Showing posts with label Richard III. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard III. Show all posts

Friday, September 3, 2021

21st - 22nd August, Bosworth Battlefield Heritage Centre, Leicestershire

(commemorating the battle anniversary at the Heritage centre)

BOSWORTH BATTLEFIELD HERITAGE EVENT

Much affected by Covid uncertainties, the annual Medieval Festival at Bosworth went ahead in a reduced format this year ... a Living History and Commemoration, but without the big reenactment and Medieval Fair.

 
(my DBA version of the battle on the Battlefields Trust stand)
 
The Battlefields Trust were happy to support the event, and went along with my 54mm DBA version of the battle as part of the BT stand.
 
Indeed, Julian H had his 'Wars of the Roses in 10 minutes' in the lecture pavilion, using swoppets, and a team of locl wargamers were doing a big version of the battle using Never Mind the Billhooks opposte us - so, after my subtle introduction of the figures back in 2014, model soldiers and wargame approaches now seem to be bedded in at Bosworth! 
 

 
(this year, the Battlefields Trust stand was strategically placd on the commemorative procession route)
 
(Henry's mercenaries 'ready for battle at Bosworth Battlefield')

 
(scenes from Bosworth 2021 ... including the lecture pavilion, Richard in battle and Living History displays)

(miniature action at Bosworth: DBA )

 
(miniature action at Bosworth: Never Mind the Billhooks) 
 
So a lower key event than usual at Bosworth, this year, but more time to meet people, forge links and reflect on the tumultuous events of 1485.  A place-holder for the return of the big battle next year - and a rare opportunity for me to do both days ... usually the Sunday of Bosworth is Partizan in Newark (which, this year, again fell victim to the pestillence) ...

The good news, however, is that the Autumn version of the show The Other Partizan is confirmed for October - and things are looking good.  Ancients is back on the move, you might say.  Our odyssey continues.

 
(roses are laid at the Bosworth sundial)

Saturday, August 28, 2021

BattleDay 21 preview: Bosworth 1485

 Bosorth Field ... what's in a location?

In 2010, the Battlefields Trust completed an archaeological project which identified where the battle of Bosworth was actually fought - the evidence was conclusive, and, contrary to a tradition popular over the last 200 years, it was not fought on Ambion Hill.

(Bosworth Field)
 
Apart from anything else, it was pretty much fought on the flat.
 
In the case of Bosworth, we can pretty much pinpoint when we 'lost' the battlefield.
 
Speed's map of Leicestershire is from 1610 and marks 'King Richard's Field' and when you compare his location with the archaeological trace, it seems that, after 125 years, people still had a fair understanding of the location.

                         
(detail from Speed's Leicestershire, 1610)

Click for a bigger version. If you look a line from Shenton to Dadlington, you will see that maybe 70% of the field is West of that line.  If you compare it with the finds map (below) you can see how closely it is validated by the archaeology.


(finds map, Bosworth battlefield)

Compare that with the Ordnance Survey map of 1810, and it is evident that something has changed:
 

(OS Map of 1810)
 
The area of the battlefield West of the notional Shenton to Dadlington line has disappeared and is now concentrated up in the area of Ambion Hill (where archaeologists will later find, pretty much, nothing).
 
How did this happen?  In his study published in 1788, William Hutton mixed local anecdote with 'clues' in Holinshed to propose a detailed battlefield based on Ambion Hill, which was picked up by subsequent antiquarians, and by Ordnance Survey.  It quickly embeded itself in maps and books - and without any real foundation, became the 'orthodox' location for the next 200 years.
 
There was never any archaeology to support the Ambion Hill location, and very little sense could be made of the primary sources.  Many books have challenged the orhodoxy over the years - but it took intensive archaeology to reveal a convincing alternative.
 
 
 (some of the 32 canonbals found marking the site of Bosworth Field)

In addition to the cannonballs that provide compelling evidence for the site itself, the archaeologists also found a 'high status' silver gilt boar badge, surely closely associated with Richard and his closest personal supporters in an area of Fenn Hole, marsh in 1485.

 (Richard's emblem - the white board)
 
It seems very likely that this marks where the King met his sticky end, and Plantagenet gave way to Tudor
 
(Fenn Hole today ... there is even a thorn bush)

The archaeology does not tell us the exact orientation of the troops or their deployments, and as the much delayed BattleDay approaches, the presenting teams will be making their assessments.