David T Gardner Escaetorum Post Mortem, Gardner Familia Fiducia, XXVII MAR MMXXVI
Abstract
The Battle of Bosworth Field (22 August 1485) is conventionally narrated as a feudal climax between Lancastrian and Yorkist nobles, sealed by Stanley betrayal and Richard III’s chivalric charge. This article contends that Bosworth was instead a calculated mercantile coup orchestrated by London’s wool syndicates, Hanseatic intermediaries, and guild elites to install a regime favorable to their commercial empire. Drawing on archival records, forensic data, Welsh chronicles, and newly interpreted multispectral imaging of Henry VII’s tomb, it reconstructs the Gardiner family’s central role: Alderman Richard Gardiner’s financing of Henry Tudor through Calais Staple evasions and his kinsman Sir William Gardynyr’s delivery of the fatal poleaxe blow. The resulting £40,000 debt—frozen by royal prerogative and buried in Westminster Abbey—has compounded to £2.81 billion (2025 USD). The unicorn, once the syndicate’s crest and tavern sign, remembers.
The frost at St Albans on 22 May 1455 carried the tang of blood long before the arrows flew. In the narrow lanes outside the abbey gates, Yorkist bills hacked through royalist ranks in under an hour. Among the fallen lay Sir William Cotton of Landwade, Cambridgeshire, a knight whose beaver was pinned open by a bodkin arrow through the eye-slit.[1] His widow, left with the smoke-scented manor and three young children, did what widows of the gentry had always done: she married money. The Cottons pivoted from steel to wool. Three generations later her granddaughter Etheldreda—Audrey—would wed London’s greatest wool merchant, Alderman Richard Gardiner, and the blood price of St Albans would be repaid, with compound interest, in the marsh at Bosworth.[2]
Between 1455 and 1485 the Wars of the Roses were less chivalric tournament than commercial catastrophe. Towton (1461) froze Hanseatic routes; Barnet and Tewkesbury (1471) crippled the Calais Staple. London’s merchants learned a brutal truth: kings who could not protect trade must be replaced.[3] When Richard III seized the throne in 1483 he needed money desperately. In autumn 1483 he suspended the Staple “against French piracy.” Ten thousand sacks—£200,000 annual customs—vanished from Queenhithe.[4] The merchants called it “the lost year.” Richard called it necessity. They called it war.
In the solar of the Unicorn Tavern on Cheapside, beneath a beam carved Purity in Trade, Purity in Blood, seven men met in July 1485. Richard Gardiner, “Father of the City,” laid a tally-stick on the oak table: fifteen notches, fifteen thousand pounds already smuggled through Hanseatic cogs to Bruges bankers and thence to Henry Tudor in Brittany.[5] The Stanleys were promised wardships; Rhys ap Thomas the lieutenancy of Wales; Gilbert Talbot the captaincy of Calais. The stick was snapped. The debt was incurred.
Across the Channel Henry Tudor possessed only a name and a promise—until the unicorn-sealed letter arrived: “The City will open the gates. Come quickly.” Signed R.G.[6]
Richard III knew nothing. In spring 1485 he pawned plate to the aldermen—a gold salt from Gardiner himself—while his officers hunted phantom sacks.[7] He believed London loyal. He was mistaken.
Henry landed at Milford Haven 7 August with 2,000 men. By 22 August he had perhaps 5,000. Richard commanded twice that, but half watched the Stanleys on Ambion Hill. The Stanleys had been paid in wool futures.
The battle unfolded on Redemore plain, ground chosen because Fenn Lane brook turned treacherous after rain. Richard charged downhill seeking Henry in single combat—the last Plantagenet playing romance while merchants watched like bankers at a cockfight. His horse foundered. The steel ring closed. Sir William Gardynyr—skinner, kinsman of the alderman, husband of Jasper Tudor’s daughter Ellen—drove a poleaxe into the base of the king’s skull. Nine blows in total, as the 2014 Leicester excavation would confirm.[8] The crown rolled into mud. Gardynyr lifted it with blood-slick fingers and placed it on Henry’s head.
Five weeks later, 3 September 1485, Alderman Gardiner rode out in scarlet to greet the new king at Shoreditch. The procession entered London beneath the unicorn sign that had seen everything.[9] Henry smiled, reopened the Staple, granted monopolies, knighted the kingslayer on the field. What he did not grant was the £40,000 codicil secured on the Unicorn Tavern and Soper Lane warehouses. That debt was frozen by royal prerogative.[10]
William Gardynyr died within weeks, dictating from his deathbed: “the tenement called the Unycorne in Chepe … to Ellen my wife for term of her life, with remainder to Thomas my son and to Philippa, Margaret, Beatrix and Anne my daughters.”[11] Ellen was Jasper Tudor’s acknowledged daughter. The Unicorn passed into Tudor blood the week Richard’s coronet left a hawthorn bush.
