The woman took another sip from her chilled pint of lager as I sat, transfixed, my burger and fries getting cold in front of me. She was giving me directions to Bloody Meadow, the legendary last stand of the Lancastrian soldiers in 1471, at the Battle of Tewkesbury. She told me how the battlefield is now surrounded by houses, not like when she was little, when she was four years old and would pick up arrows after re-enactments, and it was all fields behind other fields. She's lived in Tewkesbury all her life, she's telling me, as I steal a still-hot chip from my plate and dab it in ketchup. Oh, and there are tunnels, too. From the abbey to the old pub we're sitting in.
Turns out, the battlefield site isn't very far from the town centre. After a 15-minute stroll, we found a detour into a field that promised a battlefield walk, and a few more minutes' down the road, Bloody Meadow itself.
It was here that witnessed the most intense fighting of the Battle of Tewkesbury. With Henry VI now locked up in the Tower of London and the Earl of Warwick dead after the Battle of Barnet, Edward faced the remnants of Lancastrian resistance to his rule, under Henry VI's queen, Margaret of Anjou.
The Yorkists gained the upper hand and Lancastrian forces tried to disband and run away, however many ended up drowned in the nearby river 'at a mill in the meadow fast by the town', likely to have been a mill owned by the abbey. It's been estimated that around three thousand Lancastrian soldiers died in these fields near Tewkesbury on that day. Among them were Thomas Courtenay Earl of Devonshire, Lord John Beaufort, Lord Wenlock, Sir William Vaux and Sir Thomas Seymour.
Walking back from Bloody Meadow you get a beautiful view of nearby Tewkesbury Abbey, and it is here that some of the soldiers fled to seek sanctuary and the protection of the church. Among them was the Duke of Somerset, and, it was said, fourteen other men. Still in armour, and what would have been a short ride on horseback (if not an angry trudge through a field), Edward chased them to the abbey door but was stopped by the priest, reminded of the rules of sanctuary and urged to consider pardoning the men inside. Edward, for now, left the men to heal their wounds.
After visiting the abbey church to give thanks for his victory, Edward demanded Somerset and the other men leave their sanctuary and face justice in a trial. Some believe Edward had the men forcibly removed, leading to the need for the abbey church to be reconsecrated. Unsurprisingly, as enemies, they were sentenced to death and beheaded in the marketplace of Tewkesbury on 6 May. Margaret of Anjou was also discovered, in a 'poor religious house' in the town and taken to London with strict instructions to be kept separately from her husband. She was later ransomed to France. Edward marched into London to occupy his throne and ruled for another decade before dying in 1483 of a short illness.
You might also like The Women of Warwick Castle, The Queens of the Wars of the Roses and Historic Pubs: The Old Black Bear of Tewkesbury.
Source:
James Bennett, History of Tewkesbury. Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green. London 1830