Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
1470–1483
Prince of Wales
Edward was born in sanctuary at Westminster in November 1470, during the brief period when his father had been deposed and Henry VI temporarily restored. He entered the world already entangled in political crisis, though the family's fortunes would stabilise quickly after his father's return. He spent most of his childhood at Ludlow Castle, which served as the administrative centre for the Council of Wales and the Marches. His household was well run and his education carefully supervised, preparing him for the kingship that seemed likely but never arrived. He was described as serious and capable for his age, with a strong memory and genuine interest in learning.
Preparation for a role can be thorough and genuine even when the role itself is never fulfilled.
April 1483
Father's death
When Edward IV died in April 1483, the transition should have been managed by the royal council and the boy's guardians. Instead, it immediately became a contest between two power centres: the Woodville family of the boy's mother, Queen Elizabeth, who surrounded him at Ludlow, and his uncle Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who was the most powerful lord in the north of England. Both sides understood that whoever controlled the young king effectively controlled England. The council was divided, and Richard moved swiftly, intercepting the royal party as it travelled toward London. Within days, the dynamics of the reign had changed entirely.
A child king's accession creates a vacuum that competing adults rush to fill, often with destructive results.
May 1483
Seized on the road
At Stony Stratford on 30 April 1483, Richard of Gloucester made his decisive move. He met the king's party, dismissed or arrested the Woodville lords accompanying him, including his uncle Anthony Rivers and his half-brother Richard Grey, and took personal charge of the young king. The action was framed as protecting the boy from dangerous influence, but it effectively removed any independent Woodville power from the equation. Edward was brought to London and initially lodged in the Bishop of London's palace, then moved to the royal apartments in the Tower of London, which in that period were also used as royal lodgings before coronations. That ambiguity mattered: the Tower could be presented as preparation for kingship even as it became the place where his freedom disappeared.
Framing a seizure of power as protection is one of the oldest and most effective political manoeuvres.
May–June 1483
Tower confinement
The weeks in the Tower saw Edward's position steadily diminish. His mother, sensing danger, had already taken sanctuary at Westminster with his younger brother Richard. Preparations for the coronation were made and then delayed. Richard of Gloucester consolidated his hold over the council, arresting and executing key figures including Lord Hastings, a former ally of Edward IV who had apparently resisted Gloucester's growing ambitions. The young king was described by one observer as becoming visibly anxious, saying that he had put his trust in his uncle and hoped he would not be deceived. The atmosphere around him was shifting from protective custody toward something more ominous.
When every person around a captive is removed or replaced, the captivity itself changes in nature.
June 1483
Declared illegitimate
In late June 1483, a petition was presented to Richard of Gloucester arguing that Edward IV's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville had been invalid because of a pre-contract with another woman, Lady Eleanor Butler. If true, this made both Edward V and his younger brother illegitimate and incapable of inheriting the throne. The argument was of dubious legal strength, but it served its political purpose. Parliament — or a body acting in parliament's name — accepted the petition, and the boys were formally set aside. Richard was then invited to take the crown. Edward V, not yet crowned and only weeks into his reign, was king no longer.
Legal arguments, however strained, can provide the formal cover needed to justify actions already decided in advance.
July 1483
Richard III takes the throne
Richard III's coronation on 6 July 1483 left the two princes in an impossible position. Still alive and still with a claim, however now formally denied, they represented the most obvious focus for any opposition to the new king. They were still being seen in the Tower grounds in the early summer, but sightings become progressively rarer as the weeks passed. The Italian diplomat Dominic Mancini, who left England shortly after the coronation, wrote that the princes had been seen less and less frequently and that people were already fearing the worst. The window in which they might have been freed or acknowledged was closing.
A deposed heir who remains alive is always a problem for the ruler who removed them.
Late 1483
Disappearance
No reliable account records when Edward V died or precisely how. By the time Buckingham's rebellion in October 1483 appealed to him as a Yorkist claimant, he appears to have been already gone. The most widely accepted view is that both princes were killed sometime in the summer or autumn of 1483, on the orders of or with the knowledge of Richard III, who had the clearest motive and opportunity. The discovery of bones beneath a staircase in the Tower in 1674, reinterred in Westminster Abbey, added physical texture to the story without resolving it. Other theories have pointed to Henry Stafford Duke of Buckingham or even Henry Tudor, but these remain minority views.
Some historical questions remain genuinely unanswerable, and their openness says something about how power operates without accountability.
1483–1485
The princes' absence
Even without confirmation of their deaths, the princes' absence from public life created a persistent cloud over Richard III's rule. Their mother and sisters remained in sanctuary at Westminster for a period, a visible expression of distrust. Rumours of their deaths circulated widely both in England and abroad, and the moral weight of the charge attached itself to Richard's reign even when no one could prove it. When Henry Tudor invaded in 1485 and offered himself as the man who would restore stability, the princes' fate — and the suspicion around it — was already part of the political atmosphere. A king suspected of killing children finds it very difficult to build lasting loyalty.
Suspected atrocity can undermine a reign even when nothing is proven.
Post-1483
The Princes in the Tower
The story of the Princes in the Tower has never lost its hold on the historical imagination. Edward V's brief reign and sudden disappearance encapsulate many of the most disturbing features of medieval politics: the vulnerability of children in succession crises, the ruthlessness of dynastic ambition, and the ease with which power can override justice. Later tradition, shaped heavily by Tudor writers including Sir Thomas More and later William Shakespeare, fixed Richard III as the unambiguous villain. Modern historians are more cautious about evidence, motive, and the reliability of hostile sources, but the fundamental uncertainty remains. Edward V is remembered not for anything he did, which was almost nothing, but for what was done to him and what his disappearance revealed about the end of Yorkist rule.
Sometimes a historical figure matters most not for what they achieved, but for what their fate reveals about the world that surrounded them.