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An 18th century illustration of Henry Stafford.
'Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham' (
4 September 1454 –
2 November 1483) played a major role in
Richard III of England's rise and fall. He is also one of the primary suspects in the disappearance (and presumed murder) of the
Princes in the Tower. Buckingham was related to the royal family of England so many different ways that he was his own cousin many times over, but his connections were all through daughters of younger sons. His chances of inheriting the throne would have seemed remote, but eventually the internecine conflicts among the descendants of
Edward III of England and within the Houses of Lancaster and York brought Buckingham within striking distance of the crown. Some historians claim Buckingham's deliberate plotting to seize the throne started as early as the reign of Edward IV, and if they are correct then his elaborate and lengthy plan very nearly succeeded.
Early life
His father,
Humphrey, Earl Stafford, supported the
House of Lancaster in the initial phase of the
Wars of the Roses. He was killed at the
First Battle of St Albans (
22 May,
1455) when Henry was an infant, and his paternal grandfather,
Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham, another leading Lancastrian, was killed five years later, at the
Battle of Northampton (
10 July,
1460).
In
1465, at the age of 11, Henry was recognized as
Duke of Buckingham. The new Duke eventually became a ward of Queen
Elizabeth Woodville,
consort of
Edward IV of England. The next year he was married to her sister
Catherine Woodville — she was 24.
Buckingham never forgave Elizabeth for forcing him into that marriage, and he resented his wife and the other Woodvilles, as well. When Edward IV died in
1483, and the Woodvilles struggled with Edward's brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester, over the
guardianship of the young
Edward V, Buckingham first sided with Richard.
Parliament subsequently
declared Edward V illegitimate offering Richard the throne, and he accepted it, becoming
Richard III. After initially supporting Richard, Buckingham subsequently started working with
John Morton,
Bishop of Ely, in support of Buckingham's second-cousin
Henry Tudor against the King, even though this placed him on the same side as his despised Woodville in-laws.
Reign of Richard III
After King Edward IV's death, Buckingham moved quickly to support Richard's claim to the crown. He was with Richard when they took possession of the young King Edward V at
Stony Stratford in April
1483 and played a major role in the
coup d'etat which followed. When Henry Tudor tried to invade the
Kingdom of England to take the throne from Richard in October 1483, Buckingham raised an army in
Wales and started marching east to support Henry. By a combination of luck and skill, Richard put down the rebellion: Henry's ships ran into a storm and had to go back to
Brittany, and Buckingham's army was greatly troubled by the same storm and deserted when Richard's forces came against them. Buckingham tried to escape in disguise but was turned in for the
bounty Richard had put on his head, and he was convicted of
treason and
beheaded in
Salisbury on 2 November.
Following Buckingham's execution, his widow, Catherine, married
Jasper Tudor, 1st Duke of Bedford.
The Bohun Estate
Buckingham's motives in these events are disputed. His antipathy to Edward IV and his children probably arose from two causes. One was his dislike for their mutual Woodville in-laws, whom Edward greatly favoured. Another was his interest in the
Bohun estate. Buckingham had inherited a great deal of property from his great-great-grandmother, Eleanor de Bohun, wife of
Thomas of Woodstock and daughter of
Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, Essex and Northampton.
Eleanor's younger sister and co-heir
Mary de Bohun married Henry Bolingbroke, who eventually became
Henry IV, and her share of the de Bohun estates became incorporated into the holdings of the
House of Lancaster, being eventually inherited by
Henry VI. When Henry VI was deposed by Edward IV, Edward appropriated that half into the
Crown property under the
House of York.
Buckingham claimed those lands should have been devolved to him instead, and it is likely that Richard III promised to settle the estate on Buckingham in return for his help seizing the throne. Indeed, after Richard's
coronation he did award the other half of the Bohun estate to Buckingham, but it was conditional on the approval of Parliament. Historians disagree on whether this condition was in fact a way for Richard to appear to keep his promise while actually breaking it, but this may have been a motivation for Buckingham to turn against Richard.
