:51,520 --> 00:21:55,280
John Rous has written this book for his new boss, Henry VII,
364
00:21:55,280 --> 00:21:57,120
what's he got to say about him?
365
00:21:57,120 --> 00:22:00,040
He talks about Henry being such a good king,
366
00:22:00,040 --> 00:22:03,120
"For he will be remembered for generations to come."
367
00:22:03,120 --> 00:22:04,600
HE SPEAKS LATIN
368
00:22:04,600 --> 00:22:06,960
"For many centuries he will be remembered."
369
00:22:06,960 --> 00:22:12,040
Rous started writing this book when Richard III was still the boss.
370
00:22:12,040 --> 00:22:14,920
What does he have to say about Richard III?
371
00:22:14,920 --> 00:22:18,400
John Rous isn't very complimentary about Richard at all.
372
00:22:18,400 --> 00:22:19,560
And in fact,
373
00:22:19,560 --> 00:22:24,160
- let's look at the passage where he describes Richard's own birth.
- OK.
374
00:22:24,160 --> 00:22:29,120
It says that he had been in his mother's womb for two years.
375
00:22:29,120 --> 00:22:32,360
He was born "cum dentibus" - with teeth.
376
00:22:32,360 --> 00:22:33,560
With teeth.
377
00:22:33,560 --> 00:22:35,480
"Et capillis ad humeros."
378
00:22:35,480 --> 00:22:38,120
- That's hair to the shoulder.
- Hair to the shoulders.
379
00:22:38,120 --> 00:22:39,680
Very hairy.
380
00:22:39,680 --> 00:22:41,640
And then there's this slightly mysterious word
381
00:22:41,640 --> 00:22:43,720
that could be talons.
382
00:22:43,720 --> 00:22:46,120
Talons, which is quite creepy, isn't it?
383
00:22:46,120 --> 00:22:47,840
That's very monstrous.
384
00:22:47,840 --> 00:22:51,480
And then it says he was born under the sign of Scorpio
385
00:22:51,480 --> 00:22:56,080
and he continued to behave in life like a scorpion.
386
00:22:56,080 --> 00:23:00,160
This is a really striking vilification of Richard III.
387
00:23:00,160 --> 00:23:03,320
Is this the first one? Does it all start here?
388
00:23:03,320 --> 00:23:04,640
Essentially, yes.
389
00:23:04,640 --> 00:23:09,160
The demonization of Richard is taking place here and, in fact,
390
00:23:09,160 --> 00:23:11,520
later down on this particular page,
391
00:23:11,520 --> 00:23:15,720
Rous accuses Richard of committing several murders
392
00:23:15,720 --> 00:23:19,840
including the murder of his own wife, the murder of his nephews
393
00:23:19,840 --> 00:23:22,360
and also the fact that he had killed,
394
00:23:22,360 --> 00:23:24,320
with his own hands, Henry VI.
395
00:23:24,320 --> 00:23:28,440
What do you think Rous' motives were for writing this history in this
396
00:23:28,440 --> 00:23:33,360
- particular way?
- John Rous is writing specifically in order to praise
397
00:23:33,360 --> 00:23:36,360
the new king of England, Henry VII.
398
00:23:36,360 --> 00:23:40,200
He was only writing what he expected his readers would want to read.
399
00:23:42,000 --> 00:23:46,200
Demonising Richard when you're now ruled by his archrival, Henry,
400
00:23:46,200 --> 00:23:48,080
was certainly sensible.
401
00:23:48,080 --> 00:23:51,920
And Tudor historians onwards went to town.
402
00:23:51,920 --> 00:23:53,680
Richard III was said to be
403
00:23:53,680 --> 00:23:55,720
"malicious, wrathful and envious"
404
00:23:55,720 --> 00:23:57,120
as a king.
405
00:23:57,120 --> 00:24:00,280
He was also a "lump of foul deformity."
406
00:24:00,280 --> 00:24:01,760
"Ill-featured of limbs."
407
00:24:01,760 --> 00:24:03,800
And "hard-favoured of visage."
408
00:24:05,840 --> 00:24:09,400
As Rous reveals, telling the truth was less important
409
00:24:09,400 --> 00:24:12,240
than pandering to the right master.
410
00:24:13,840 --> 00:24:15,960
At an earlier stage of his career,
411
00:24:15,960 --> 00:24:20,960
he'd written other works in which he praised Richard III instead.
412
00:24:20,960 --> 00:24:23,080
This document is called The Rous Roll.
413
00:24:23,080 --> 00:24:27,240
And John Rous actually made it for presentation to Anne Neville,
414
00:24:27,240 --> 00:24:29,280
who was the wife of Richard III.
415
00:24:29,280 --> 00:24:31,720
We've got the same historian, John Rous,
416
00:24:31,720 --> 00:24:34,120
writing just three years earlier...
417
00:24:34,120 --> 00:24:36,480
While Richard III is still king of England.
418
00:24:36,480 --> 00:24:40,520
This is Richard himself and, in fact, he's described here as
419
00:24:40,520 --> 00:24:46,320
"the most mighty Prince, Richard, King of England,
420
00:24:46,320 --> 00:24:49,960
"and of France, and Lord of Ireland."
421
00:24:49,960 --> 00:24:54,480
And then it goes on to say that "he got great thank of God
422
00:24:54,480 --> 00:24:59,240
"and love of all his subjects, rich and poor.
423
00:24:59,240 --> 00:25:04,320
"And great love of the people of all other lands about him."
424
00:25:04,320 --> 00:25:06,800
So, this couldn't be any better, really.
425
00:25:06,800 --> 00:25:09,920
He's a fantastic king, he's doing a great job and everybody loves him.
426
00:25:09,920 --> 00:25:12,520
And physically...
427
00:25:12,520 --> 00:25:15,920
he's not what I was expecting at all.
428
00:25:15,920 --> 00:25:19,200
There's no sign of a hunchback here at all, is there?
429
00:25:19,200 --> 00:25:21,640
No, he's the perfect knight, in fact.
430
00:25:21,640 --> 00:25:23,240
He's wearing his armour.
431
00:25:23,240 --> 00:25:26,160
He's got rather a lovely face.
432
00:25:26,160 --> 00:25:28,440
He's got beautiful curly hair.
433
00:25:28,440 --> 00:25:30,520
Although it's in a bit of a pudding basin,
434
00:25:30,520 --> 00:25:32,280
which isn't my favourite hairstyle.
435
00:25:32,280 --> 00:25:35,960
He's actually depicted more as a Renaissance prince
436
00:25:35,960 --> 00:25:40,400
rather than the deformed caricature that we know of
437
00:25:40,400 --> 00:25:42,720
from the works of Shakespeare.
438
00:25:42,720 --> 00:25:46,520
So, Julian, we've got two very contrasting pictures of Richard III
439
00:25:46,520 --> 00:25:48,600
from the same historian.
440
00:25:48,600 --> 00:25:50,800
Where does the truth lie?
441
00:25:50,800 --> 00:25:53,320
Well, who knows where the truth actually lies,
442
00:25:53,320 --> 00:25:58,280
but what we can say is that John Rous was writing in order to
443
00:25:58,280 --> 00:26:01,920
gain the favour of the people who were actually paying him.
444
00:26:01,920 --> 00:26:03,200
That's really depressing.
