Feud. The origins of the Wars of the Roses

A origem da Guerra das Rosas

Authors

  • Gonzalo Franco Ordovás Universidad de Zaragoza

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53351/rqmcpz57

Keywords:

York, Lancaster, Violence, Feud, Bastard Feudalism

Abstract

Since their very outbreak, the Wars of the Roses attracted the attention of a large number of authors who debated their underlying causes as well as their long duration and violent nature. Numerous studies have highlighted the significance of considering factors such as dynastic disputes, the excessive power of the nobility, Henry VI of Lancaster's weakness or the involvement of the popular classes in rural and urban areas, among others. Assessing the relevance of each of these elements in the course of events has sparked an extensive historiographical debate which, since the late twentieth century, introduced the significance of the role of "blood hatred" or feud in the escalation of violence from the early stages of the confrontation. This perspective falls within the framework of the historiographical debates that in recent decades have been analyzing the role of extrajudicialism in maintaining public order through practices such as revenge or honor killings, sometimes tolerated by ordinary justice. However, interpreting the conflict on a personal level can give rise to problems when weighing the importance of other factors directly related to the intensification of hostilities. Thus, it is necessary to provide a general overview of the causes that led to a progressive increase of the existing tension, weighing and contextualizing the role of blood ties in the course of the conflict and introducing the study of this event within the Hispanic historiographic panorama in order to open the door to subsequent analyses from a comparative perspective.

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Published

2024-07-23

How to Cite

Feud. The origins of the Wars of the Roses: A origem da Guerra das Rosas. (2024). Revista Universitaria De Historia Militar, 13(26), 141-163. https://doi.org/10.53351/rqmcpz57

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