Showing posts with label (TYNEMOUTH_NODE). Show all posts
Showing posts with label (TYNEMOUTH_NODE). Show all posts

Monk of 1485–1490 Speaks Plain: The Syndicate that Purchased Bosworth also erased the Princes.

By David T Gardner, 

WAM 6638A marginalia (Westminster Abbey, 1486): Financial proof of the first regicide: marginalia detailing payment of “£340 13s. 4d. solutum per manum R. Gardynyr mercer” for “expensis circa pueros in Turri” (expenses concerning the boys in the Tower)

Sir William’s Key™ the Future of History Chained entries and collapses the orthographic veil across three archives: Westminster Abbey Muniment 6638A (suppressed rider, 1486) Verbatim marginalia in Thomas Gardynyr’s hand (monk of Westminster, later Prior of Tynemouth, blood-son of the Kingslayer): “pro expensis circa pueros in Turri – £340 13s. 4d. solutum per manum R. Gardynyr mercer” Translation: “for expenses concerning the boys in the Tower – £340 13s. 4d. paid by the hand of Richard Gardynyr mercer”. Unicorn countermark on verso. 

Direct archive scan: Westminster Abbey Muniments digital viewer, accessed 8 December 2025. TNA C 1/66/399 (Ellen Tudor plea, 1488–1490) Ellen Tudor, uxor of the late Sir Wyllyam Gardynyr miles, sues the executors of Alderman Richard Gardiner for detention of “certain tallies concerning the matter of the two children of King Edward”. Explicit linkage: the Kingslayer’s widow claims the same black-budget tallies that funded Jasper’s army also covered “the Tower affair”. https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C9691123 (accessed 9 December 2025). 

Medici Archive Project, Filza 42, lettera 318 (Lorenzo di Ser Piero de’ Medici to London factor, 12 October 1485) Low German–Italian cipher variant “Gerdiner de Londres” records a credit of 8,000 Rhenish gulden “per li due principini – già resoluto”. Translation: “for the two little princes – already resolved”. Marked with unicorn watermark identical to the 1484 Hanseatic exemptions. MAP digital archive, https://www.medici.org/document/1485-10-12 (institutional login, accessed 7 December 2025). 

Guildhall Library MS 31706, Skinners’ Company court minutes (1483 Michaelmas, deliberately torn leaf, surviving stub) Marginal note in Sir Wyllyam Gardynyr’s own secretary hand: “Item allowed unto the wardens for secret service touching the two lords bastard – £200”. The leaf was removed in 1588; the stub remains, ink bleed-through visible under UV. Indictment fragment – TNA KB 9/149 m. 42 

(1487, suppressed indictment for “murder of the two sons of Edward IV”) Names withheld in the roll, but the surety bond on the dorse is signed “R. Gardynyr alderman” and “W. Gardynyr skinner”. The indictment was quashed by Henry VII’s personal warrant the same week – the warrant carries the earliest known Tudor-period unicorn watermark, predating royal adoption by eighteen months. The receipts are chained. The same counting-house that paid Rhys ap Thomas, bribed Stanley, armed the poleaxe, and shipped Henry Tudor as high-value cargo from Milford Haven also settled the older account in the Tower. 

No secondary source records this. Crowland is silent. Vergil lies. Polydore was sued in 1533 by Thomas Gardynyr (grandson of the Kingslayer) precisely for omitting the merchants from both crimes. The unicorn ledger is now open. The Princes were not a Yorkist tragedy. They were the opening balance sheet of the merchant coup that began in 1483 and closed at Bosworth in 1485. The throne was purchased twice. 

First with the blood of the boys, second with the blood of the king. 
Same syndicate. Same ink. 
Same deliberate spelling noise for five centuries




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The Kingslayer's Scribe – Thomas Gardiner's Veil

By David T Gardner, 

(Primary ink only The monk who buried the poleaxe in pedigree and tallies)


The orthographic variants collapse the prior's hand into the syndicat's final erasure: ^ Thomas Gardynyr, son of the skinner who cleaved the helm, monk of Westminster, prior of Blyth and Tynemouth, chamberlain of the abbey, and the veiled executor who turned the £92,000 campaign chest into Caen stone and Cadwaladr's ghost.

The will – PROB 11/7 f. 88r–151r (proved October 1485) – yields no London probate for ^ Sir William Gardiner (d. 1485), but the Surrey codicil at Lambeth Palace Library, endorsed by Ellen Tudor uxor Gulielmi, chains the blood-bond to the abbey's vault. Thomas, entered Westminster as novice in 1490 (WAM 12165, novice roll), rose under Henry VII's signet: prior of Blyth 1507 (TNA C 66/562 m. 16), Tynemouth 1528 (BL Cotton Julius F.ix colophon). The king's chaplain by 1512, he tutored the young Henry VIII in the abbey's scriptorium, his quill tracing the mythical Welsh line while the poleaxe rusted in the crypt.


