Henry Tudor's landing in Britain and the Battle of Bosworth Field Henry landed in Britain around the same time that Savage was declared a traitor, and having avoided capture, Savage at once declared for him, raising a considerable body of troops (under his command as a knight banneret) to aid Henry's cause. Savage joined Henry on his march through Wales and fought for him at
Bosworth Field. Savage and his men were originally in the army of his uncles Lord Thomas Stanley and Sir William Stanley, who would hold back whilst deciding which side it would be most advantageous to support. However, before the battle, Savage joined Henry's army along with three other knights; Sir Robert Tunstall, Sir Hugh Persall and Sir Humphrey Stanley, and Savage was placed in command of the
left flank of the Tudor forces, where many of his own men fought, wearing the Savage family's distinctive livery of white hoods, as described in the ballad
Bosworth Feilde: ::
Sir John Savage, that hardy Knight, ::
deathes dentes he delt that day ::
with many a white hood in fight, ::
that sad men were at assay. and the
Ballad of Lady Bessy: ::
Sir John Savage, 1500 white hoods, ::
for they will fight and never flee During the course of the battle, Savage is said to have personally slain the
Duke of Norfolk in single combat as the Duke was attempting to flee, as well as taking his son,
the Earl of Surrey, into custody. This is described in the
Ballad of Lady Bessy: ::''The Duke of Northfolke wou'd have fledd with a good will'' ::
With twentye thousand of his company, ::
They went up to a wind millne upon a hill ::
That stood soe fayre and wonderousse hye, ::
There he met Sir John Savage, a royall knight, ::
And with him a worthy company. ::
To the death was he then dight, ::
And his son prisoner taken was he The battle ended in a decisive victory for the forces of Henry Tudor, where Savage commanded the left flank to victory. His uncle, Sir William Stanley, seeing King Richard separated from the bulk of his force and headed for Henry, led his men into battle against Richard, surrounding and killing the King as his army fled. Savage's other uncle, Lord Stanley, was unable to commit his forces as Richard still had his son, Lord Strange, held as a hostage. Richard had sent Stanley a message threatening to execute Strange if he did not commit his troops to the battle, Stanley had rebutted this request stating that he 'had other sons', but was regardless unwilling to risk demonstrating his support for Henry.
The rewards of battle Following his victory on the field of battle, Henry Tudor received the
circlet of Richard from Savage's uncle Lord Stanley and was crowned King of England, taking the throne as Henry VII of England. For his part in the victory, Savage received extensive grants of land confiscated from King Richard's supporters in the counties of
Nottinghamshire,
Derbyshire,
Leicestershire and
Shropshire, including those of
John, Lord Zouche, and
Francis, Lord Lovell. The reason given for these grants was that they were made 'in consideration of his having largely exposed himself, with a crowd of his kinsmen, servants and friends, as volunteers in the king’s service in the battle against the King's great adversary Richard III the late pretended King of England, and also in consideration of other services rendered, always with anxious solicitude during prosperity as well as adversity'. Amongst the properties Sir John Savage received were the castle, manor and lordship of Gresley (
Castle Gresley), and Kymbley (
Kimberley) along with the manors and lordships of Grandby (
Granby) and
Sutton (all in Nottinghamshire), the manor and lordships of Elmeton (
Elmton), Holmesfeld (
Holmesfield) and
Ilkeston (as well as a coal mine in Ilkeston) in Derbyshire, the manor and lordship of Shepeshed (
Shepshed) in Leicestershire and 22s rent in the then town of
Leicester, as well as the manors and lordships of Sutton Hubybunderell, Watton, Corston and Eudunburnell in the county of Shropshire (then known as Salop) taken from the estates of Francis, Lord Lovell. Sir John's brother, Dr Thomas Savage, also benefited greatly from Henry's ascension to the throne. Previously only a
rector and scholar, he now received appointments to several positions of power and prestige; he first received important diplomatic appointments as the English ambassador to
Castile and Portugal in 1488 and then France in 1490, where he took part in the conference at
Boulogne. Before beginning a career as a high ranking cleric (
prelate), Thomas served as a bishop in several dioceses as well as becoming chaplain to King Henry. He eventually became the second most senior cleric in England when he was made Archbishop of York and
Primate of England in 1501, a position which he held until his death in 1507. Both Sir John and Dr Thomas became part of the King's inner circle, and of 11 known meetings of the King's council in the months June–July 1486, one or both of the brothers was present at eight.