445
00:26:03,200 --> 00:26:06,240
We can't believe historians.
446
00:26:06,240 --> 00:26:08,240
You can never believe a historian.
447
00:26:09,920 --> 00:26:11,480
Well, tell that to the Tudors
448
00:26:11,480 --> 00:26:15,960
because Henry and his historians' dodgy stories were unshakeable.
449
00:26:15,960 --> 00:26:21,240
When Henry VII died in 1509, and his son Henry VIII succeeded him,
450
00:26:21,240 --> 00:26:26,160
the new Henry didn't abandon his father's dynastic founding myth.
451
00:26:26,160 --> 00:26:30,120
Far from it, he embraced the tale and made it his own.
452
00:26:31,200 --> 00:26:32,600
Unlike his father,
453
00:26:32,600 --> 00:26:35,280
the new King Henry hadn't had to fight for his crown
454
00:26:35,280 --> 00:26:38,640
and there were no questions over his right to rule.
455
00:26:38,640 --> 00:26:41,600
But he still emblazoned the dynasty's new symbol,
456
00:26:41,600 --> 00:26:43,240
the Tudor rose,
457
00:26:43,240 --> 00:26:47,000
onto one of the country's most formidable institutions,
458
00:26:47,000 --> 00:26:49,400
the Yeomen of the Guard.
459
00:26:49,400 --> 00:26:52,280
I think I might have a better codpiece than you.
460
00:26:52,280 --> 00:26:54,800
I think you might do.
461
00:26:54,800 --> 00:26:59,600
Alan, I'm clearly wearing the trousers of a muscular giant.
462
00:26:59,600 --> 00:27:00,960
Like yourself.
463
00:27:00,960 --> 00:27:06,000
When were the Yeomen of the Guard formalised as a body of men?
464
00:27:06,000 --> 00:27:09,600
Well, that was after the Battle of Bosworth Field, in 1485.
465
00:27:09,600 --> 00:27:11,200
Henry VII, of course,
466
00:27:11,200 --> 00:27:13,240
defeated Richard at that battle
467
00:27:13,240 --> 00:27:14,480
and having defeated him,
468
00:27:14,480 --> 00:27:17,320
of course, was pretty much worried for his own safety.
469
00:27:17,320 --> 00:27:22,720
- Yeah.
- And so then, formed up to 300 Yeomen of the Guard.
470
00:27:22,720 --> 00:27:26,840
Henry VIII adopted his father's Yeomen Guards
471
00:27:26,840 --> 00:27:29,320
and increased their number to 600.
472
00:27:29,320 --> 00:27:31,960
When Henry appeared on important occasions,
473
00:27:31,960 --> 00:27:35,360
he'd be surrounded by this magnificent troop.
474
00:27:35,360 --> 00:27:36,880
Show me my Tudor version.
475
00:27:36,880 --> 00:27:41,840
'Henry also introduced the Yeomen's iconic scarlet uniform
476
00:27:41,840 --> 00:27:44,720
'and a modern version of it is still worn today.'
477
00:27:45,720 --> 00:27:49,120
You're going to slip into something equally comfortable yourself.
478
00:27:49,120 --> 00:27:50,520
Yes, I am.
479
00:27:50,520 --> 00:27:52,160
One arm in.
480
00:27:52,160 --> 00:27:55,080
Now, let's discuss our chests.
481
00:27:55,080 --> 00:27:57,120
- OK.
- SHE CHUCKLES
482
00:27:57,120 --> 00:27:59,720
On my chest, I've got a Tudor rose,
483
00:27:59,720 --> 00:28:02,000
that is going to become the rose of England.
484
00:28:02,000 --> 00:28:04,840
- It is indeed.
- It's still there, 500 years later.
485
00:28:04,840 --> 00:28:07,640
This is a symbol that's really endured, isn't it?
486
00:28:07,640 --> 00:28:09,920
- Absolutely.
- And that's a very fancy thistle.
487
00:28:09,920 --> 00:28:14,240
Introduced when King James VI of Scotland became James I of England.
488
00:28:14,240 --> 00:28:15,880
Of course, over here, the shamrock,
489
00:28:15,880 --> 00:28:18,600
which was introduced on the Act of Union.
490
00:28:18,600 --> 00:28:21,960
So you have the whole of the United Kingdom on your belly.
491
00:28:21,960 --> 00:28:23,040
We do.
492
00:28:25,280 --> 00:28:26,920
There we go.
493
00:28:26,920 --> 00:28:30,960
- Superb.
- Are we ready for our photo opportunity?
494
00:28:30,960 --> 00:28:32,120
Indeed.
495
00:28:39,280 --> 00:28:40,520
'Under Henry VIII,
496
00:28:40,520 --> 00:28:44,360
'the Tudor rose went from being the symbol of one royal marriage
497
00:28:44,360 --> 00:28:46,920
'to an emblem for the whole nation.'
498
00:28:46,920 --> 00:28:50,960
This Tudor rose has been an incredibly powerful
499
00:28:50,960 --> 00:28:53,360
and long-lasting symbol.
500
00:28:53,360 --> 00:28:56,280
'You will still find it today representing England
501
00:28:56,280 --> 00:28:58,320
'on the Queen's coronation dress,'
502
00:28:58,320 --> 00:29:01,840
on the Duchess of Cambridge's wedding dress,
503
00:29:01,840 --> 00:29:04,720
and you might even find it in your pocket
504
00:29:04,720 --> 00:29:07,560
because it's still on the 20p.
505
00:29:16,160 --> 00:29:19,240
'Henry VIII had nailed down his father's version
506
00:29:19,240 --> 00:29:21,520
'of the story of the Wars of the Roses.
507
00:29:23,080 --> 00:29:25,160
'By the middle of the 16th century,
508
00:29:25,160 --> 00:29:28,680
'the people who'd experienced the wars had pretty much all died,
509
00:29:28,680 --> 00:29:30,800
'but the story was still alive.
510
00:29:32,880 --> 00:29:36,480
'But when Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558,
511
00:29:36,480 --> 00:29:40,000
'her grandfather's myth-making proved incredibly useful.'
512
00:29:41,920 --> 00:29:44,520
Ah, here I am in my younger days.
513
00:29:44,520 --> 00:29:48,360
This is Elizabeth I's coronation portrait.
514
00:29:48,360 --> 00:29:51,320
She's wearing all the trappings of majesty,
515
00:29:51,320 --> 00:29:53,640
she's holding her orb and sceptre
516
00:29:53,640 --> 00:29:57,000
and she's wearing ermine, the royal fur.
517
00:29:57,000 --> 00:30:01,520
But this picture glosses over the fact that Elizabeth's coronation
518
00:30:01,520 --> 00:30:04,160
was a bit of a touch-and-go affair.
519
00:30:04,160 --> 00:30:07,520
The problem was that she was the daughter of Anne Boleyn,
520
00:30:07,520 --> 00:30:11,760
the product of a marriage that had been declared null and void.
521
00:30:11,760 --> 00:30:14,600
You could argue that she was illegitimate.
522
00:30:14,600 --> 00:30:18,360
This was such a big problem that it was actually quite hard to find
523
00:30:18,360 --> 00:30:20,280
a bishop willing to anoint her.
