- Source: The Rose of Rouen
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The Rose of Rouen is a fifteenth-century carol, written after the Battle of Towton in 1461, eulogizing the Yorkist leader and later King Edward IV, Edward, Earl of March.
Historical context
Before the Battle of Towton took place on 29 March 1461, Queen Margaret, wife of Henry VI of England, led the Lancastrian army south, fresh from victory over the Yorkists at the Battle of Wakefield.
Etymology
The title of the poem reflects its subject. King Edward, son of Richard, Duke of York, had been born in Rouen, France, in 1442, while his father was on campaign. He was, as a young man, described by contemporaries as taller than average, extremely fit and handsome. His cognizance was a rose en soleil, and so was nick-named the Rose of Rouen. This also reinforced his noble parenting as his mother, Cecilly Neville, in praise of her beauty, was called "The Rose of Raby," after the castle of her birth. Edward's connection with the rose continued into his reign, and coins known as "rose nobles" were issued. Edward's birthplace was an important factor in his favour when he was elected king in 1461, as it was thought an omen that Normandy—only recently lost to France in the Hundred Years' War—would be returned to the English.
Creation
The poem is one of many politically-orientated pieces from the period, and plays heavily on the North—South divide. The army that Margaret brings to the gates of London was northern. Yorkist propaganda heavily emphasised its barbaric nature, particularly fuelling rumours that the Lancastrians were sacking towns as it marched deeper south. The rumours had fertile soil: because, historian Margaret Cron has said, "fear of barbarians from the north was a race memory in southern minds." The Rose of Rouen was written on the premise that not only would northern lords over-run the south, but more, that "they would then live in it and take what they needed including wives and daughters." This is the fate, says the poem, that Edward of York saved England from.
Text
Like other political poetry of the period, it is careful to identify its protagonists by their cognizances rather than naming them: Edward, of course, is a white rose, his father Richard of York, Duke of York, is a falcon and fetterlock, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick a ragged staff, his uncle William Neville, Lord Fauconberg a fish hook, and John Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk by a white lion.
The Rose of Rouen's style has been described as one of "confident Yorkist triumphalism" as it concentrates on the success of Edward's strategy, from the original London muster to Edward's increasing popularity as he marched north (in which, of course, he swelled his army even more). Hence the long list of nobles (and their heraldic symbols) that the poem presents is another aspect of the propaganda, as historically, at Towton, the Queen had the bulk of the English nobility in the Lancastrian army; Edward, on the other hand, had only the Duke of Norfolk, the Earls of Warwick and Arundel, and Lord Fauconberg with him.
= Heraldic identification of the nobility
=Notes
References
= Bibliography
=Beadle, R. (2002). "Fifteenth-century Political Verses From the Holkham Archives". Medium Ævum. 71: 101–121. doi:10.2307/43630392. JSTOR 43630392. OCLC 67118740.
Crawford, A. (2007). The Yorkists: The History of a Dynasty. London: Hambledon Continuum. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-84725-197-8.
Cron, B. M. (1999). "Margaret of Anjou and the Lancastrian March on London, 1461". The Ricardian. 11: 590–615. OCLC 906456722.
Haigh, P. A. (2001). From Wakefield to Towton: The Wars of the Roses. Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-0-85052-8251.
Jewell, H. M. (1994). The North-South Divide: The Origins of Northern Consciousness in England. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-38044.
McLean, T. (2014). Medieval English Gardens. New York: Courier Corporation. ISBN 978-0-486-79494-5.
Schirmer, W. F. (1961). John Lydgate: A Study in the Culture of the XVth Century. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 109. OCLC 978910916.
Strickland, A.; Strickland, E. (2010). Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman Conquest (digitally repr. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-019712.
External links
Two stanzas, cited from Historical Poems of the XIVth and XVth Centuries.