Sunday, January 10, 2010

The Age of Henry Stafford, Second Duke of Buckingham

Although Henry Stafford, second Duke of Buckingham, hasn't suffered the same fate as his wife, whose actual age at the time of the couple's marriage in 1465 or possibly 1466 is often tripled by modern writers who are either superficial in their research and/or eager to depict the Woodvilles in the worst possible light, his own date of birth has often been a matter for confusion. So what is it?

According to the Complete Peerage and the current Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Henry Stafford (we'll call him Harry from now on) was born on September 4, 1455, making him about thirty-five months younger than Richard, Duke of Gloucester, born on October 2, 1452. Henry's birthdate in September 1455 is consistent with this 1475 Act of Parliament, which refers to an annuity of 40 pounds granted by Henry VI to Henry's grandfather, the first Duke of Buckingham:

The king our sovereign lord, for certain considerations influencing him and because his cousin Henry, the present duke of Buckingham, cousin and male heir of the said late duke, that is to say, son of Humphrey, son of the said late duke, was very young at the time of the death of the said late duke [at the battle of Northampton on July 10, 1460], that is to say, only four years of age, and was lawfully taken into the wardship of our said sovereign lord . . .


A number of sources, however, age Harry by a year by giving him a birth date of 1454. This confusion (which runs rampant on the Internet) appears to have arisen originally because of another mistake: the report by some chroniclers that Harry's father, Humphrey Stafford, the Earl of Stafford, was killed or mortally wounded at the first battle of St. Albans in May 1455. Since Harry is known to have had a younger brother, who was made a Knight of the Bath along with Harry and who was raised in Elizabeth Woodville's household with him, historians, like C.A.J. Armstrong in a note to his 1936 edition of Mancini, moved Harry's birth date back a year in order to avoid the impossible situation of the Earl of Stafford posthumously begetting Harry's younger brother.

But the Earl of Stafford did not in fact die at St. Albans, though he was wounded there. Armstrong himself had realized this by 1960, when he published his seminal article "Politics and the Battle of St. Albans, 1455." Instead, as Armstrong noted, the earl died in late 1458 of plague, according to a manuscript, Rawlinson B 355, cited by Armstrong in note 5 to his article. (Footnotes are a researcher's best friend.) Indeed, although some writers have depicted the Earl of Stafford as having been permanently prostrated by his wounds at St. Albans, he continued to take an active part in affairs following the 1455 battle: he was appointed to a commission of oyer and terminer in 1456 and to Edward of Lancaster's council and to other commissions in 1457. At some point in between sitting on commissions, the earl fathered Harry's younger brother.

So with the Earl of Stafford having survived St. Albans and lived long enough to father both Harry and his younger brother, the difficulty with Harry's birth date of 1455 disappears. Might we someday hear the sweet music of all of those erroneous online statements of "1454" being corrected? Probably not, but at least I've done my part.

4 comments:

Kathryn Warner said...

Interesting to see how these mistakes get started! I hope that all the sites which give the wrong birthdate will correct it, but given how much rubbish about Edward II still appears online just about every day despite my best efforts for the last few years, I'm not holding out much hope! :-)

trish wilson said...

Mistakes? I’ve been less than a year in this job and already I’ve caught out three dozen historians in messing up, misleading or missing out altogether including the Institute of Historical Research!

At the moment I’m getting hysterical about Walpole’s historic doubts he who claimed amongst other things that Edward V attended his father’s coronation, that his new gown was made to attend his uncle’s coronation at a time when he was still king and that Lady Eleanor’s mother was Katherine Stafford daughter of Humphrey Duck of Buckingham – it was actually Margaret Beauchamp daughter of Richard, Earl of Warwick.

Historic doubts? Have I plenty! Including Bacon, Buck and Murray Kendall the idol now revealed not only to have feet of clay but crumbling clay at that!

Susan Higginbotham said...

Alianore, it's a definite uphill battle!

Trish, I've never done more than dipped into Bacon, Buck, and Walpole. Kendall gets my blood pressure high enough. I'm working on a novel about Margaret of Anjou now, and his bias against her and the Lancastrians is as strong as his later bias in favor of Richard III and against all of his opponents. It's sad that people still use his books as a major source for their research.

trish wilson said...

Sad Sue?

All I feel at the current time is anger.