524
00:30:21,360 --> 00:30:23,360
Right at the start of her reign,
525
00:30:23,360 --> 00:30:26,840
Elizabeth had to assert her right to rule
526
00:30:26,840 --> 00:30:30,400
and she did so in the same way that her father, Henry VIII,
527
00:30:30,400 --> 00:30:33,360
and grandfather Henry VII had done before her.
528
00:30:33,360 --> 00:30:37,880
If you look closely at her magnificent gold coronation robe,
529
00:30:37,880 --> 00:30:41,640
you will see that it is embroidered with the Tudor rose.
530
00:30:41,640 --> 00:30:47,240
She herself was treated as the living embodiment of the Tudor rose.
531
00:30:47,240 --> 00:30:51,600
The poet Edmund Spenser even described how in the Royal cheek,
532
00:30:51,600 --> 00:30:54,680
the red rose was melded with the white.
533
00:30:55,880 --> 00:30:57,680
In almost every respect,
534
00:30:57,680 --> 00:31:02,040
Elizabeth brilliantly delivered on the promise of her predecessors.
535
00:31:02,040 --> 00:31:05,600
But as the decades passed, she failed to produce an heir.
536
00:31:06,560 --> 00:31:09,920
And without that heir, Elizabeth subjects were haunted
537
00:31:09,920 --> 00:31:13,400
by spectres of a horribly familiar past.
538
00:31:15,000 --> 00:31:19,240
As the country faced an uncertain future in the 1590s,
539
00:31:19,240 --> 00:31:23,840
the memory of the Wars of the Roses took on a new meaning.
540
00:31:23,840 --> 00:31:26,600
People started to worry that when the Queen died,
541
00:31:26,600 --> 00:31:29,280
there might once again be civil war,
542
00:31:29,280 --> 00:31:32,400
with rival claimants fighting for the crown.
543
00:31:32,400 --> 00:31:34,760
History might repeat itself.
544
00:31:44,400 --> 00:31:46,400
At the end of the 16th century,
545
00:31:46,400 --> 00:31:51,040
the history play transformed Tudor fibs into compelling fiction.
546
00:31:52,440 --> 00:31:55,320
For the nation's greatest playwright, William Shakespeare,
547
00:31:55,320 --> 00:31:58,720
the Wars of the Roses had all the ingredients for drama.
548
00:32:00,280 --> 00:32:02,800
And with his Machiavellian plots
549
00:32:02,800 --> 00:32:04,920
and his murderous villain,
550
00:32:04,920 --> 00:32:07,760
he wrote the conflict's definitive script.
551
00:32:12,400 --> 00:32:16,520
'Henry VI Part 1 was the first of Shakespeare's plays
552
00:32:16,520 --> 00:32:20,680
'covering the wars, and it proved a very palpable hit.
553
00:32:20,680 --> 00:32:22,960
'One of the play's best-known scenes
554
00:32:22,960 --> 00:32:25,480
'is set in the gardens of Inner Temple,
555
00:32:25,480 --> 00:32:27,640
'one of the Inns of Court.
556
00:32:27,640 --> 00:32:31,600
'It's the very start of the conflict and the leading nobles are deciding
557
00:32:31,600 --> 00:32:33,520
'which side to fight for.
558
00:32:33,520 --> 00:32:35,160
'Red or white.'
559
00:32:36,440 --> 00:32:40,440
Richard, Duke of York, is going to challenge the King, Henry VI,
560
00:32:40,440 --> 00:32:45,400
for the crown and he tells his supporters to pluck a white rose.
561
00:32:46,560 --> 00:32:49,320
The Duke of Somerset, who is on the King's side,
562
00:32:49,320 --> 00:32:53,360
he tells his supporters to pluck a red rose,
563
00:32:53,360 --> 00:32:55,800
"a bleeding rose", he calls it.
564
00:32:55,800 --> 00:32:57,480
And at the end of the scene,
565
00:32:57,480 --> 00:33:01,560
the Earl of Warwick prophesises the bloodshed to come.
566
00:33:02,640 --> 00:33:06,640
"This brawl today in the Temple Garden," he says,
567
00:33:06,640 --> 00:33:09,920
"Shall send between the red rose and the white
568
00:33:09,920 --> 00:33:14,040
"1,000 souls to death and deadly night."
569
00:33:15,240 --> 00:33:20,520
The scene became famous because it neatly turned the messy reality
570
00:33:20,520 --> 00:33:24,800
into a straightforward struggle between red and white.
571
00:33:24,800 --> 00:33:28,280
And it went on to inspire an Edwardian painting
572
00:33:28,280 --> 00:33:31,200
which is one of the war's most celebrated images.
573
00:33:32,360 --> 00:33:36,800
This floral phoney war preceding the actual fighting
574
00:33:36,800 --> 00:33:38,640
didn't really happen.
575
00:33:38,640 --> 00:33:42,640
But nevertheless, you will see pictures of it in history books.
576
00:33:42,640 --> 00:33:46,080
And that's because Shakespeare's fictional version
577
00:33:46,080 --> 00:33:50,000
of the Wars of the Roses is such a good story, it's so powerful,
578
00:33:50,000 --> 00:33:51,800
that it trumps the truth.
579
00:33:53,720 --> 00:33:56,840
'From John Rous' character assassination
580
00:33:56,840 --> 00:33:58,600
'of Richard III onwards,
581
00:33:58,600 --> 00:34:03,080
'Shakespeare found his history books packed with tales of the conflict.
582
00:34:03,080 --> 00:34:05,720
'They were ripe for recycling.
583
00:34:05,720 --> 00:34:09,280
'After Henry VI Parts 1, 2 and 3
584
00:34:09,280 --> 00:34:12,600
'came one of his masterpieces, Richard III.'
585
00:34:14,080 --> 00:34:16,640
Andrew, this is an early, very early,
586
00:34:16,640 --> 00:34:18,840
collected edition of Shakespeare's works.
587
00:34:18,840 --> 00:34:21,880
And it's split into the comedies and the tragedies.
588
00:34:21,880 --> 00:34:23,840
But then also, the histories.
589
00:34:23,840 --> 00:34:25,640
Is that a new category of play?
590
00:34:25,640 --> 00:34:27,240
There had been history plays before
591
00:34:27,240 --> 00:34:28,320
but Shakespeare is one of
592
00:34:28,320 --> 00:34:29,560
the first writers who writes
593
00:34:29,560 --> 00:34:31,360
a sustained number of histories.
594
00:34:31,360 --> 00:34:33,480
The Henry VI plays are blockbusters.
595
00:34:33,480 --> 00:34:37,080
Parts 2 and 3 are written first and they are so popular
596
00:34:37,080 --> 00:34:39,320
that Part 1 is then written afterwards.
597
00:34:39,320 --> 00:34:42,400
It's the first kind of trilogy that we have surviving.
598
00:34:42,400 --> 00:34:45,640
So, history, it's not funny, it's not sad, it's a bit of both?
599
00:34:45,640 --> 00:34:47,160
You can do what you want with a history,
600
00:34:47,160 --> 00:34:48,640
depending on what the facts tell you.
601
00:34:48,640 --> 00:34:50,720
You don't have to stick to the facts, goodness me!
602
00:34:50,720 --> 00:34:53,120
You don't quite have to stick to the facts, no, that's right.
