Fotheringhay
Fotheringhay is a small village in Northamptonshire, England, historically prominent due to its castle's role as the birthplace of King Richard III on 2 October 1452 and the site of Mary, Queen of Scots' imprisonment, trial, and execution on 8 February 1587.[1][2][3] The motte-and-bailey castle, founded around 1100 by Simon de St Liz, Earl of Northampton and Huntingdon, commanded a strategic ford over the River Nene and later became a favored residence of the House of York, whose members shaped key events in the Wars of the Roses.[3][4] ![Church of St Mary and All Saints, Fotheringhay][float-right]The village's collegiate Church of St Mary and All Saints, begun in the 1270s and largely completed by the 1430s under the patronage of the Yorkists, survives as a perpendicular Gothic structure housing the tombs of Edward, Duke of York, and his two wives, with vaults originally intended for other Yorkist burials.[4][5] Fotheringhay Castle fell into ruin after the early 17th century, its stone quarried away by 1630s, leaving only an earthen motte as a reminder of its former prominence, while the church underwent restorations, including a £1.5 million project completed in 2020 to preserve its structure and Yorkist heritage.[3][5] These sites underscore Fotheringhay's enduring connection to medieval royal intrigue and dynastic struggles, drawing interest from historians and societies dedicated to figures like Richard III.[1]