Most of the European rulers do not …

Years: 1396 - 1539
Most of the European rulers do not believe Henry will survive long, and are thus willing to shelter claimants against him.

The first plot against him is the Stafford and Lovell Rebellion of 1486, which presents no serious threat, but Richard III's nephew John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln, hatches another attempt the following year.

Using a peasant boy named Lambert Simnel, who poses as Edward, Earl of Warwick (the real Warwick is locked up in the Tower of London), he leads an army of two thousand German mercenaries paid for by Margaret of York into England.

They are defeated and de la Pole killed at the difficult Battle of Stoke, where the loyalty of some of the royal troops to Henry had been questionable.

The king, realizing that Simnel had been merely a dupe, employs him in the royal kitchen.

A more serious menace is Perkin Warbeck, a Flemish youth who poses as Edward IV's son Richard.

Again enjoying the support of Margaret of York, he invades England four times from 1495–1497 before he is finally captured and put in the Tower of London.

Both Warbeck and the Earl of Warwick are too dangerous to keep around even in captivity, and Henry has to execute them in 1499 before Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain will allow their daughter Catherine to come to England and marry his son Arthur.

In 1497, Henry defeats Cornish rebels marching on London.

The rest of his Henry VII's reign is relatively peaceful, despite worries concerning succession after the death of his wife Elizabeth of York in 1503.

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