The Princes in the Tower
Richard III is alleged to have consolidated his power by eliminating his brother's children, who preceded him in
succession to the throne. However, there is some question about Buckingham's relationship to the disappearance of the
Princes in the Tower. According to a manuscript discovered in the early
1980s in the
College of Arms collection, the Princes were murdered "be [by] the vise" of the Duke of Buckingham. There is some argument over whether "vise" means "advice" or "devise," and, if the former, in what sense.
[1]
If Richard was responsible for killing the Princes in the Tower, the murders may have caused Buckingham to change sides. On the other hand, Buckingham himself had motivation to kill the Princes, being a Lancastrian contender for the throne with a viable claim potentially equivalent to that of Henry Tudor, depending on one's view of the legitimacy of the Tudor branch of the House of Lancaster. According to this perspective, if Buckingham killed the Princes and blamed Richard, he could foment a Lancastrian rebellion, putting the throne into play with only Henry Tudor as a rival. Indeed, a Lancastrian rebellion followed, but it was Henry Tudor who succeeded in deposing Richard III.
Relationship to Edward III
Three of Buckingham's four grandparents were descended from
Edward III of England:
★ Buckingham's paternal grandfather was
Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham, who was the grandson and senior descendant of
Thomas of Woodstock, youngest son of Edward III.
★ Buckingham's paternal grandmother Anne Neville was a granddaughter of
John of Gaunt through his daughter
Joan Beaufort, making her a great-granddaughter of
Edward III.
★ Buckingham's maternal grandfather
Edmund Beaufort was a grandson of
John of Gaunt, the youngest son of his son
John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset.
★ Buckingham's maternal grandmother Eleanor Beauchamp was descended from a daughter of
William Marshal but not from Edward III.
★ Buckingham's grandparents Anne Neville and Edmund Beaufort were also first cousins for their respective parents
Joan Beaufort and
John Beaufort were sister and brother.
Important relatives
Buckingham was the son of
Humphrey, Earl Stafford and Margaret Beaufort.
Four of Buckingham's first and second cousins became King of England, and two of his second cousins became Queen:
★ '
Edward IV' and his brother '
Richard III' were Buckingham's first cousins once removed. Buckingham's father
Humphrey, Earl Stafford, was son of Anne Neville (~1411-1480). Anne's sister
Cecily, Duchess of York was the mother of Edward IV and Richard III. Edward's son '
Edward V' was thus Buckingham's second cousin, as was the younger Edward's sister '
Elizabeth of York', later wife and Queen Consort of
Henry VII of England.
★ '
Henry Tudor', later King
Henry VII was Buckingham's second cousin. Buckingham's mother was Margaret Beaufort (~1427-1474), daughter of
Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset. Margaret's first cousin, also named
Margaret Beaufort (1443-1509) was the mother of
Henry VII, the latter Margaret being the daughter of the
1st Duke of Somerset.
★ '
Anne Neville', in line to become Queen as the wife of Lancastrian
Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales, eventually did become Queen as the wife of
Richard III of England. Her paternal grandfather
Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury was the brother of Buckingham's paternal grandmother (also named Anne Neville) making Buckingham the Queen's second cousin.
One can see from the ancestral chart below that two of his great-grandparents were brother and sister (John Beaufort and Joan Beaufort). This made Buckingham's parents second cousins.
The Ancestry of Henry Stafford
Children
Buckingham and his wife
Catherine Woodville were parents to four children:
★
Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham (
3 February,
1478 -
17 May,
1521). Executed by order of
Henry VIII of England.
★
Elizabeth Stafford, Countess of Sussex. Married
Robert Radclyffe, 1st Earl of Sussex and was mother to
Henry Radclyffe, 2nd Earl of Sussex and grandmother of
Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex.
★
Henry Stafford, 1st Earl of Wiltshire (c. 1479 - March, 1522/1523).
★
Anne Stafford, Countess of Huntingdon. Married
George Hastings, 1st Earl of Huntingdon and was mother to
Francis Hastings, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon and grandmother to both
Henry Hastings, 3rd Earl of Huntingdon and
George Hastings, 4th Earl of Huntingdon.
Notes
1. For a discussion of the matter, see the article by Richard Firth Green, who discovered the manuscript, in the ''English Historical Review'' of 1981.
External links
★
Listed among other members of the Stafford family, with their genealogies clarified