http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00546sp
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Wars of the Roses which have been the
scene for many a historical skirmish over the ages: The period in the fifteenth
century when the House of Lancaster and the House of York were continually at
odds is described by Shakespeare, in the three parts of Henry VI and Richard III
as a time of enormous moral, military and political turmoil - the quintessential
civil war; but twentieth century historians like K.B. Macfarlane argued the
political instability is wildly overstated and there were no Wars of the Roses
at all. Opposing this position are the many Tudor historians who like to claim
that the Wars of the Roses represent the final breakdown of the feudal system
and lead directly to the Tudor Era and the birth of the modern age.
With Dr Helen Castor, Fellow and Director of Studies in History, Sidney
Sussex College, Cambridge; Professor Colin Richmond, Emeritus Professor of
History, Keele University; Dr Steven Gunn is a Tudor historian and Fellow and
Tutor in Modern History, Merton College, Oxford.
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