After an uneasy peace during which attempts at reconciliation failed, hostilities broke out again in 1459. Richard of York once again feared indictment for rebellion by a Great Council dominated by his opponents. He and the Nevilles concentrated their forces near York's stronghold at
Ludlow Castle in the
Welsh Marches but at the confrontation with the much larger royal army which became known as the
Battle of Ludford, some of Warwick's contingent from the garrison of
Calais, led by experienced captain
Andrew Trollope, defected overnight. York and the Nevilles promptly abandoned their troops and fled. The next day, the outnumbered and leaderless Yorkist army surrendered. York went to Ireland, where he had unchallenged support, while Salisbury, Warwick and York's eldest son
Edward, Earl of March, made their way to Calais, where Warwick was
Constable. They narrowly forestalled the new
Duke of Somerset who, with Trollope, had been sent to regain it. Lancastrian attempts to reassert their authority over Ireland and Calais failed, but York and his supporters were declared traitors and
attainted. The victorious Lancastrians became reviled for the manner in which their army had looted the town of Ludlow after the Yorkist surrender at Ludford Bridge, and the repressive acts of a compliant
Parliament of Devils which caused many uncommitted peers to fear for their own property and titles. The country remained in disorder. In 1460, the Nevilles invaded England through a foothold they had already established at
Sandwich and rapidly secured London and the South of England where Warwick had popular support. Warwick and March then advanced north to engage Henry's army in the Midlands. At the
Battle of Northampton, part of the Lancastrian army defected and the rest were decisively defeated. Henry was captured on the battlefield for the second time. He was taken to London, and confined in the
Bishop of London's palace.
George Neville, Bishop of Exeter, was appointed Chancellor of England and
Viscount Bourchier (another of York's brothers in law) was appointed Treasurer. The Duke of York landed in
Chester some weeks later and made his way to London with much pomp. Entering
Parliament, he attempted to claim the throne, but was met with stunned silence. Even his close allies were not prepared to support such a drastic step. Instead, after the
House of Lords had considered his claim, they passed the
Act of Accord, by which Henry would remain king, but York would govern the country as Lord Protector. Henry's son was disinherited, and York or one of his heirs would become king on Henry's death. The powerless and frightened Henry was forced to assent.
Lancastrian moves When the Battle of Northampton was fought, Queen Margaret and her seven-year-old son Edward had been at
Eccleshall Castle near
Stafford, from where they fled via
Cheshire to
Harlech Castle in North Wales. There they joined Lancastrian nobles (including Henry's half-brother
Jasper Tudor and the
Duke of Exeter) who were recruiting armies in Wales and the
West Country. They later proceeded by ship to
Scotland, where Margaret negotiated, unsuccessfully it seems, for troops and other aid for the Lancastrian cause from the queen and regent,
Mary of Guelders. At the same time, other Lancastrians were rallying in
Northern England. Many of them, including the
Earl of Northumberland and Lords
Clifford and
Ros, had estates and influence in the north. They were later joined by the
Duke of Somerset and the
Earl of Devon, who brought their forces from the West Country.[10] Northumberland, Clifford and Somerset were the sons of York's and Salisbury's rivals who had been killed at St. Albans. The Lancastrian forces mustered near
Kingston upon Hull, and were said (in ''Gregory's Chronicle'', a near-contemporary account) to number 15,000. Legal cases brought against York's and Salisbury's murdered estimated the force at 20,000, but in reality the Lancastrians' numbers were far smaller, probably only a few hundred. The Lancastrians seem to have gathered at
Pontefract and began pillaging York's and Salisbury's estates in the north of England.
York's response Faced with these challenges to his authority as Protector, York despatched his eldest son Edward to the Welsh Marches to contain the Lancastrians in Wales and left the Earl of Warwick in charge in London. He himself left London for the north on 9 December, accompanied by his second son
Edmund, Earl of Rutland, and the Earl of Salisbury. According to one later chronicler, he tried to bring a train of artillery under "one called Lovelace, a gentleman of Kent" but bad weather forced the artillery to return to London. York did have artillery with him when he was captured, so it seems likely that this story was another invention designed to construct a narrative that explained York's death by betrayal and treason. Lovelace later featured in pro-Yorkist chronicles as a servant of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick who was captured at Wakefield and persuaded to betray his Yorkist masters for gold. York's and Salisbury's army was said by some to number 8,000 to 9,000 men, but it was more likely to have numbered only a few hundred strong. York may have underestimated both the numbers of the Lancastrian army in the north and the degree of opposition he had provoked by his attempt to seize the throne. On an earlier expedition to the north during his first protectorship in 1454, he and the Nevilles had easily subdued a rebellion by the Percys and the Duke of Exeter. In 1460, not only had almost every other northern peer joined the Lancastrian army, but York's nominal supporters were also divided. The Nevilles were one of the wealthiest and most influential families in the North and in addition to controlling large estates, the Earl of Salisbury had held the office of
Warden of the Eastern March for several years. However, in the
Neville–Neville feud, the cadet branch of the family headed by Salisbury had largely disinherited and eclipsed the senior branch (sometimes referred to as the "northern Nevilles") under his great-nephew, the
Earl of Westmoreland. Westmoreland had spent several years trying to recover his lands. He had since become too ill, perhaps with some mental disorder, to play any active part. His younger brother,
John Neville of Raby, had much to gain by York's and Salisbury's destruction. According to the pro-Yorkist
Annales, York's scouts clashed with the Lancastrians on 16 December, at Worksop in
Nottinghamshire. If this event happened it was, at best, a minor skirmish, but by the terms of an act passed in Parliament just prior to York's departure from London, it would have constituted an act of treason against the heir to the throne. ==The 'Battle' of Wakefield==