Margaret moves south, wreaking havoc as she …

Years: 1461 - 1461
February

Margaret moves south, wreaking havoc as she progresses, her army supporting itself by looting as it passes through the prosperous south of England.

In London, Warwick uses this as propaganda to reinforce Yorkist support throughout the south—the town of Coventry switches allegiance to the Yorkists.

Warwick fails to start raising an army soon enough and, without Edward's army to reinforce him, is caught off-guard by the Lancastrians' early arrival at St. Albans.

At the Second Battle of St. Albans on February 17, 1461, the Queen wins the Lancastrians' most decisive victory yet, and as the Yorkist forces flee they leave behind the bemused King Henry, who is found unharmed, sitting quietly beneath a tree singing.

The Queen having recovered control of her husband, Henry knights thirty Lancastrian soldiers immediately after the battle.

Two Yorkist knights (one of them Sir Thomas Kyriell, a veteran leader of the Hundred Years War), who had sworn to let him come to no harm, had remained with him throughout the battle.

In an illustration of the increasing bitterness of the war, Queen Margaret asks her seven-year-old son Edward of Westminster, how, not whether, the two knights are to die.

Edward, thus prompted, sends them to be beheaded.

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