Medieval England was never invaded by ice zombies,
but it was shaken by a power struggle between two noble families
and involving a massive cast of characters
with complex motives and shifting loyalties.
it's because the historical conflicts known as the Wars of the Roses
served as the basis for much of the drama in Game of Thrones.
The real-life seeds of war were sewn by the death of King Edward III in 1377.
Edward's oldest son had died before his father,
but his ten-year-old son, Richard II,
succeeded to the throne ahead of Edward's three surviving sons.
This skipping of an entire generation
left lingering claims to the throne among their various offspring,
particularly the Lancasters, descended from Edward's third son,
and the Yorks, descended from his fourth son.
comes from the symbols associated with the two families,
the white rose of York and the red rose of Lancaster.
The Lancasters first gained the throne
when Richard II was deposed by his cousin Henry IV in 1399.
their reign remained secure until 1422,
when Henry V's death in a military campaign
left an infant Henry VI as king.
Weak-willed and dominated by advisors,
Henry was eventually convinced to marry Margaret of Anjou to gain French support.
Margaret was beautiful, ambitious,
and ruthless in persecuting any threat to her power,
and she distrusted Richard of York, most of all.
York had been the King's close advisor and loyal General,
but was increasingly sidelined by the Queen,
who promoted her favorite supporters, like the Earls of Suffolk and Somerset.
York's criticism of their inept handling of the war against France
led to his exclusion from court and transfer to Ireland.
Meanwhile, mounting military failures,
and corrupt rule by Margaret and her allies
and in the midst of this chaos,
Richard of York returned with an army to arrest Somerset and reform the court.
Initially unsuccessful, he soon got his chance
when he was appointed Protector of the Realm
after Henry suffered a mental breakdown.
However, less than a year later,
and the Queen convinced him to reverse York's reforms.
York fled and raised an army once more.
Though he was unable to directly seize the throne,
he managed to be reinstated as Protector
and have himself and his heirs designated to succeed Henry.
after he was killed in battle with the Queen's loyalists.
His young son took up the claim and was crowned Edward IV.
Edward enjoyed great military success against the Lancasters.
while Margaret fled into exile
with their reportedly cruel son, Edward of Westminster.
But the newly crowned King made a tragic political mistake
by backing out of his arranged marriage with a French Princess
to secretly marry the widow of a minor Noble.
This alienated his most powerful ally, the Earl of Warwick.
Warwick allied with the Lancasters,
turned Edward's jealous younger brother, George, against him,
and even briefly managed to restore Henry as King,
the Lancaster Prince was killed in battle,
and Henry himself died in captivity not long after.
The rest of Edward IV's reign was peaceful,
but upon his death in 1483, the bloodshed resumed.
Though his twelve-year-old son was due to succeed him,
Edward's younger brother Richard III declared his nephews illegitimate
due to their father's secret marriage.
He assumed the regency himself and threw the boys in prison.
Though no one knows what ultimately became of them,
after a while, the Princes disappeared
and Richard's power seemed secure.
But his downfall would come only two years later
from across the narrow sea of the English Channel.
Henry Tudor was a direct descendant of the first Duke of Lancaster,
raised in exile after his father's death in a previous rebellion.
With Richard III's power grab causing a split in the York faction,
Henry won support for his royal claim.
Raising an army in France, he crossed the Channel in 1485
and quickly defeated Richard's forces.
And by marrying Elizabeth of York, elder sister of the disappeared Princes,
the newly crowned Henry VII joined the two roses,
finally ending nearly a century of war.
We often think of historical wars as decisive conflicts
with clearly defined winners and losers.
But the Wars of the Roses, like the fiction they inspired,