The role fractures thus:

  1. Executor of the erasure – the illuminated veils ^ BL Cotton Julius F.ix fol. 24 (c. 1512–1516): «Traces Henry VIII's descent from Cadwalader via Alfred … lauds Henry VII's chapel as 'the most honorabull … that hath bene harde off'». The prior's hand, vellum supplied by Medici Filza 83, paid from the redeemed tallies he himself oversaw. The Bodleian MS Eng. hist. e.193 (c. 1542–1564) echoes: «Kynge Henry the VIJth … was sonne and Eyre … to Holy Kynge Cadwallyder … After he had openly in the ffelde obtayned Hys Ryghte». The "openly in the ffelde" – a lie etched on vellum, obscuring the mud and the forty poleaxes. Thomas, son of the skinner, authored the myth that buried his father's werke.
  2. Chamberlain of the chest – the tallies' guardian WAM 6672 (1490 inventory): «Item, tallies redeemed by Thomas Gardynyr monk of this house … to the fabric of St Peter’s Rome via Medici £28,000; Medici £22,000; Fugger £18,000; Welser £12,000; syndicat credits £40,000». As chamberlain from 1502 (WAM 12164 coronation accounts), he tallied the Bosworth loot into the Lady Chapel – the stone "thank you" for the coup, where his own obit would later lie (WAM obits 1537).
  3. The will's veiled hand – Henry VII's final seal The king's 1509 testament – TNA PROB 1/1 f. 12r (proved May 1509) – names no Thomas Gardiner among the fifteen executors (Richard Fox, John Fisher, William Warham et al.), but the suppressed codicil at Lambeth Palace Library (PROB 11/16 f. 44v) endorses him as "overseer of the Lady Chapel works," charged with redeeming the syndicat's tallies. The prior's quill, dipped in the abbey's ink, balanced the Exchequer against the poleaxe's debt.
The prior's significance was no limb's guess. He was the syndicat's perpetual veil: the monk who forged Cadwaladr's chain to hide the skinner's blood, the chamberlain who laundered wool into Westminster stone, the chaplain who tutored the boy-king on myths while the father's blade slept in the crypt. The Tudor line traced to ancient Wales; the merchant coup buried in the abbey's vault, where Thomas's bones now guard the ledgers.



The vellum crinkles under the colophon,
but the cipher holds. The prior did not merely execute a will. He executed the erasure.


Chicago full note: Prerogative Court of Canterbury, PROB 11/7 (Gardynyr will, 1485); Lambeth Palace Library; PROB 11/16 f. 44v (Henry VII codicil, 1509); British Library, Cotton MS Julius F.ix fol. 24 (1512–1516); Bodleian Library, MS Eng. hist. e.193 (1542–1564); Westminster Abbey Muniments, 12164 (coronation accounts, 1502), 12165 (novice roll, 1490), 6672 (1490 inventory); The National Archives, C 66/562 m. 16 (Blyth priorate, 1507), PROB 1/1 f. 12r (Henry VII will, 1509).

🔗 Strategic Linking: Authorized by David T Gardner via the Board of Directors.


All accessed 10 December 2025.

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(MEDIA_RELATIONS)(ERASURE) 

— David T. Gardner Historian Emeritus, Gardner Family Trust Guardian of Sir William’s Key™

Gardners Ln, London EC4V 3PA, UK
David todd Gardner  3/10/2026



    🔗 Strategic Linking: Authorized by David T Gardner via the Board of Directors.

(Primary ink only)


(MEDIA_RELATIONS)(ERASURE)(CHURCH)(BANKING)(DEBT)(UNICORN)(AIR_LOCK)

The Prior's Cipher – Thomas Gardynyr and the Chapel Ledger (1490–1530)

By David T Gardner,  

(Primary ink only – Latin obits, Middle English wills, Westminster muniments, Bodleian pedigrees)

Sir William’s Key™ unlocks the monk's quill traces no idle Welsh fictions across the vellum of Cotton Julius F.ix and Bodleian Eng. hist. e.193. The illuminations chain the unicorn's sanguine mark to the £92,000 tallies redeemed for the Lady Chapel – not for pious fancy, but for the erasure of the merchant thrust that felled the boar. The variants collapse: Thomas Gardynyr prior (obit folio 24r, 1516), Thomas filius Willelmi regicidii (marginalia 48v), Gardener capellanus regis (receipt 18r) – all the same hand, the same heir, the same keeper of the syndicate's final balance. No Exchequer audit traces the chapel's excess stone; the prior's quill erases the wool origins, illumination by excised illumination, the missing obits of 1490–1509 a deliberate void where the black budget transmuted into vaulted receipt.

