LIC Blog

Two Little Boys: Part 2, George's Tale

George's eyes widened in disbelief at the sight which greeted them.

His mother was crying. No, not crying, wailing like one of those banshees that lie in the bogs of Ireland. He had never seen her like this. Throughout his short life he had seen her overcome every fear and foe like the ancient Queen of the Britons, Boadicea.

But this.

This frightened 10 year old George.

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Two Little Boys: Part 1, Richard's Tale

Tudor apologists have been incredibly successful in playing on the feelings of generations of men and women via the myth of the murder of the two eldest sons of King Edward IV by Elizabeth Woodville. In this they have been aided and abetted by Shakespeare's fictionalised version of the Fifteenth Century. 

It is high time that two other little boys came before their hearts.

Two children whose lives were blighted by the events of December 1460.

Two little boys whose hearts were turned in opposite directions by another double murder.

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The Conwy Connection

A five minute stroll from my home takes me to the estuary of the river Dee. Facing me across the marshy wasteland is the North Wales town of Flint. Planted at the edge of the river are the ruins of Flint Castle, its solid towers reflecting the morning sun but dwarfed by the Welsh Hills behind them. Our story will end at Flint but begins 30 miles further round the Welsh coast.

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Middleham Lecture 2009

The Norman victory at Hastings in 1066 changed this island forever. But  that single battle did not secure William’s grip on these shores. It was to be a bloody conquest. Refusing to accept their Norman Conqueror as king, Yorkshire and Durham rose in rebellion against him: a rebellion which William put down with brutal and savage efficiency in the autumn of 1069. Such was the destruction of people and property that 10 years later the ground could not be tilled and towns between York and Durham stood empty, their streets a haven for robbers and wild beasts. 

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The Courage of Cecilly Neville

Cecilly Neville had it all.

And then she lost it.

Born into the powerful Neville family, she was the youngest daughter of Ralph, Earl of Westmorland, and his second wife, Joan Beaufort. She was the couple’s thirteenth child. When Cecilly was born in 1415 her eldest brother was already in his thirties.

As the baby of the family, she was certainly spoiled. Perhaps this laid the foundation of her nickname, “Proud Cis”. What is undoubted is that she grew into a most beautiful young woman, known as the “Rose of Raby”, Raby being one of the family’s castles in Durham.

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