603
00:34:53,120 --> 00:34:55,440
How old-fashioned of you! THEY LAUGH
604
00:34:55,440 --> 00:34:59,120
How does Shakespeare go about taking history and turning it into fiction?
605
00:34:59,120 --> 00:35:02,520
- What is his method?
- Shakespeare is very much a magpie.
606
00:35:02,520 --> 00:35:06,320
He uses bits and pieces from history, as he wants to.
607
00:35:06,320 --> 00:35:09,240
He uses chronicles like Holinshed,
608
00:35:09,240 --> 00:35:12,240
which is one of the most important of Tudor chronicles
609
00:35:12,240 --> 00:35:15,360
that shows the triumph of the Tudors.
610
00:35:15,360 --> 00:35:19,160
Sometimes you can catch him in the act of being inspired
611
00:35:19,160 --> 00:35:21,120
- by these histories, can you?
- Oh, certainly.
612
00:35:21,120 --> 00:35:24,520
There's this passage which describes Richard III.
613
00:35:24,520 --> 00:35:29,240
"He was small and little of stature, so was he of body greatly deformed,
614
00:35:29,240 --> 00:35:31,520
"the one shoulder higher than the other.
615
00:35:31,520 --> 00:35:34,360
"His face small but his countenance was cruel,
616
00:35:34,360 --> 00:35:39,080
"a man would judge it to savour and smell of malice, fraud and deceit."
617
00:35:40,160 --> 00:35:42,040
That's a killer line.
618
00:35:42,040 --> 00:35:43,880
I recognise this character.
619
00:35:43,880 --> 00:35:46,760
This is the evil Richard that we know and love.
620
00:35:46,760 --> 00:35:50,400
Exactly. And that is something that Shakespeare clearly expands.
621
00:35:50,400 --> 00:35:53,840
He's really not afraid to use history, to use the past,
622
00:35:53,840 --> 00:35:55,800
to make moral points, is he?
623
00:35:55,800 --> 00:35:58,640
Good, bad, do it like this, don't do it like that.
624
00:35:58,640 --> 00:36:02,520
That's exactly right. History is told and retold because it tells you
625
00:36:02,520 --> 00:36:06,160
lessons, because you start to think about things that you might be able
626
00:36:06,160 --> 00:36:08,080
to do rather better than last time.
627
00:36:08,080 --> 00:36:09,800
A cautionary tale.
628
00:36:11,280 --> 00:36:13,080
For Elizabethan audiences,
629
00:36:13,080 --> 00:36:17,160
tales of the country torn apart by rival factions
630
00:36:17,160 --> 00:36:19,360
struck a powerful chord.
631
00:36:19,360 --> 00:36:21,280
Just 60 years earlier,
632
00:36:21,280 --> 00:36:24,960
Henry VIII's break with Rome had caused the country to divide,
633
00:36:24,960 --> 00:36:27,560
along religious fault lines.
634
00:36:27,560 --> 00:36:30,000
Protestant and Catholic.
635
00:36:30,000 --> 00:36:33,600
So another civil war seemed an ever-present danger.
636
00:36:35,360 --> 00:36:38,800
Is this all happening because Elizabeth I is getting old?
637
00:36:38,800 --> 00:36:40,520
They are worried she is going to die,
638
00:36:40,520 --> 00:36:43,560
they are worried there is going to be another War of the Roses?
639
00:36:43,560 --> 00:36:44,840
That's exactly right.
640
00:36:44,840 --> 00:36:48,480
There's a great fear that there will be a religious war that will be even
641
00:36:48,480 --> 00:36:51,760
worse than the dynastic war of the Wars of the Roses.
642
00:36:51,760 --> 00:36:55,680
So this is water-cooler conversation in the 1590s.
643
00:36:55,680 --> 00:36:57,640
I would have thought so. Yes.
644
00:36:59,120 --> 00:37:02,520
Shakespeare redefined the Wars of the Roses
645
00:37:02,520 --> 00:37:06,560
and he turned Richard III from a crude Tudor cliche
646
00:37:06,560 --> 00:37:10,080
into a truly captivating antihero.
647
00:37:10,080 --> 00:37:13,400
From David Garrick in the 18th century
648
00:37:13,400 --> 00:37:15,640
to Edmund Kean in the 19th,
649
00:37:15,640 --> 00:37:20,000
the biggest stars of the stage have made their names playing the part.
650
00:37:21,720 --> 00:37:25,120
Right from the start, audiences were fascinated
651
00:37:25,120 --> 00:37:28,680
by Shakespeare's character of Richard III.
652
00:37:28,680 --> 00:37:32,520
There's a story about THE most famous Elizabethan actor,
653
00:37:32,520 --> 00:37:33,880
Richard Burbage.
654
00:37:33,880 --> 00:37:37,560
He was playing the part and that night he got a message from a lady
655
00:37:37,560 --> 00:37:39,560
who'd been in the audience, saying,
656
00:37:39,560 --> 00:37:43,040
"Come to my room, Mr Burbage, I've taken a fancy to you."
657
00:37:43,040 --> 00:37:46,840
But she wanted him to come in character.
658
00:37:46,840 --> 00:37:52,680
She'd been seduced by Richard III's blend of cruelty and charisma,
659
00:37:52,680 --> 00:37:55,800
which has kept people interested ever since.
660
00:37:59,600 --> 00:38:03,200
Shakespeare followed the lead of Tudor historians by playing up
661
00:38:03,200 --> 00:38:06,240
Richard's apparently monstrous appearance.
662
00:38:07,800 --> 00:38:11,920
'And the Royal Shakespeare Company's costume collection reveals how
663
00:38:11,920 --> 00:38:16,440
'Richard's physical body has come to define our image of the man.'
664
00:38:17,640 --> 00:38:21,280
Robyn, how many different depictions of Richard III have you had
665
00:38:21,280 --> 00:38:24,000
- here in Stratford?
- Since 1886,
666
00:38:24,000 --> 00:38:26,920
which was the first permanent theatre company in Stratford,
667
00:38:26,920 --> 00:38:29,680
there's been around 45 different productions.
668
00:38:29,680 --> 00:38:33,160
- Wow!
- He's definitely one of the most popular, I think, yes.
669
00:38:33,160 --> 00:38:35,520
The first one I can show you is actually my favourite
670
00:38:35,520 --> 00:38:38,680
and that's a 1984 production of Richard III
671
00:38:38,680 --> 00:38:41,120
and it was actually played by Sir Antony Sher.
672
00:38:41,120 --> 00:38:43,040
He played it as a spider.
673
00:38:43,040 --> 00:38:46,880
In the text, he is described as a "bottled spider".
674
00:38:46,880 --> 00:38:51,280
He was wearing a very tight Lycra body suit.
675
00:38:51,280 --> 00:38:54,520
It's a bit like those pyjamas that kids wear with Superman,
676
00:38:54,520 --> 00:38:58,280
- you know, and they have built-in muscles.
- Exactly. Yeah, exactly.
677
00:38:59,520 --> 00:39:04,440
This is one of three humps that were used in the production.
678
00:39:04,440 --> 00:39:08,040
And it's the one that he wore most of the time on stage.
679
00:39:08,040 --> 00:39:11,880
So, it's, I guess you could say, his favourite hump.
680
00:39:11,880 --> 00:39:14,240
Hm, it smells...
681
00:39:14,240 --> 00:39:15,840
- bad.
- Yeah, it does.
682
00:39:15,840 --> 00:39:19,040
It's a very unattractive item altogether, isn't it?
683
00:39:19,040 --> 00:39:22,560
It was actually strapped on to Antony Sher.
684
00:39:22,560 --> 00:39:23,920
Little buttons up the front.
685
00:39:23,920 --> 00:39:28,080
So he would have worn this, very tight and close to his body.
686
00:39:28,080 --> 00:39:31,760
It's basically because of Shakespeare that I'm thinking that
687
00:39:31,760 --> 00:39:36,280
- the smell of Antony Sher's sweat is the smell of evil.
- Mm.
688
00:39:36,280 --> 00:39:39,400
So, can we have a look at a contrasting Richard III?
689
00:39:39,400 --> 00:39:44,080
This is from a 1980 production of Richard III, Alan Howard,
690
00:39:44,080 --> 00:39:45,760
who played Richard III.
691
00:39:45,760 --> 00:39:49,400
Again, this is a different concentration on another disability.
692
00:39:49,400 --> 00:39:52,440
Critics actually compared it to a surgical boot.
693
00:39:52,440 --> 00:39:56,720
Unlike Antony Sher, who was very nimble across the stage,
694
00:39:56,720 --> 00:40:02,920
Alan Howard, his interpretation was very, very slow, very heavy.
695
00:40:02,920 --> 00:40:07,400
You can see how much pain he was in throughout the production.
696
00:40:07,400 --> 00:40:09,040
What's going on with this arm here?
697
00:40:09,040 --> 00:40:12,440
Ah, yes. That's Richard's withered arm.
698
00:40:12,440 --> 00:40:14,040
It really is withering away.
699
00:40:14,040 --> 00:40:16,520
It looks like a zombie falling to pieces as he walks along.
700
00:40:16,520 --> 00:40:17,640
Yes, yes.
701
00:40:17,640 --> 00:40:22,200
Is he always portrayed with a physical problem of some kind?
702
00:40:22,200 --> 00:40:26,560
Yes. They do all have some type of disability.
703
00:40:26,560 --> 00:40:29,520
Today, I think we kind of take that with us,
704
00:40:29,520 --> 00:40:32,520
so Shakespeare's idea of Richard III
705
00:40:32,520 --> 00:40:35,720
is, kind of, our idea of Richard III, really.
706
00:40:37,680 --> 00:40:40,120
For Shakespeare and his first audiences,
707
00:40:40,120 --> 00:40:43,200
Richard's hunch and his arm and his limp
708
00:40:43,200 --> 00:40:46,160
weren't just physical deformities.
709
00:40:46,160 --> 00:40:49,280
They believed in the science of physiognomy,
710
00:40:49,280 --> 00:40:51,640
that suggested that your outward appearance
711
00:40:51,640 --> 00:40:54,000
reflected your inner self.
712
00:40:54,000 --> 00:41:00,160
So if Richard was deformed, he must have had an irredeemably evil soul.
713
00:41:02,480 --> 00:41:06,760
The tale of the Princes in the Tower reveals the enduring power of
714
00:41:06,760 --> 00:41:09,800
Shakespeare's depiction of the monstrous Richard.
715
00:41:12,680 --> 00:41:14,280
In 1483,
716
00:41:14,280 --> 00:41:18,360
Richard imprisoned his two young nephews in the Tower of London
717
00:41:18,360 --> 00:41:22,680
after the death of their father, King Edward IV.
718
00:41:22,680 --> 00:41:26,080
And there he had the tender babes murdered,
719
00:41:26,080 --> 00:41:28,520
this ruthless piece of butchery,
720
00:41:28,520 --> 00:41:31,600
giving him the crown that was rightfully theirs.
721
00:41:36,120 --> 00:41:37,680
'In the 17th century,
722
00:41:37,680 --> 00:41:41,640
'people were still gripped by tales of evil Richard,
723
00:41:41,640 --> 00:41:43,360
'so well over 100 years after
724
00:41:43,360 --> 00:41:46,280
'the disappearance of the unfortunate princes,
725
00:41:46,280 --> 00:41:49,600
'their fate remained a fascinating mystery to be solved.
726
00:41:52,120 --> 00:41:53,560
'And in 1619,
727
00:41:53,560 --> 00:41:58,040
'the historian Sir George Buck heard that the bodies of the princes
728
00:41:58,040 --> 00:42:00,160
'might still be in the tower.'
729
00:42:01,720 --> 00:42:06,240
Buck wrote that certain bones, like the bones of a child,
730
00:42:06,240 --> 00:42:10,920
had been found in a remote and desolate turret of the tower.
731
00:42:10,920 --> 00:42:12,920
But on closer examination,
732
00:42:12,920 --> 00:42:15,960
these turned out to be the bones of an ape.
733
00:42:15,960 --> 00:42:18,160
It's quite a sad story.
734
00:42:18,160 --> 00:42:21,640
One of the apes from the tower menagerie wandered off,
735
00:42:21,640 --> 00:42:25,400
it somehow got itself into this turret, and there it died.
736
00:42:28,200 --> 00:42:33,040
'A few decades later, one John Webb reported a more promising lead.'
737
00:42:35,000 --> 00:42:38,840
A secret sealed room had been discovered,
738
00:42:38,840 --> 00:42:42,400
built into one of the walls at the King's lodgings.
739
00:42:42,400 --> 00:42:45,120
That's a building that was here. It's gone now.
740
00:42:48,160 --> 00:42:52,160
'And in the secret room, there was a table and on the table,
741
00:42:52,160 --> 00:42:54,480
'there were bones.'
742
00:42:54,480 --> 00:42:58,000
This time, at least the bones were human, not animal's,
743
00:42:58,000 --> 00:43:00,560
but the problem was that these were the remains
744
00:43:00,560 --> 00:43:02,120
of really little children,
745
00:43:02,120 --> 00:43:06,320
six or eight years old, too young to have been the little princes.
746
00:43:08,720 --> 00:43:12,080
'At last, in 1674,
747
00:43:12,080 --> 00:43:16,440
'the 190-year-old mystery appeared to have been solved.'
748
00:43:16,440 --> 00:43:21,200
Workmen excavating the foundations of a predecessor at this staircase
749
00:43:21,200 --> 00:43:27,520
discovered a wooden chest and in it were more children, two of them.
750
00:43:27,520 --> 00:43:31,360
This time, it was decided that they really and truly were
751
00:43:31,360 --> 00:43:32,760
the little princes.
752
00:43:33,760 --> 00:43:38,360
The discovery of these remains only fuelled an obsession with this
753
00:43:38,360 --> 00:43:43,600
legendary crime and when the princes were at last laid to rest,
754
00:43:43,600 --> 00:43:47,680
the reigning monarch, Charles II, seized the opportunity
755
00:43:47,680 --> 00:43:51,720
to condemn wicked King Richard's terrible wrong.
756
00:43:51,720 --> 00:43:55,640
These bones from the tower were brought to a final resting place
757
00:43:55,640 --> 00:43:57,360
at Westminster Abbey,
758
00:43:57,360 --> 00:44:01,400
burial place of kings and queens since Edward the Confessor.
759
00:44:01,400 --> 00:44:06,360
Charles II commissioned a special marble funeral urn for the little
760
00:44:06,360 --> 00:44:10,080
princes and this proved to be the perfect place
761
00:44:10,080 --> 00:44:12,920
to hold their murderer to account.
