Friday, 13 June 2025
Unraveling a medieval murder case
Sunday, 8 June 2025
A gold coin with Christian and Odin imagery from Anglo-Saxon Norfolk
Wednesday, 4 June 2025
Resistance to Cardinal Wolsey’s plan to suppress Bayham Abbey
Re-thatching a medieval tithe barn
Sunday, 1 June 2025
Book Review: The Yorkists
This is a joint biography of King Edward IV -and his younger brothers George Duke of Clarence and King Richard III. Thomas Penn has produced a thank you pacy page turner, especially in the coverage of the years up to 1471 and Edward IV’s return to power. It is visually evocative but occasionally words run away with facts and accuracy. It has something of History as film script about it, or it reads rather like modern journalism - which grates at times, but makes for liveliness and immediacy. Penn’s strong visual sense conveys the reality of individuals and events. He has telling vignettes to carry his narrative forward - I shall never think of Henry Duke of Buckingham in quite the same way now I know he was using face cosmetics.
The illustrations are well chosen, and several were new to me - they are not just the old favourites reused yet again.
The book is an attempt to understand the personalities of the three brothers - which after more than five centuries is inevitably a bit challenging, but is based on serious books and research.
The attention paid to finance and banking, and to diplomatic intrigue is insightful and very helpful. It takes the reader behind the politics and faction that inevitably take centre stage in most accounts of these years.
It is I think better on the 1470s - thanks in part to the memoirs of Philippe de Commynes and the details he provides.
Penn concentrates on what is recorded rather than turning to speculation, notably with the questions around the fate of the Princes in the Tower.
It is useful for an introduction to the period or as a supplement to more traditional accounts and which injects pace and drama to a familiar story, and also stimulates reflection on these tumultuous years.
Whether you see the York brothers as glamorous and heroic or as an appalling
trio this is a book that will give you food for thought. How the reader understands the subtitle “An English Tragedy” will depend very much on how they construe that tragic quality - for the house of York, for their families, their victims or for the country.
Posted on Amazon 5.1.2023
( Slightly adapted )