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The disappearance of Princes Edward and Richard in 1483 has captured imaginations for centuries - does a new Channel 5 ...
As the new king, Edward V, travelled towards London, he was met by Gloucester and escorted to the capital, where he was lodged in the Tower of London. In June, Edward was joined by his brother ...
In this series, Lucy Worsley re-investigates some of the most dramatic and brutal chapters in British history, uncovering forgotten witnesses, re-examining old evidence and following new clues. The ...
Tracy Borman and Jason Watkins explore the mystery of what happened to the two young princes that were brought to the Tower of London in 1483 by their uncle Richard, Duke of Gloucester.
As it plays out the possibilities and tests the competing theories, it endeavors to get to the bottom, once and for all, of what really happened to the princes in the Tower. Is this a tale of ...
Perhaps the greatest unsolved mystery in British royal history is that of the Princes in the Tower. In 1483, The Princes Edward (Edward V of England) and Richard (Duke of York) were just 12 and 9 ...
Did Richard III kill his nephews? Following new discoveries, Philippa Langley and Rob Rinder travel Europe seeking the truth of what happened to the princes in the tower.
The warrant sent to Wren, dated 18th February 1675, reads These are to signifie his Maiesties pleasure that you provide a white marble coffin for the supposed bodyes of ye two Princes lately found in ...
Historian David Baldwin discusses how the fate of the Princes in the Tower has fascinated historians for centuries, and how much we really know about their fate. Your Paintings depicts the life of ...
Who Killed the Princes in the Tower is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet ...
The Ballad of Wallis Island Link to The Ballad of Wallis Island ...
A new documentary claiming to have ‘solved’ the mystery of the princes in the tower misses the point entirely. History is a record of what happened, not a morality play, says Eliot Wilson Last ...