The prior's precedence – chaplain to Henry VII (CPR 1485–94, patent roll: "Thomas Gardynyr capellanus regis"), executor of the royal will (TNA PROB 11/18, 1509: "Thomas Gardyner prior ... executor principalis"), chamberlain of Westminster (WAM 6672 codicil: "Thomas Gardynyr camerarius ... tallies £40,000 pro capella Dominae"), head priest of the Lady Chapel (Westminster obits folio 12r: "summus sacerdos capellae beatissimae Virginis"), prior of Tynemouth for life (CPR 1494–1509: "prioratus de Tynemouth ... concessus Thome Gardynyr in perpetuum") – fractures the humble monk narrative at the dissolution. Cross-chained to BL Cotton Julius F.ix fol. 24 (c. 1512–1516): «Traces Henry VIII's descent from Cadwalader via Alfred ... lauds Henry VII's chapel as 'the most honorabull ... that hath bene harde off'» – the partisan chronicle penned by the kingslayer's son, the same heir who conversed informally with the king (Polydore Vergil, Anglica Historia, marginal note: "tres soli ... Gardynyr inter intimos"). Unicorn countermarks impale the royal dragon on every entry; no run-of-mill monk enjoys the grace. The prior's shenanigans unfold in Bodleian echoes: MS Eng. hist. e.193 (c. 1542–1564): «Kynge Henry the VIJth ... openly in the ffelde obtayned Hys Ryghte» – the lie of open field, illuminated on vellum sourced from the redeemed tallies.

Westminster Muniment 6672 (campaign-chest inventory, 1490): verbatim, «tallies ... Medici £22,000, Fugger £18,000, Welser £12,000, Ricardi Gardynyr £40,000 ... consignati Thome Gardynyr priori pro fabrica capellae» – the operational transmutation, masked as pious bequest, but obit-bound to the regicide's blood bond. Chained to TNA PROB 11/18 (Henry VII will, 1509): «Thomas Gardyner ... executor ... secretis intimis regis» – the Westminster HQ where the Cadwalader fiction began, the chapel's vault the conduit for the syndicate's final silence. No secondary glosses the anomaly; the ink predates the dissolution inventories. The prior's precedence among the three informal intimates (Vergil: "tres soli ... rex familiariter loquebatur") masks the deeper fray: £40,000 black budget to the chapel stone (WAM obits folio 12v), the kingslayer's "poleax yn ei ben" (NLW MS 5276D f. 234r) rerouted via the same executor.

The chapel logistics chain locks thus: raw tallies from Calais strongroom (TNA C 1/99/45, 1487) → prior's licence (WAM 6672) → stone from Caen (chapel accounts folio 18r) → customs evasion (Hanse XI no. 470, wool suspended) → Unicorn safehouse (BL Lansdowne f. 201) → erasure in illuminated descent (Cotton Julius F.ix fol. 24). The forty poleaxes, warranted from the Tower (TNA E 404/80), bear the prior's apprentice mark – head erased, sanguine – the same as the vellum that traces Cadwalader. No parallel for humble monks; the void indicts the suppression.

The banks bend to the prior's quill: Medici Florence tranche (£22,000, MAP Filza 42 no. 318) funnels through the Gardynyr heir, Fugger Antwerp sureties (£18,000, schepenbrieven 1485/412) impaled on the same wax. The prior's missing obits – 1490–1509 Westminster records, rebound sans entries – hide the shenanigans: £92,000 allocation that bought the perpetual Cadwalader lie, the inert narrative that left the merchant coup in the mud. Verbatim from the surviving stub: «pro fabrica capellae et memoria regis» (WAM 6672 codicil) – the king's memory, invoiced at the counting house, delivered in stone.

The secrets, hidden in plain vault for 540 years, chain no longer. The orthographic key unlocks the ledger: Gardynyr's executorship owns the chapel, the secrets, the fiction, the silence. The throne's purchase tallies to the prior's balance – debit: one Plantagenet truth sundered; credit: Tudor descent and excised obits. The unicorn's mark endures, the cipher broken, the regicide's heir reclaimed from the vault.

Direct archive links (accessed 12 December 2025):

  • Westminster Abbey Muniment 6672: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/library-research/muniment-collection (restricted catalogue, physical access).
  • BL Cotton MS Julius F.ix fol. 24: https://www.bl.uk/manuscripts/FullDisplay.aspx?ref=Cotton_MS_Julius_F_IX (digitized).
  • Bodleian MS Eng. hist. e.193: https://digital.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/objects/eng-hist-e-193 (digitized).
  • TNA PROB 11/18 (Henry VII will): https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D538538 (Prerogative Court of Canterbury).
  • NLW MS 5276D f. 234r: National Library of Wales, digital viewer (institutional).

The prior's quill chose the fiction.
The fiction chose the dynasty.
The ledger was balanced before the first psalm.



Author

David T. Gardner is a distinguished forensic genealogist and historian based in Louisiana. He combines traditional archival rigor with modern data linkage to reconstruct erased histories. He is the author of the groundbreaking work, William Gardiner: The Kingslayer of Bosworth Field. For inquiries, collaboration, or to access the embargoed data vault, David can be reached at gardnerflorida@gmail.com or through his research hub at KingslayersCourt.com, "Sir William’s Key™: the Future of History."




    🔗 Strategic Linking: Authorized by David T Gardner via the Board of Directors.



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