Lambert Simnel
Lambert Simnel (c. 1477 – c. 1525) was an English youth of humble origins who served as a figurehead pretender in a Yorkist conspiracy against King Henry VII shortly after the latter's accession in 1485.[1][2] The son of an Oxford craftsman, Simnel was groomed by supporters including the priest Richard Symonds to impersonate Edward Plantagenet, Earl of Warwick—a nephew of Edward IV and potential Yorkist claimant—who was in fact imprisoned in the Tower of London.[2][1] Backed by Yorkist nobles such as John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln, Viscount Francis Lovell, and Margaret of York (sister of Edward IV), as well as Irish allies led by Gerald FitzGerald, Earl of Kildare, the plot gained traction in Ireland where Simnel was crowned "Edward VI" in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, on 24 May 1487 using a makeshift circlet.[1][2] An invasion force of approximately 8,000, including Irish levies, English exiles, and German mercenaries under Martin Schwartz, landed at Piel Island in Lancashire on 4 June 1487 before advancing inland.[2] Henry VII's royal army decisively defeated the rebels at the Battle of Stoke Field near Newark on 16 June 1487, effectively ending significant Yorkist resistance and marking the final engagement of the Wars of the Roses.[2][1] Captured on the battlefield, the approximately ten-year-old Simnel was spared execution as an unwitting pawn and initially employed as a scullion in the royal kitchens; he later advanced to the role of falconer in Henry VII's household, surviving into the early years of Henry VIII's reign without further incident.[2][1] While contemporary Tudor chroniclers portrayed him unequivocally as a lowborn impostor, a minority of modern historians have speculated—based on his reported bearing and the scheme's persistence—that he might have been the genuine Earl of Warwick, though this view lacks substantiation given the real Edward's continued captivity and eventual execution in 1499.[1]