Everything about John De Vere 13th Earl Of Oxford totally explained
John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford (
8 September,
1442 –
10 March,
1513) was one of the principal
Lancastrian commanders during the English
Wars of the Roses.
Early in the reign of
Edward IV, Oxford's father, the 12th Earl, and his elder brother were executed for plotting against the king (1462). However, Edward was pursuing a policy of conciliation with Lancastrian families, and de Vere was allowed to succeed to his father's estates and titles. He was allowed to assume his family's traditional role as Lord High Chamberlain, officiating in that capacity at the coronation of Edward's queen,
Elizabeth Woodville, in 1465. Around the same time he married Margaret Neville, daughter of
Alice Montagu, Countess of Salisbury, a sister of
Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick.
In 1468 Oxford was caught in a plot against the king. He spent a short time in the
Tower of London, but was released and pardoned early in 1469. He probably avoided execution due to the influence of his brother-in-law. Oxford was very likely quietly involved in Warwick's schemes against Edward in 1469 and 1470. In the latter year he fled to
Margaret of Anjou's court in exile in France. Given his position as the leader of a steadfast Lancastrian family and also as Warwick's brother-in-law, Oxford negotiated the switch of Warwick to the Lancastrian side. He returned to England when
Henry VI was restored in 1470. Oxford was appointed
Constable of England.
Oxford was one of the Lancastrian commanders at the
Battle of Barnet (1471). After this defeat, and the death of Warwick, he fled again, this time to Scotland and then to France. With a little aid from
Louis XI of France he took to piracy against English ships and the occasional raid on the coast. Then came the most puzzling incident of Oxford's career. In 1473 he seized
St Michael's Mount, a small rocky island off the coast of
Cornwall. His motives are not clear. Most likely, this was to be the prelude to an invasion of England intending to depose Edward and put his brother,
George, Duke of Clarence, on the throne. No invasion or help came, and in early 1474 he surrendered. Oxford was imprisoned in the fortress of
Hammes, near
Calais.
Three years later, Oxford leapt off the walls of Hammes into the chin-deep moat. Whether he meant to escape or to kill himself isn't known; he accomplished neither. He remained imprisoned there until 1484, when he persuaded the captain of Hammes, Sir
James Blount to escape with him to the court in exile of Henry Tudor (later
Henry VII of England). It is said that Henry was "ravished with joy incredible" at this event.
As by far the most experienced Lancastrian, Oxford was the real commander at the
Battle of Bosworth Field, though Henry was theoretically in charge. Oxford commanded the centre, and held off the downhill charge of the
Duke of Norfolk at the beginning of the battle. To celebrate the Tudor victory at Bosworth, he commissioned the building of
St. Peter and St. Paul, Lavenham
Oxford was now restored to his estates and titles, and was also appointed
Lord High Admiral and
Constable of the Tower. His fighting days were not quite over. Two Yorkist pretenders invaded England in the early years of Henry's reign. Oxford commanded the vanguard at the
Battle of Stoke Field (the only part of the royalist army that actually had to fight), and was then commander in chief at the
Battle of Blackheath.
Oxford was succeeded as Earl by his nephew.
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