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Royal Blood

  • Bertram Fields

4.00

1 ratings

In this comprehensive, meticulously researched new book, renowned litigator Bertram Fields goes back more than 500 years to offer a compelling look at the case of Richard III. Applying the same modern techniques he successfully uses in the courtroom, Fields outlines and evaluates the arguments on both sides, weighs the evidence, and offers the definitive truth about this extraordinary man. Fields examines the earliest biographers of Richard, exposing the political, cultural, and geographical biases inherent in their portrayals and reveals how much "fact" was actually gossip and disinformation, including that given the world by More and Shakespeare. He sets the stage for the coming drama with a lucid and colorful picture of the War of the Roses, the long struggle between the houses of York (white rose) and Lancaster (red rose), that put Richard's family on the throne. He vividly brings to life the key players, including the weak but saintly Henry VI, used and deceived by everyone, including his rapacious queen; the womanizing soldier-king Edward IV, bribed into inaction by the French king's gold; his conniving wife, Elizabeth Woodville; the charming but treacherous brother Clarence; Richard's loyal wife, Anne Neville, kidnapped and hidden away as a kitchen maid; and Henry Tudor, the exile with virtually no legitimate claim to rule, who schemed at Richard's betrayal and replaced him on the throne. Setting them against the rich tapestry of the period, the author conveys a fresh and insightful view of the many players in this royal drama and analyzes their motives and machinations as they vie for the power of the crown. Clearing away the dust of time, Royal Blood attempts to answer the intriguing questions inherent in the drama: Was Edward IV's marriage truly legal? Were his sons, Edward, Prince of Wales, and Richard, Duke of York illegitimate? What role did Richard play -- or not -- in his brother Clarence's death? Were the bones found in the Tower of London those of the young princes? Was there even a murder -- were the boys instead removed from the Tower and raised in secrecy? And if they were cold-bloodedly killed who else would have wanted them dead? The neurotic, mercurial Buckingham? Henry VII himself? Royal Blood ends with a stunning reenvisioning of British and world history: what if Richard had never accepted the crown? What if he had instead insisted his young nephew reign as Edward V? How would our lives be changed? - Jacket flap.

Genres

  • Biography
  • Death and burial
  • History
  • Kings and rulers
  • Murder
  • Princes
  • Political prisoners
  • Edward v, king of england, 1470-1483
  • Great britain, history, medieval period, 1066-1485
  • Murder, great britain
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About the author

  • Bertram Fields

    4.00

    1 ratings · 6 works

Editions

  • Edition cover

    Sutton

    2006

  • Edition cover

    Harper Perennial

    June 20, 2000

  • Edition cover

    Harper Perennial

    June 20, 2000

  • Edition cover

    Harper

    October 1, 1998

  • Princes, great britain
  • Richard iii, king of england, 1452-1485
  • Edition cover

    Harper

    October 1, 1998

  • Edition cover

    History Press Limited, The

    2011

  • Edition cover

    History Press Limited, The

    2000

  • Edition cover

    History Press Limited, The

    2011

  • Edition cover

    1st Perennial ed.

    ReganBooks

    2000