The Mystery of the Princes by Audrey Williamson
(Sutton, 2002, ISBN 075092943X)
Audrey Williamson's assessment of the
evidence surrounding the disappearance of the two Princes in the Tower,
Edward V and his younger brother, Richard, Duke of York, is as frustrating
as it is enlightening. Williamson does well in defence of Richard III,
playing her part in the campaign to restore his reputation after hundreds
of years of apparently unwarranted demonisation at the behest, or at
least, in the interests of those who followed him on the throne of
England, Henry VII and his second son, Henry VIII. She tears apart the
loosely collated near-contemporary indications that Richard was an inhuman
monster, responsible for not only the murder of his nephews, but also the
deaths of this brothers, Edward IV and George, Duke of Clarence and
perhaps even his wife, Anne Neville, undermining the credibility of
sources that have provided the basis for the myth of the monster. But her
forensic demolition of the evidence that has been used to propagate the
myth, mostly famously by the likes of Sir Thomas More and Shakespeare, is
not matched by the quality of evidence presented to bolster her argument
that Richard was in fact an early version of a Renaissance Prince, albeit
an asexual one. She is prone to flights of fancy in favour of her hero,
based on little more than conjecture and supposition to the extent that
her argument becomes as weak that of those who have sought to undermine
Richard III and his legacy.
Research presented in a more scholarly
manner seems to indicate that Richard was not responsible for the
disappearance, let alone the murders, of his nephews, and thus that
Williamson is correct in her overall thesis. It is unfortunate the she
did not choose to share with readers the basis for some of her
suppositions. The Mystery of the Princes is, however, a very readable
introduction to one of the most tantalising mysteries in English history.
There seems little room any longer to consider Richard III as the
perpetrator. Some have suggested that Henry VII had more cause to do away
with the princes, but Williamson demonstrates, in one of the finer
sections of the book, that even this theory is doubtful. But what, then,
did happen to the young brothers, housed in the Tower of London at the
beginning of Richard's reign in 1483? Williamson has no conclusive
answer, but leaves the reader with tantalising possibilities.