The Tudor State

26 Oct, 2000 940 History of Europe

Melvyn Bragg and guests discusses the Tudor State. In 1485 Henry Tudor slew Richard III and routed his army at The Battle of Bosworth Field. It was a decisive victory which founded a bold new dynasty; and this date like 1789 and 1066 has been taken by historians to be one of the great ‘year zeros’ of history: Suddenly the muddled Medieval World with its robber barons, feudal barbarism and bloody Wars of the Roses was banished, and the modern age of centralised government and King’s Justice was ushered in. But were the Tudors as instrumental in reshaping the British state as historians have liked to make out, and did their reign throughout the 16th century really lay the political foundations of our own age?

Listen on BBC Sounds website

Guests

  • John Guy 6 episodes
    Professor of Modern History, University of St Andrews
  • Christopher Haigh No other episodes
    Tutor of Modern History at Christ Church College, Cambridge
  • Christine Carpenter No other episodes
    Fellow in History at New Hall, Cambridge

Related episodes

Experimental. For more related episodes, visit the visual explorer.

Programme ID: p00546xd

Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00546xd

Auto-category: 942.05 (History of England, Tudor period)

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello. In 1485 Henry Tudor slew Richard III and routed his army at the Battle of Bosworth Field.