How dangerous were the threats to Henry VII's government?
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- Thu Feb 26 2004

Have a little read: ... How dangerous were the threats to Henry VII's government? During Henry VII's reign, he as king had three main rebellions. Two, being the Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck uprisings. The third, being the Cornish Rebellion. Lambert Simnel was the first pretender to the throne. He was a ten-year-old boy who looked just like Richard of York, Edward IV's youngest sons. The other pretender to the English throne was Perkin Warbeck. Warbeck also claimed to be Richard. Finally, the Cornish Rebellion, was a serious threat to Henry VII, as he was having money trouble and could not fund that big an army. In 1486, a small ten-year-old boy appeared, claiming that he was the real Richard of York, heir to the throne. Lambert Simnel was from Oxford and the son of an organ maker. The man who engineered the rumour was Richard Symonds, a priest also from Oxford. Due to the defeat at
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