The origins of conflict, 1450–1459
- English society and politics in 1450: the weakness of Henry VI’s rule; baronial factions; Cade’s rebellion; the loss of Normandy
- The impact on English politics of the emerging power and influence of Richard of York
- The outbreak of war: the first Battle of St Albans and the balance of military power in 1455
- The uneasy peace: the influence of Margaret of Anjou; factional rivalries and their impact on English society
The War of the Barons, 1459–1461
- The renewal of war: York’s flight into exile; the emergence of Warwick ‘the Kingmaker’; the capture of Henry VI at Northampton
Filling the political vacuum: the rule of Richard of York as Protector of England - Shifting loyalties and the Lancastrian revival: Wakefield; the second Battle of St Albans; the death of York and the restoration of Henry VI
Proclamation of Edward IV as King; Yorkist victory at Towton; the strengths and weaknesses of the Yorkists by 1461
The triumph of the Yorkists, 1461–1471
- The personal rule of Edward IV and the political impact of his marriage to Elizabeth Woodville
- Factional rivalries: Warwick ‘the Kingmaker’; attempts to restore Henry VI; Margaret of Anjou; Edward, Prince of Wales
- The crushing of the Lancastrian cause: Barnet and Tewkesbury; the destruction of the Lancastrian nobility
- The impact of the baronial wars on English society by 1471: the weakening of the aristocracy; the impact on trade and the economy
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