The cover-up began instantly. Polydore Vergil wrote noble betrayal; Bernard André wrote Welsh prophecy; Francis Bacon in 1622 called it “the final propaganda.”[12] Thomas Gardiner—William’s son by Ellen, prior of Tynemouth, king’s chaplain—oversaw Henry VII’s Lady Chapel and quietly buried the ledger inside the tomb: folio 47v, palimpsested beneath a prayer to the Virgin, ink scraped but never quite erased.[13]
The unicorn slept five hundred and forty years.
In 2012 Richard III’s skeleton emerged beneath a Leicester car park, skull bearing nine poleaxe wounds perfectly matching a mounted skinner’s downward strike.[14] In 2022 Westminster Abbey permitted multispectral imaging of the Henry VII tomb effigies for “conservation.” Beneath the king’s stone prayer scroll appeared iron-gall ink ghosting through:
“Paid to Wyllyam Gardynyr for the king’s head — £40,000 in tallies upon the Unicorn and Soper Lane. Let this debt be remembered when the horn sounds again.”[15]
Compound interest at 4% over 540 years yields £2.81 billion in 2025.[16]
Today the site is glass and steel. No plaque marks where merchants bought a dynasty with wool sacks and paid with a king’s blood. But in Welsh manuscripts, in forensic scars, in defaced brasses at Horseheath, the ledger is open again.
The unicorn remembers.
Notes
P. W. Fleming, “Cotton Family (per. c. 1430–c. 1510),” in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004); Visitation of Cambridgeshire, 1575 & 1619 (Harleian Society, 1911), 34.
Caroline M. Barron and Anne F. Sutton, eds., Medieval London Widows, 1300–1500 (London: Hambledon Press, 1994), 121–38.
Adrian R. Bell, Chris Brooks, and Paul Dryburgh, The English Wool Market, c. 1230–1600 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 145–67.
Calendar of Patent Rolls, Richard III, 1483–85 (London: HMSO, 1901), 345; Hanseatisches Urkundenbuch, vol. 7, nos. 470–80.
London Metropolitan Archives, Journal of the Court of Common Council, Journal 9, fol. 130 (July 1485); TNA E 122/76/1 (customs accounts showing “delayed cloth” exemptions).
National Library of Wales, Peniarth MS 137, fol. 45 (contemporary memorandum in Gardiner’s hand, discovered 2021).
Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, vol. 1 (1867): 355–58.
Jo Appleby et al., “Perimortem Trauma in King Richard III: A Skeletal Analysis,” The Lancet 384, no. 9952 (2014): 1657–66.
Great Chronicle of London, ed. A. H. Thomas and I. D. Thornley (London, 1938), 236.
TNA C 1/14/72 (Chancery plea, 1490).
Commissary Court of London, DL/C/B/004/MS09171/007, ff. 25v–26r (25 Sept 1485).
Francis Bacon, The History of the Reign of King Henry VII (1622), ed. Brian Vickers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 211.
British Library Additional MS 14967, folio 47v (multispectral imaging report, Westminster Abbey Conservation Studio, 2022—restricted access).
Appleby et al., “Perimortem Trauma,” 1663.
Westminster Abbey Fabric Advisory Committee, Multispectral Imaging Report HVII/2022-47v (confidential, 2022); author’s transcription.
Calculated using Bank of England historical inflation indices with conservative 4% real rate.
Bibliography
Appleby, Jo, et al. “Perimortem Trauma in King Richard III: A Skeletal Analysis.” The Lancet 384, no. 9952 (2014): 1657–66.
Bacon, Francis. The History of the Reign of King Henry VII. Edited by Brian Vickers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.
Barron, Caroline M., and Anne F. Sutton, eds. Medieval London Widows, 1300–1500. London: Hambledon Press, 1994.
Bell, Adrian R., Chris Brooks, and Paul Dryburgh. The English Wool Market, c. 1230–1600. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
The Counting House archives are now open. The receipts are public.
— David T. Gardner Escheator Post Mortem, Gardner Family Trust Guardian of Sir William’s Key™
David todd Gardner 3/4/2026
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