Anyone remotely familiar with the Wars of the Roses will know about the Battle of Towton in Yorkshire, when the nearby river was supposed to have turned red with the blood of the dead soldiers.
The battle took place between the Lancastrian army of Henry VI, headed by the Duke of Somerset, and the Yorkist troops led by Edward Plantagenet, son of the since dead Duke of York. From the 1450s, concerns grew for the country amid Henry's ineffective rule and health problems that left him mentally incapacitated for long periods of time. York had managed to wrestle a promise out of Henry that he would be king after his own death, which only added enthusiasm to the Yorkists' cause. The duke's supporters conspired, fought and raised money and men to pave his way to the the throne in the civil war known as the Wars of the Roses. But the duke was defeated at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460 and killed in a public execution afterwards. It was his eldest son Edward who took up his fight.
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| Richard Caton Woodville, Battle of Towton painting, 1927. Via Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain. |
Squaring up on the muddy field of Towton, said the Tudor historian Edward Hall, were 60,000 royal soldiers, while Edward's troops amounted to just over 48,000. They met in a field between the villages of Towton and Saxton in Yorkshire on a bed of raised ground. Among those ready to fight were well-known men of medieval politics. Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick commanded a portion of Edward's army, while Lord Falconberg oversaw another division. Warwick was used to battle, and was not only an expert soldier and military leader but was also known for his generosity. It was said that when he held a feast, the inns of London were full of the earl's meat, him urging everyone present to take as much leftovers they could slide onto the blade of a dagger before leaving.
The armies first clashed at around seven in the morning. It was 29 March, but was bitterly cold, with flakes of snow falling, the ice particles mushing with earth under the soldier's leather boots. It was said that the battle continued until dusk, and it would have been an exhausting fight. The Yorkists however gained the upper hand, with one explanation given being that the snow fall increased throughout the day, driving in the direction of the Lancastrian soldiers. Struggling to see through the haze, they found counter attack more and more difficult. It's possible too, that Edward's underdog passion inspired his troops to fight harder. He was outnumbered, but unlike Henry VI, led his own army into battle. Edward was a respected warrior, and was driven on by the very recent loss of his own father, and many of his supporters would have also backed and personally known the duke.
Spears, axes, swords, shields and arrows were among the weapons used at Towton. Research by York Osteoarchaeology on skeletons unearthed and believed to have been soldiers at the battle showed some fascinating findings. The youngest they excavated was around fifteen years of age, while many showed evidence of blunt force or weapon related trauma. There were also signs of longer term illness. The death of Lord Dacre is a famous one - it is said that he was pausing in battle to take a drink, took off his gorget (the chain mail worn around the neck) and was struck in the throat by an arrow.
As the Lancastrian soldiers plotted their escape from the field, they headed to outlying areas, and many who survived the battle sadly drowned in the river Cock nearby. The figures are startling, although are debated by modern historians. In a letter Edward wrote to his mother Cecily Neville after the battle, he claimed that 28,000 Lancastrian soldiers and commanders had died. In total, 38,000 lie on the field, although it was believed that the total dead, including those that drowned in the river, numbered around 97,000. Among them were members of the nobility, including the Earls of Northumberland, Westmoreland, and Shrewsbury; John Lord Clifford, the Lords Dacre, Beaumont, Neville, Willoughby, Roos, Scales, Grey, Fitzhugh, Molineaux, Welles, and Henry Buckingham. There was also Sir Andrew Trollop, Sir John Neville, Sir Richard Percy, Sir John Heyton, Sir Gervase Clifton, Sir Edward Harnis, Sir John Burton, Sir David Trollop, Sir Thomas Crakenthorpe, Sir John Ormond and others. I explored the consequences of medieval battle in my book Forgotten Women of the Wars of the Roses, and the impact this had on families. Many women were left struggling to manage, maintain and cling on to marital estates after their husbands died in war. Some even left a secular life altogether and entered a religious establishment.
Many of the dead were buried, unceremoniously, in local churchyards, buried in communal pits or alone, with hastily erected tombs built over them. The Tudor historian John Stow noted that many were buried in Saxton churchyard. In the mid-nineteenth century, when preparing the ground there for a new burial, diggers encountered a pile of bones around five feet thick believed to have been casualties of Towton. On an earlier occasion, in 1794, a 'vast quantity of bones' were discovered in the ground, with 'arrow piles, pieces of broken swords, and five groat pieces of Henry IV, Henry V and Henry VI'. It's possible too, that the dead were buried in mounds in outlying areas. On the battlefield itself, a gold ring was recovered in 1786 decorated with the crest of the Percy family of Northumberland. A silver gilt ring with joined hands was also discovered, along with a spur.
The Yorkists were victorious, and Edward Plantagenet Earl of March made his way to London to be crowned king. The deposed Henry VI and his queen Margaret of Anjou fled, and headed for Scotland to seek further support. Before Edward rode south, he travelled the short distance to York and removed his father's head from Mickelgate Bar, replacing it with those of executed Lancastrian soldiers.