762
00:44:12,920 --> 00:44:16,640
The inscription on it said that they'd been killed
763
00:44:16,640 --> 00:44:20,320
by "their perfidious uncle, Richard the Usurper."
764
00:44:20,320 --> 00:44:25,200
So the Stuarts took the Tudor tale about Richard's crimes,
765
00:44:25,200 --> 00:44:29,400
they accepted it as fact and they even set it in stone.
766
00:44:33,880 --> 00:44:37,080
When Queen Victoria came to the throne more than three and a half
767
00:44:37,080 --> 00:44:40,400
centuries after the start of the Wars of the Roses,
768
00:44:40,400 --> 00:44:43,360
the conflict was little more than a distant memory.
769
00:44:46,040 --> 00:44:49,200
And the Victorian vision of medieval England was shaped
770
00:44:49,200 --> 00:44:53,160
by the bestselling novelist Sir Walter Scott.
771
00:44:53,160 --> 00:44:57,560
His rip-roaring tales of knights in shining armour were full of
772
00:44:57,560 --> 00:45:00,880
historical fantasy but very short on historical fact.
773
00:45:04,880 --> 00:45:08,840
To 19th-century Romantics like Walter Scott,
774
00:45:08,840 --> 00:45:13,240
the Wars of the Roses represented the Middle Ages gone wrong.
775
00:45:13,240 --> 00:45:15,840
Scott wasn't very fond of the period.
776
00:45:15,840 --> 00:45:19,520
Out of more than 20 novels, he only set one in it,
777
00:45:19,520 --> 00:45:23,440
the rather obscure Anne Of Geierstein.
778
00:45:23,440 --> 00:45:26,640
And he doesn't make it sound very nice.
779
00:45:26,640 --> 00:45:29,120
England is torn and bleeding.
780
00:45:29,120 --> 00:45:34,880
There are piles of slain bodies and quite a lot of drenching in blood.
781
00:45:34,880 --> 00:45:38,720
To Walter Scott, the Wars of the Roses had too much brutality
782
00:45:38,720 --> 00:45:41,600
and not enough chivalry to be a bestseller.
783
00:45:42,680 --> 00:45:45,760
But what Walter Scott did do for the Wars of the Roses
784
00:45:45,760 --> 00:45:48,560
was give it its name. Listen to this,
785
00:45:48,560 --> 00:45:53,040
he talks about "the civil discords so dreadfully prosecuted
786
00:45:53,040 --> 00:45:56,360
"in the wars of the White and Red Roses."
787
00:45:56,360 --> 00:46:00,040
This is more than 300 years after the ending of the conflict
788
00:46:00,040 --> 00:46:03,320
but this is the first time that anybody's called it that.
789
00:46:04,480 --> 00:46:08,800
Most Victorians didn't question the well-established mythology of the
790
00:46:08,800 --> 00:46:12,440
Wars of the Roses and they enjoyed a spot of Shakespeare
791
00:46:12,440 --> 00:46:15,440
as much as their predecessors.
792
00:46:15,440 --> 00:46:21,200
But 19th-century historians took a very dim view of the period.
793
00:46:23,400 --> 00:46:26,680
Helen, we are sitting in the middle of a Victorian vision
794
00:46:26,680 --> 00:46:29,000
of the Middle Ages, which they loved.
795
00:46:29,000 --> 00:46:31,360
But they didn't much like the 15th century, did they?
796
00:46:31,360 --> 00:46:32,440
They didn't.
797
00:46:32,440 --> 00:46:35,040
They were very interested in the Middle Ages as a whole
798
00:46:35,040 --> 00:46:38,160
but they saw the 15th century as something dark, corrupted,
799
00:46:38,160 --> 00:46:39,760
an unhappy time.
800
00:46:39,760 --> 00:46:43,720
Who were these Victorian historians writing about the Wars of the Roses?
801
00:46:43,720 --> 00:46:46,920
The key figure is William Stubbs, Bishop William Stubbs.
802
00:46:46,920 --> 00:46:48,800
He was a hugely influential figure
803
00:46:48,800 --> 00:46:51,040
in the development of the discipline.
804
00:46:51,040 --> 00:46:53,200
It was while he was Regius Professor at Oxford
805
00:46:53,200 --> 00:46:55,080
that the first students began
806
00:46:55,080 --> 00:46:58,480
to be able to take history as a degree subject there.
807
00:46:58,480 --> 00:46:59,840
But he was also a clergyman.
808
00:46:59,840 --> 00:47:02,120
He ended his life as Bishop of Oxford.
809
00:47:02,120 --> 00:47:04,880
He could really turn a phrase, couldn't he, Mr Stubbs?
810
00:47:04,880 --> 00:47:06,200
Yes, certainly.
811
00:47:06,200 --> 00:47:10,480
The 15th century in Stubbs' view goes something like this,
812
00:47:10,480 --> 00:47:15,320
"The son of the Plantagenets went down in clouds and thick darkness.
813
00:47:15,320 --> 00:47:18,640
"The coming of the Tudors gave as yet no promise of light,
814
00:47:18,640 --> 00:47:21,840
"it was, as the morning spread upon the mountains,
815
00:47:21,840 --> 00:47:23,840
"darkest before the dawn."
816
00:47:23,840 --> 00:47:28,480
It sounds like Victorian historians were quite happy to pass judgment
817
00:47:28,480 --> 00:47:31,320
on the past. Black and white, good and bad.
818
00:47:31,320 --> 00:47:33,120
And not only not afraid to judge the past,
819
00:47:33,120 --> 00:47:35,120
they saw it as part of their job.
820
00:47:35,120 --> 00:47:37,160
For historians like Stubbs,
821
00:47:37,160 --> 00:47:39,480
their Christianity was an intrinsic part
822
00:47:39,480 --> 00:47:42,680
of what it meant to be a historian.
823
00:47:42,680 --> 00:47:44,800
So they needed to look in the archives,
824
00:47:44,800 --> 00:47:46,720
they needed to find out the information,
825
00:47:46,720 --> 00:47:50,080
they were great scholars, but then they needed to stand back
826
00:47:50,080 --> 00:47:54,520
to assess what they'd found and stand in judgment on it.
827
00:47:54,520 --> 00:47:56,960
And their judgment had to take in
828
00:47:56,960 --> 00:48:00,320
the moral dimensions of their worldview.
829
00:48:00,320 --> 00:48:05,560
They were quite willing to say that certain actions, certain people,
830
00:48:05,560 --> 00:48:08,000
and certain periods, were evil.
831
00:48:08,000 --> 00:48:11,400
I'm thinking that he is typical of a type of historian that we call
832
00:48:11,400 --> 00:48:12,680
wig historians.
833
00:48:12,680 --> 00:48:16,640
That's a broad grouping, but what is this thing called wig history?
834
00:48:16,640 --> 00:48:18,760
Really, when we talk about wig history,
835
00:48:18,760 --> 00:48:21,680
we're talking about a view of history as progress.
836
00:48:21,680 --> 00:48:25,560
As a movement towards the best of all possible worlds,
837
00:48:25,560 --> 00:48:30,120
which is embodied in 19th-century society,
838
00:48:30,120 --> 00:48:31,680
19th-century politics.
