Towton, 1461 - Britain's Bloodiest Battle - Wars of the Roses

231,006
0
Published 2024-04-13
๐Ÿšฉ Sign up for a 14-day free trial on MyHeritage and discover your past bit.ly/HistoryMarcheMH Use my link to get a 50% discount!

๐Ÿšฉ Support HistoryMarche on Patreon and get ad-free early access to our videos for as little as $1: www.patreon.com/historymarche

๐Ÿ“ข Narrated by David McCallion

๐ŸŽผ Music:
Epidemic Sounds
Filmstro
All this scoring action - Kevin MacLeod

๐Ÿ“š Sources:
Christopher Gravet & Graham Turner โ€“ Towton 1461: Englandโ€™s Bloodiest Battle (2003)
Philip A. Haigh โ€“ From Wakefield to Towton: The Wars of the Roses (2001)
Edward Hall, Chronicle
Michael Hicks โ€“ The Wars of the Roses, 1455-1485 (2003)
John Sadler โ€“ Towton: The Battle of Palm Sunday Field, 1461 (2011)

#history #documentary #medieval

All Comments (21)
  • @kmoney3066
    This guys ability to keep you interested with his voice is incredible. The energy he uses makes it feel like youโ€™re there to see the battle.
  • @Sanj1n
    HistoryMarche is one of the best YT History channels.
  • @Marva123
    The quality of visuals and audio narration made me feel like I wasn't watching a YouTube video, but almost apart of the actual events during that period. Unbelievable quality, your productions get better with each passing release.
  • @jonbaxter2254
    On the first day of the Battle of the Somme, Britain lost 20K soldiers killed. Machine guns, poison gas, flamethrowers, planes and massive artillery. This battle, 500 years prior, lost 28K killed. With just bows, spears and swords. A bloody massacre, that has still never been topped as our bloodiest day.
  • @koslab1991
    i like the more narrative aspects of the video. great job mate
  • Some of the skeletons at Towton showed up to at least 20 injuries done, it must have been a BRUTAL battle.
  • The magnates present at the battle on the Lancastrian side were: Duke of Somerset, Duke of Exeter, Son of the Duke of Buckingham, Earl of Northumberland, Earl of Devon, Earl of Wiltshire & Ormond, Viscount Beaumont, Baron Moleyns & Hungerford, Baron Dacre, Baron Clifford, Baron Neville, Baron Rivers, Baron Welles, Baron Willoughby, Baron Ros, Baron Richemont, Baron Maulay, Baron Codnor, Baron Fitzhugh and Bishop of Carlyle. 7 rich Knights. Scottish mercenaries and Militia from York. The magnates on the Yorkist side were: Duke of York (Edward IV), Duke of Norfolk, Duke of Suffolk, Earl of Warwick & Salisbury, Son of the Earl of Arundel, Viscount Bourchier, Baron Fauconberg, The men of Baron Fitz Walter (killed at Ferrybridge), Baron Stanley, Baron Grey, Baron Clinton, Baron Dudley, Baron Scrope of Bolton. 8 rich Knights and Esquires. Kentish men raised by commission of array. That's 1 King, 4 Dukes, the son of 1 Duke, 4 Earls, the son of 1 Earl, 2 Viscounts, 18 Barons and the men of 1 Baron. Edward IV was the Duke of York, the Earl of March, the Earl of Cambridge, and the Earl of Ulster, making him the most powerful man on the battlefield.
  • @TrentBattyDrums
    you always make me feel like I'm there, in the battle, on the march, your way of telling stories is so immersive and addicting. Thank you, you always make my weekend better.
  • @Soul93Taker
    The moment i saw those red cavalry units in the forest after you mentioned Edward's father and brother died on an ambush supposedly devised byba former ally i thought "man, Edward's not gonna like this"
  • You're the Best historymarche! Your documentaries and narration are second to none! Please consider doing the battle of Barnet (death of the Kingmaker) and of Tewekesbury (Death of Edward, son of henry Vi and margaret lf anjou)
  • @rikdryden7388
    Excellent as always. Bloody Meadow was at the end of the battle rather than the main plain it was fought on but you're right that Towton is famous for it, as is Tewkesbury. You might want to edit the graphics a little - you have Towton as Townton and half of Norfolk has disappeared into The Wash when Edward is marching north. But that aside, superbly put together once again.
  • I live in Wakefield and the two biggest battlefields in the uk are on my doorstep basically, Towton and the English civil War battlefield of Marston Moor. A wealth of history all around. Excellent programme and topic with amazing narration, top notch
  • @mattrowan2460
    Cersei Lannister is inspired by Margaret of Anjou to a degree... George RR Martin takes a lot of the York vs. Lancaster history in A Song of Ice and Fire
  • @Kingshieldwall
    Absolutely fascinated with this battle. A massive part of English History. It has lots of twists and turns and is epic in scale. Never understood why it's never been made into a warfilm. Great choice, great graphics ๐Ÿ‘ ๐Ÿ‘Œ ๐Ÿ‘
  • @Aetius-ju1tc
    I did not expect that, the story telling was exceptional good in this video, similar to the ones about Rome! The difference between Edward IV, his generals and his enemies is really interesting. The fact that he risk is life even if it looked like he would lose, and that his generals never backstabbed him is also what makes a good army.
  • @paulo-zm4vp
    I loved this new intro style, where you show the battle, and only afterwards give the context!