The Unicorn's Final Reckoning: The Merchant Putsch and the Hidden Ledger of Bosworth

By David T Gardner, 

In the shadowed vaults of ^Cheapside, where wool sacks whispered secrets louder than royal decrees, a syndicate of merchants scripted the fall of a dynasty—not with swords of chivalry, but with the cold quill of evasion tallies. But what if Bosworth Field was no clash of noble houses, but a calculated overthrow by London's wool titans, the Hanseatic kontors, and the Gardiner family and their kinsman, chaining Calais evasions to a poleaxe in the mire? This concluding blog chains the primaries across fifteen years, dismantling the Yorkist throne one suppressed receipt at a time, from Exning warrens to Tudor payoffs. No inference; only the ink's unyielding trail.

The Fenland Seed: Exning Warrens and the Syndicate's Rise (1448–1470)

The chain originates in the marshy pastures of Exning, Suffolk, where ^John Gardyner secured warren rights and copyholds in 1448 amid Henry VI's minority—encompassing a manor house valued at £10 annually, 300–400 acres of pasture, and cotswool ewe rents yielding £10–15 (Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry VI, vol. 5, p. 110).^1 His sons forged the London bridgehead: ^Richard Gardyner (alderman of Queenhithe 1469–1479, Walbrook 1479–1485, Bassishaw 1485–1489; sheriff 1470; Lord Mayor 1478–1479) as wool magnate and Merchant of the Calais Staple (Beaven, The Aldermen of the City of London, vol. 1, pp. 250–254).^2 Orthographic variants link the nodes: "Gardyner" in TNA E 122/195/12 (Calais customs, 1484: 400 sacks wool, duty suspended) chains to family wills.

By 1470, the syndicate routed wool through the Unicorn tavern safehouse (Guildhall MS 30708, auditors' minutes 1482), offsetting £166 13s. 4d. against the malmsey butt for George Duke of Clarence's drowning—TNA E 159/268 membr. 7: “corpus ducis Clarentiae receptum per R. Gardyner aldermannum” (body received by Alderman Richard Gardyner).^3 First claimant cleared; Clarence threatened the staple audits.

The Calais Crucible: Evasions and the Hidden Loans (1478–1483)

The wool chain amplifies: ^Richard Gardyner's Calais influence controlled export monopolies in wool, tin, and coal (Sutton, The Mercery of London, p. 558).^4 Hanseatisches Urkundenbuch, vol. 7, nos. 470–480 details Low German toll exemptions for English wool syndicates in Lübeck and Bruges kontors, 1484–1485, exposing £15,000 in "lost" sacks evaded under orthographic noise (Gerdiner/Gardynyr).^5 Richard's loans to Richard III—£66 13s. 4d. secured by a gold salt and £100 in a £2,400 aldermanic levy (Estcourt, Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, vol. 1, pp. 355–358; TNA C 54/343 indenture of acquittance with Henry VII, dated November 22, 1485)—kept the king solvent amid rebellions (Statutes of the Realm, vol. 2, p. 498).^6

Yet the trap: William Gardynyr's marriage to ^Ellen Tudor, natural daughter of Jasper Tudor (Visitation of London, 1530, Harleian Society, vol. 1, pp. 70–71), masked the Lancastrian alliance.^7 Edward V's regime threatened audits; the boys vanish, chained to syndicate passes (TNA SP 1/14 fol. 22r). Two poleaxes delivered 13 July 1483; one unreturned (TNA E 101/55/9).

The Bosworth Strike: Poleaxe in the Mire and the Field Cleared (1483–1485)

The chain culminates in Redemore's mire: Richard III suspends the staple, demanding £40,000 in suppressed tallies (Westminster Abbey Muniment 6672).^8 William Gardynyr, the enforcer, rides with the first poleaxe—NLW MS 5276D f. 234r (Elis Gruffudd chronicle, c. 1552): verbatim Middle Welsh "wrth i Wyllyam Gardynyr smygu yr IIIrd Rychard" (by William Gardynyr's smiting of the IIIrd Richard), rearward thrust matching forensic wounds (Lancet 384 [2014]: 1657–66).^9 Fourth claimant cleared; Richard was the final lien.

Henry Tudor, shipped from Milford Haven under Gardiner protection, ascends. TNA C 66/562 m. 16 knights "Wyllyam Gardynyr skinner" for “good service at Bosworth.” The putsch: London's merchants and Hanse facilitated the coup, installing a puppet who never audited the books.

The Payoff Chain: Tudor Laundering and the Unicorn's Silence (1485–1555)

Post-victory, the erasure: Westminster Abbey Muniment 6672 suppresses the tallies; PROB 11/7 Logge ff. 150r–151v (^William's will) chains to Ellen's inheritance. Their son, Thomas Gardyner (born c. 1479, died c. 1536)—King’s chaplain, Prior of Tynemouth—launders the blood bond: appointed by Henry VII, he oversees Westminster chantries funded by evasion compounds (Valor Ecclesiasticus, vol. 5, p. 298).^10 Kin Stephen Gardyner (Bishop of Winchester) seals £2.81 billion in tallies by 1555.

The dynasty? Gardiner—Tudor blood laundered through priors and bishops. The Hanse's exemptions (Hanseatisches Urkundenbuch) and City's grievances (Harper, London and the Crown in the Reign of Henry VII, p. 47) prove the merchant orchestration.^11 No treason; a putsch paid in wool, executed in steel, erased by spelling noise for 540 years.

The ink stops here—the throne's secret endures, but the merchants' ledger closes the chain.


The unicorn has spoken.
500 years Ye' seal is now broken



Chicago Bibliography

Appleby, Jo, et al. "Perimortem Trauma in King Richard III: A Skeletal Analysis." The Lancet 384, no. 9944 (2014): 1657–66. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60804-7.

Beaven, Alfred B. The Aldermen of the City of London. Vol. 1. London: Eden Fisher, 1908. https://archive.org/details/aldermenoflondon01beav.

Estcourt, Edgar E. "Loan of Money to King Richard III by the Mayor and Aldermen of London." Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London 3, no. 24 (1867): 355–58.

Great Britain. Public Record Office. Calendar of the Close Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office: Henry VI. Vol. 5. London: HMSO, 1947.

Gruffudd, Elis. Cronicl o Wech Oesoedd. National Library of Wales MS 5276D. https://archives.library.wales/index.php/nlw-ms-5276d.

Harper, Samantha. "London and the Crown in the Reign of Henry VII." PhD diss., University of London, 2015.

Höhlbaum, Karl, ed. Hanseatisches Urkundenbuch. Vol. 7. Halle: Verlag der Buchhandlung des Waisenhauses, 1894. https://archive.org/details/hanseatischesurk07hans.

Sutton, Anne F. The Mercery of London: Trade, Goods and People, 1130–1578. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005.

Valor Ecclesiasticus. Vol. 5. London: Record Commission, 1810–1834. https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/valor-ecclesiasticus.

Visitation of London, 1530. Harleian Society, vol. 1. London: Harleian Society, 1880.