EDWARD STAFFORD, 3RD DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM
'Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham' (February 3 1478 – May 17 1521) was an English nobleman. He was the son of Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham and Catherine Woodville.
Born at Brecknock Castle, Brecon, Wales, his father was attainted and executed for rebelling against King Richard III of England when Stafford was five. When Henry VII ascended the throne, the attainder was reversed and the wardship of the young duke was given to the King's mother Lady Margaret Beaufort. (A reason for the reverse of the attainder may be that Edward was first cousin to Queen Elizabeth of York, Henry's wife.) As a young man, Stafford was made a Knight of the Garter (1495), and had various ceremonial roles at the royal court. This continued in an even grander way with the accession of Henry VIII: Stafford was Lord High Steward at Henry's coronation in 1509, where he also carried the king's crown, and in 1514 he became Lord High Constable.[1]
Yet the real power in Henry VIII's court was not with the great nobles but with low-born men such as Thomas Wolsey. Stafford, with his royal blood and numerous connections by descent or marriage with the rest of the aristocracy, became a leader of the disaffected nobles. The ever-suspicious king personally examined various witnesses, and had Stafford arrested in 1521. The charges, such as that Stafford had listened to prophecies regarding when the king would die, are generally considered to be trumped-up. It was once maintained that Wolsey was behind the matter, but there is no hard evidence for this.
Stafford was tried before a panel of 17 peers, but with the king's mind already decided, conviction was certain, and he was executed on Tower Hill. He was posthumously attainted by Act of Parliament on July 31, 1523.
Stafford married Alianore Percy, daughter of Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland. They had four children:
#Henry Stafford, 1st Baron Stafford, who later recovered some of the forfeited estates.
#Elizabeth, who married Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk
#Catherine, who married Ralph Neville, 4th Earl of Westmorland
#Mary, who married George Neville, 5th Baron Abergavenny
Stafford was portrayed by Charles Dance in the 2003 film 'Henry VIII', starring Ray Winstone, with numerous historical inaccuracies. In the film, Stafford organises a rebellion outside London, which is reported to Wolsey. The Henrican guards take the group by surprise, and Henry VIII meets Stafford outside London, who offers him the Royal ring, if he could "kill me first". Stafford thus makes an attempt while Henry had his back turned, but Henry anticipates this and throws him to the ground. Henry then orders his removal to the Tower of London.
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