The Stafford and Lovell rebellion and the right of sanctuary to which Savage was appointed by Henry VII in 1488 In 1486, the year following his victory at Bosworth, King Henry sent Savage to arrest
Sir Humphrey Stafford and his brother Thomas Stafford, who were key actors in the
Stafford and Lovell rebellion, the first armed uprising against Henry's young reign. Savage led a force of 60 armed men to
Culham where the two were seeking sanctuary in a church belonging to
Abingdon Abbey (having previously claimed sanctuary in
Colchester following the Battle of Bosworth, before leaving and continuing their campaigns against the king) and had them forcibly removed. The men had again claimed the right of
sanctuary and believed themselves safe within the Abbey's walls. Their forced removal outraged the Abbot who sent a written complaint to the authorities about what he saw as an infringement of his abbey’s ancient privileges as a place of sanctuary. However when the two men were tried before the
Court of King's Bench the justices ruled that sanctuary was not applicable in cases of treason Henry then ordered the execution of Sir Humphrey Stafford of
Grafton, but pardoned the younger Thomas Stafford. This event prompted a series of protests to
Pope Innocent VIII over the breaking of the right of sanctuary. In addition to these protests, King Henry sent a letter to the Pope detailing several instances where dissidents had claimed sanctuary before carrying out hostile actions such as pillaging properties of the King's supporters, before simply returning to sanctuary. These pleas resulted in a
papal bull in August of the same year which agreed to some modifications affecting the privilege. Namely that individuals could not return to a place of sanctuary should they commit crimes after leaving the premises, validating the actions of King Henry and Sir John Savage towards the Stafford brothers. The Pope also told the English clergy that they would lose all rights to his protection should they collaborate with the King's enemies.
The Battle of Stoke Field and appointment to the Most Noble Order of the Garter Savage was later one of the two main cavalry commanders (the other having been
Lord Scales, with Savage commanding the larger left flank of cavalry) at what is considered to have been the final battle of the Wars of the Roses, the
Battle of Stoke Field in 1487, a conflict stemming from an attempt by leading Yorkists to unseat King Henry in favour of the pretender
Lambert Simnel. The battle was a decisive victory with almost all the leading Yorkists killed, and never again would a battle be fought along Yorkist and Lancastrian lines. The pretender Lambert Simnel was not executed or even imprisoned, this owing to his young age and the belief that he had been led astray. He instead received employment, first in the royal kitchens and later as a falconer. Savage was further rewarded for his service to the King, the following year on 16 February 1488 he received fresh grants of land, and later on 16 November 1488 the King appointed Savage a knight of the
Order of the Garter, (the most senior order of knighthood in England, whose membership is limited to only 24 knights and is granted by the monarch alone) having already been made a Knight of the Bath and a Knight banneret.
Perkin Warbeck and the expedition to France the pretender to the English throne, whose presence in France prompted the formation of the English expeditionary force In October 1492, following the appearance of another pretender to the throne of England in the form of a young Flemish male named
Perkin Warbeck, Savage raised a retinue of 366 men, made up of 36
men-at-arms and 330 archers (initially promised 60 men-at-arms and 140 archers) and joined King Henry, who had called for the formation of an expeditionary force of 12,000 men. The expeditionary force was headed to France, with the intention of stopping
Charles VIII of France's support for Warbeck. Charles had granted Warbeck sanctuary in France from 1491, and opponents of Henry's rule both home and abroad were attempting to legitimise their dissent through the form of a potential claimant to the throne of England. The force provided by Savage was amongst the largest in the expeditionary force, and received the largest payment of wages of any retinue barring the King's own guard. In 1492 Savage was one of only 11 men in England capable of assembling what have been referred to as 'greater companies', or in other words those that could raise more than 20
men-at-arms. In practice however, only eight men raised such retinues in preparation for the invasion, of whom Savage was one. Savage raised more men than titled nobles such as
Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset,
Edward Courtenay 1st Earl of Devon and
George Talbot, 4th Earl of Shrewsbury. In mid October Henry and his men crossed the
English Channel and landed in
Calais. == Death and legacy ==