839
00:48:31,680 --> 00:48:35,000
So Victorians see an onward march of progress
840
00:48:35,000 --> 00:48:37,760
up to the Wars of the Roses, then it slips back.
841
00:48:37,760 --> 00:48:39,400
And then it's up and up and up again
842
00:48:39,400 --> 00:48:41,760
to the glorious perfection of Queen Victoria.
843
00:48:41,760 --> 00:48:44,080
Progress isn't always quite that straightforward.
844
00:48:44,080 --> 00:48:46,280
Obviously, there are lumps and bumps along the way.
845
00:48:46,280 --> 00:48:49,680
But the 15th century seemed a pretty dark age,
846
00:48:49,680 --> 00:48:52,280
when the country collapsed into civil war
847
00:48:52,280 --> 00:48:54,760
and it seemed as though the forces of law
848
00:48:54,760 --> 00:48:58,880
and the Enlightenment of constitutional progress were being
849
00:48:58,880 --> 00:49:03,280
overwhelmed by over mighty subjects and aristocratic faction.
850
00:49:06,680 --> 00:49:09,880
'Although Bishop Stubbs and his colleagues weren't writing for the
851
00:49:09,880 --> 00:49:14,640
'mass market, their judgment on the Wars of the Roses as a great leap
852
00:49:14,640 --> 00:49:18,520
'backwards, as an interruption to the march of progress,
853
00:49:18,520 --> 00:49:21,080
'has proved extremely influential.'
854
00:49:28,080 --> 00:49:33,400
Ah, now this is perhaps my favourite history book.
855
00:49:33,400 --> 00:49:38,800
It's called 1066 And All That, A Memorable History Of England.
856
00:49:38,800 --> 00:49:44,320
It's basically a spoof of those very self-confident Victorian historians
857
00:49:44,320 --> 00:49:47,080
like Bishop Stubbs and his chums.
858
00:49:47,080 --> 00:49:52,040
And like them, it's not afraid to make judgments about history.
859
00:49:52,040 --> 00:49:55,280
Here's the 17th-century English Civil War, for example,
860
00:49:55,280 --> 00:49:57,960
between the Cavaliers and the Roundheads.
861
00:49:57,960 --> 00:50:01,040
The Cavaliers being "Wrong but Wromantic",
862
00:50:01,040 --> 00:50:05,360
and the Roundheads, "Right but Repulsive".
863
00:50:05,360 --> 00:50:09,080
What have they got to say about the Wars of the Roses?
864
00:50:09,080 --> 00:50:11,960
Well, it was all because the Barons,
865
00:50:11,960 --> 00:50:14,480
who "made a stupendous effort using
866
00:50:14,480 --> 00:50:17,440
"sackage, carnage and wreckage
867
00:50:17,440 --> 00:50:20,960
"so to stave off the Tudors for a time.
868
00:50:20,960 --> 00:50:24,160
"They achieved this by a very clever plan
869
00:50:24,160 --> 00:50:26,680
"known as the Wars of the Roses."
870
00:50:26,680 --> 00:50:29,080
So just like the Victorian historians,
871
00:50:29,080 --> 00:50:33,440
this book thinks that it was the fault of the bad barons.
872
00:50:33,440 --> 00:50:36,800
Clearly, the whole thing is a joke, but minus the jokes,
873
00:50:36,800 --> 00:50:38,640
and plus a few more dates,
874
00:50:38,640 --> 00:50:42,000
this was pretty much how generations of school kids
875
00:50:42,000 --> 00:50:43,600
were taught their history.
876
00:50:46,040 --> 00:50:48,320
But no account of the Wars of the Roses
877
00:50:48,320 --> 00:50:51,840
could ever hope to rival the remarkable staying power
878
00:50:51,840 --> 00:50:54,080
of Shakespeare's drama.
879
00:50:54,080 --> 00:50:59,920
In the 20th century, his Richard III made the leap from stage to screen.
880
00:50:59,920 --> 00:51:04,800
March on, join bravely, let us to't pell-mell.
881
00:51:04,800 --> 00:51:11,280
In 1955, Laurence Olivier, both directed and starred in Richard III.
882
00:51:11,280 --> 00:51:16,040
He turned Shakespeare's story into a Technicolor spectacular and he
883
00:51:16,040 --> 00:51:20,640
turned Richard III himself into the ultimate Hollywood villain.
884
00:51:20,640 --> 00:51:23,680
Complete with prosthetic villainous nose.
885
00:51:23,680 --> 00:51:26,200
Now is the winter of our discontent
886
00:51:26,200 --> 00:51:28,920
made glorious summer
887
00:51:28,920 --> 00:51:31,320
by this sun of York.
888
00:51:32,320 --> 00:51:36,960
Olivier delivers his scheming monologues straight down the camera,
889
00:51:36,960 --> 00:51:42,040
eyeball to eyeball, he draws us into his murderous plots.
890
00:51:42,040 --> 00:51:44,560
I can smile
891
00:51:44,560 --> 00:51:47,040
and murder whiles I smile.
892
00:51:47,040 --> 00:51:50,040
'He is both monstrous and magnetic.'
893
00:51:50,040 --> 00:51:52,760
And wet my cheeks with artificial tears
894
00:51:52,760 --> 00:51:55,360
and frame my face to all occasions...
895
00:51:55,360 --> 00:51:58,720
This was the definitive Richard III for the 20th century.
896
00:51:58,720 --> 00:52:02,840
Everybody else who played the part would be measured against Olivier.
897
00:52:08,760 --> 00:52:11,960
In America, the film was shown on television
898
00:52:11,960 --> 00:52:14,760
the same day that it opened in cinemas.
899
00:52:14,760 --> 00:52:18,520
As many as 40 million people watched it.
900
00:52:18,520 --> 00:52:22,360
That's more than the total number of people who'd seen it in theatres
901
00:52:22,360 --> 00:52:26,480
over the whole 350 years since it was first performed.
902
00:52:31,440 --> 00:52:33,320
40 years after Olivier,
903
00:52:33,320 --> 00:52:38,160
Ian McKellen played Richard III as the greatest tyrant of them all,
904
00:52:38,160 --> 00:52:39,360
Adolf Hitler.
905
00:52:45,520 --> 00:52:49,040
Complete with murderous moustache.
906
00:52:49,040 --> 00:52:52,880
Now is the winter of our discontent
907
00:52:52,880 --> 00:52:56,400
made glorious summer
908
00:52:56,400 --> 00:52:58,720
by this sun of York.
909
00:52:58,720 --> 00:53:01,240
LAUGHTER
910
00:53:01,240 --> 00:53:04,640
This version of Richard III didn't make any connection
911
00:53:04,640 --> 00:53:07,320
to the real events of the 15th century.
912
00:53:07,320 --> 00:53:09,880
Shakespeare's plot was so well known
913
00:53:09,880 --> 00:53:13,080
that it had become a sort of timeless parable.
914
00:53:20,000 --> 00:53:24,000
Richard III had become the biggest baddie in history
915
00:53:24,000 --> 00:53:28,560
and the Wars of the Roses symbolised a nation's darkest hour.
916
00:53:38,880 --> 00:53:44,160
But a new and radically different tale of good King Richard was also
917
00:53:44,160 --> 00:53:50,400
emerging, which turned Shakespeare's familiar story on its head.
