The Princes in the Tower Vanished... But Where Did They Go?
Today I want to take a look at one of the greatest unsolved
mysteries in English history, that is the story of the Princes in the Tower.
The story starts in the spring of 1483 when King Edward IV
died unexpectedly. His eldest son was twelve-year-old Edward, he was now King
Edward V, although he was still too young to rule alone. His younger brother,
Richard, Duke of York, was only nine years old. This must have been such a
chaotic and scary time for the two boys who suddenly found themselves at the
centre of a power struggle.
Edward V was travelling to London for his coronation when
his uncle, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, met him along the way. Richard arrested
several of the king’s supporters and took charge of his nephew. Was it the
actions of a loyal uncle protecting the future king or was it something more
sinister.
Edward was taken to the Tower of London, which was not
unusual before a coronation. Many monarchs stayed there beforehand. His younger
brother Richard then joined him so that they could be together. The brothers
were reportedly seen playing in the gardens and looking out from the Tower
windows.
Everything changed during the summer of 1483. Richard, Duke
of Gloucester, claimed that his brother Edward IV’s marriage to Elizabeth
Woodville had not been valid because
Edward had already promised to marry
another woman, Lady Eleanor Butler. If the claim was true, Edward IV’s children, including the two
princes, would have been made illegitimate and would have had no right to
inherit the throne. Parliament accepted the claim, and Richard was then crowned
King Richard III. Historians still fiercely debate what Richard's motives.
Some people believe that Richard genuinely thought that he
was protecting the country. Others think that he used the claim in order to
strengthen his own position and to take the crown. The debates can actually get
quite heated, but there is no conclusive evidence either way to prove exactly
why Richard acted the way that he did, which is one of the reason why the
events in 1483 remain so controversial.
After that, the two
princes were rarely seen. By the end of
the summer, they had disappeared completely. No official explanation was ever
given. But their sudden disappearance caused rumours across England.
If the boys were alive after Richard became king, someone
else may have killed them without his knowledge.
If they had survived Richard’s reign, they would have
remained a threat to Henry VII after he took the throne in 1485, giving Henry a
possible motive as well.
Henry Stafford, one of Richard’s closest allies before
rebelling against him, has also been suggested as a possible suspect because he
had ambitions of his own.
The truth is unknown
because no contemporary evidence clearly explains what happened.
In 1674, workmen rebuilding part of the Tower of London
discovered the skeletons of two children under a staircase. Many believed that
they were the missing princes. The bones were placed in Westminster Abbey,
where they still are today. Modern DNA testing has never been carried out on them, so
we still do not know their true identity.
More than five hundred years later, the mystery still continues
to fascinate historians. At the heart of the story are two young boys whose
future was taken from them. Whatever did happened to the boys, one thing is
true, they were just children who were caught up in a dangerous world where
ambition and power mattered more than them.
What do you think happened to the Princes in the Tower?