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St Albans
- 22nd May 1455
There were two battles during the English Wars
of the Roses fought in or near the town of St Albans.
The first Battle of St Albans
was the first battle of the war and was fought on May 22nd 1455.
Richard Duke of York and his ally, Richard
Neville, Earl of Warwick defeated the Lancastrians under Edmund
Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset, who was killed. York captured King Henry
VI of England and had himself appointed Constable of England.
2nd St Albans
- 17th February 1461
The second Battle of St Albans
was fought February 22, 1461. With the defeat and death of the Duke of
York the previous December (at the Battle
of Wakefield, and York's son and heir busy in the west (where the Battle
of Mortimer's Cross was fought a few days before the engagement at
St Albans), the way was clear for the Lancastrians (lead by Queen
Margaret ) to march south towards London, pillaging and sacking as
they went.
They were intercepted near St Albans by forces
commanded by the Earl of Warwick. Warwick had his men set up an array of
defenses, including ditches and spikes, but they were surprised and
defeated before these were complete.
The Lancastrians captured King Henry, who
supposedly spent the battle sitting under a tree, singing. But they did
not press their advantage by marching south to London. The reasons are
not clear; it may be that their reputation for pillaging had preceded
them as the Londoners would not open their gates.

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