918
00:53:50,400 --> 00:53:51,760
In 1924,
919
00:53:51,760 --> 00:53:54,960
The Richard III Society was founded
920
00:53:54,960 --> 00:53:58,880
to counter what they saw as outrageous Tudor lies.
921
00:53:58,880 --> 00:54:02,680
And to paint a much more flattering portrait of Richard.
922
00:54:02,680 --> 00:54:05,000
Their Richard was a good lord
923
00:54:05,000 --> 00:54:06,600
and a mighty prince
924
00:54:06,600 --> 00:54:09,440
and he definitely didn't have a hunchback.
925
00:54:14,320 --> 00:54:19,360
'Centuries after Richard's death, his supporters, the Ricardians,
926
00:54:19,360 --> 00:54:21,480
'were determined to clear his name.'
927
00:54:22,880 --> 00:54:27,560
The culmination of Richard's rehabilitation came in 2012
928
00:54:27,560 --> 00:54:31,120
with the extraordinary discovery of his body,
929
00:54:31,120 --> 00:54:33,400
here in this car park in Leicester.
930
00:54:34,400 --> 00:54:41,080
After centuries of conjecture and half-truths and even downright lies,
931
00:54:41,080 --> 00:54:44,240
here was some hard evidence for the real Richard.
932
00:54:46,840 --> 00:54:49,320
Just five feet under the tarmac,
933
00:54:49,320 --> 00:54:52,560
archaeologists made the remarkable find.
934
00:54:57,400 --> 00:55:01,280
The Ricardians were delighted finally to lay eyes on their hero.
935
00:55:02,280 --> 00:55:04,440
But even from a quick glance,
936
00:55:04,440 --> 00:55:06,680
it was clear that this man did have
937
00:55:06,680 --> 00:55:09,080
an abnormal curvature of the spine.
938
00:55:12,280 --> 00:55:15,760
In a battle where opinions mattered more than facts,
939
00:55:15,760 --> 00:55:17,880
Richard's physical imperfections
940
00:55:17,880 --> 00:55:20,720
didn't shake the Ricardians' conviction.
941
00:55:20,720 --> 00:55:24,800
In the Wars of the Roses, the wrong man had come out on top.
942
00:55:24,800 --> 00:55:29,880
For them, the final twist in the tale is that Henry VII, not Richard,
943
00:55:29,880 --> 00:55:32,040
was the true villain of the piece.
944
00:55:33,520 --> 00:55:34,720
To the Ricardians,
945
00:55:34,720 --> 00:55:39,360
the triumphant Tudor was nothing more than a ruthless usurper
946
00:55:39,360 --> 00:55:41,920
who had slandered Richard's good name.
947
00:55:44,560 --> 00:55:49,040
As Henry VII faced their wrath, his defenders rallied round.
948
00:55:49,040 --> 00:55:53,040
In 2013, another royal fan club was born.
949
00:55:53,040 --> 00:55:55,200
The Henry Tudor Society.
950
00:55:56,280 --> 00:55:57,640
Nathan, what is this?
951
00:55:57,640 --> 00:55:59,600
It's a small representation
952
00:55:59,600 --> 00:56:03,040
of a statue that we are hoping to put up in Pembroke.
953
00:56:03,040 --> 00:56:07,480
I feel that Henry Tudor is an overlooked monarch.
954
00:56:07,480 --> 00:56:09,520
Since Richard III was dug up,
955
00:56:09,520 --> 00:56:13,280
there's been a sort of rehabilitation of his reputation.
956
00:56:13,280 --> 00:56:17,440
Do you think this means that, inevitably, Henry Tudor's gone down?
957
00:56:17,440 --> 00:56:19,880
Unfortunately, yes, it does seem that way.
958
00:56:19,880 --> 00:56:21,840
For one king to become unmaligned,
959
00:56:21,840 --> 00:56:24,880
it seems that some feel that another has to become maligned.
960
00:56:24,880 --> 00:56:26,720
So, how many members have you got?
961
00:56:26,720 --> 00:56:29,360
Currently, there's 12,000 people on my Facebook page.
962
00:56:29,360 --> 00:56:32,320
Wow! And how many has Richard III got, then? Shall we...?
963
00:56:32,320 --> 00:56:34,880
Let's compare. Did you say you've got 12,000 likes?
964
00:56:34,880 --> 00:56:36,880
12,358 as of today.
965
00:56:36,880 --> 00:56:41,720
I hate to tell you this, Nathan, but Richard III has got 16,000.
966
00:56:41,720 --> 00:56:44,480
- He is ahead of you. But not by much.
- Not by much.
967
00:56:44,480 --> 00:56:46,200
We are hot on your tail, Richard.
968
00:56:46,200 --> 00:56:48,680
And is there a sort of tension between the two societies?
969
00:56:48,680 --> 00:56:51,560
How do you get on together? Not well, I imagine.
970
00:56:51,560 --> 00:56:55,320
If you believe some things you read on Facebook, this man was a monster,
971
00:56:55,320 --> 00:56:58,520
a usurper, a ruthless, evil king.
972
00:56:58,520 --> 00:57:02,040
In my opinion, this was a king who was without doubt the cleverest man
973
00:57:02,040 --> 00:57:03,920
to ever sit on the throne of England
974
00:57:03,920 --> 00:57:07,680
and he was recognised throughout Europe as a generous family man.
975
00:57:09,280 --> 00:57:14,400
The need to find a hero and a villain of the Wars of the Roses
976
00:57:14,400 --> 00:57:16,320
remains as strong as ever.
977
00:57:17,320 --> 00:57:23,440
In 2015, 530 years after his death on the battlefield of Bosworth,
978
00:57:23,440 --> 00:57:27,880
Richard III was finally laid to rest in Leicester Cathedral,
979
00:57:27,880 --> 00:57:29,720
in a tomb fit for a king.
980
00:57:31,000 --> 00:57:35,240
Ironically, the discovery of Richard's curved spine
981
00:57:35,240 --> 00:57:37,280
shows that what had seemed to be
982
00:57:37,280 --> 00:57:39,880
the most outrageous piece of myth-making of all,
983
00:57:39,880 --> 00:57:44,160
the hunchbacked king, was close to reality.
984
00:57:44,160 --> 00:57:47,320
But fascinating though Richard's bones are,
985
00:57:47,320 --> 00:57:50,520
they can't really tell us what sort of a man
986
00:57:50,520 --> 00:57:52,680
or what sort of a king he was.
987
00:57:54,160 --> 00:57:59,200
'Because history is more than a series of dates, facts and bones.
988
00:57:59,200 --> 00:58:01,720
'It's a collection of stories
989
00:58:01,720 --> 00:58:05,600
'and all stories reveal just as much about their authors as they do about
990
00:58:05,600 --> 00:58:09,080
'the heroes and the villains they portray.'
991
00:58:09,080 --> 00:58:11,760
While Richard has been laid to rest,
992
00:58:11,760 --> 00:58:15,240
the story of the Wars of the Roses certainly hasn't.
993
00:58:16,360 --> 00:58:21,040
'Next time, I'll be exploring the Glorious Revolution.
994
00:58:21,040 --> 00:58:23,240
'Was it really glorious?
995
00:58:23,240 --> 00:58:56,000
'And was it really a revolution?'
116007
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