Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Ralph Percy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Sir Ralph Percy (11 August 1425 – 25 April 1464) was an English nobleman of the House of Percy, a knight, a Governor of Bamburgh Castle and a supporter of the Lancastrian faction in the Wars of the Roses. Percy was the son of Henry Percy, 2nd Earl of Northumberland and Lady Eleanor Neville, and the grandson of Sir Henry "Hotspur" Percy.
Remove ads
Family
Percy married, firstly, Eleanor Acton and they had six children:
- Sir Ralph Percy[1]
- Peter Percy[citation needed]
- Sir Henry Percy
- George Percy
- John Percy[citation needed]
- Margaret Percy
Sir Ralph married, secondly Jane Teye. They had a child, Catherine Percy.
Career
Summarize
Perspective
Ralph was born on 11 August 1425 to Henry Percy, 2nd Earl of Northumberland and Eleanor Neville, Countess of Northumberland. He had three brothers, Henry, Thomas and Richard. Ralph, Thomas and Richard participated in the Percy-Neville feud, fighting at Stamford Bridge, where he and Thomas were taken prisoner in 1454. He was freed after Henry VI regained his sanity and the Duke of York dismissed as protector.
His father Henry was killed at the First Battle of St Albans in 1455. Four years later the Yorkists were charged with treason, and they fled, following the Rout of Ludford Bridge. However, when the Yorkists returned, Thomas was killed at the Battle of Northampton. Queen Margaret raised an army for the Lancastrian cause in the north, and the Percies joined her. Following victories at the Battle of Worksop and the Battle of Wakefield, where the enemy leader Richard of York was killed, and a victory at the Second Battle of St Albans, the Lancastrian cause was on the rise, but, at the disastrous Battle of Towton, his brothers were killed and he went into exile.
During 1462 and 1463, the Lancastrians attempted to destabilise the kingdom, which was ruled by their Yorkist enemy, Edward IV. These attempts were concentrated in the north of England and directed by the Lancastrian Queen, Margaret of Anjou (Henry VI's wife).
The Earl of Warwick led campaigns to neutralise the Lancastrians in the north in the early 1460s. As a result, Sir Ralph Percy surrendered Bamburgh Castle to Edward IV, on Christmas Eve 1462 in return for a free pardon. Sir Ralph swore allegiance to Edward IV who, in a policy of conciliation, returned Percy's lands, and control of both Bamburgh and Dunstanburgh Castles, to him.
Fighting in the north continued, exacerbated by a Scottish invasion led by James III, Margaret of Anjou and Henry VI in 1463. When the Scots sued for peace, Lord Montague was sent to arrange terms. On 25 April 1464, Montague was on his way to Norham. Percy and the Duke of Somerset (who had surrendered and sworn allegiance with Percy), forswearing their oaths, attacked Montague with 5,000 men. The site of that battle was Hedgeley Moor, seven miles south of Wooler. Percy led Somerset's vanguard and was killed.
Remove ads
Ancestry
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads