View this Artist's ProfileView this Artist's PortfolioLearn how to Commission Art from this ArtistView this Artist's Show EntriesView this Artist's Interview

  Mark Satchwill   
  Watford, UK   
  Email This Artist  Visit This Artist's Web Site  View This Artists's current Auctions on eBay  View This Artists's items available at Etsy.com  View This Artists's BLog (web log)    



Select Member's Personal Gallery: Search Art (optional) (Note:To search entire gallery, use the Gallery Search Tool)
<< First Page     < Prior Page     Page 4 of 12     Next Page >     Last Page >>
Thumbnail View                  < Prior Item                  Item 20 of 59                  Next Item >                  Thumbnail View
Art: Domitian by Artist Mark Satchwill
"Domitian"
Mark Satchwill

Art: Julius Caesar by Artist Mark Satchwill
"Julius Caesar"
Mark Satchwill

Art: Mark Anthony by Artist Mark Satchwill
"Mark Anthony"
Mark Satchwill

Art: Rome by Artist Mark Satchwill
"Rome"
Mark Satchwill

Art: Richard III by Artist Mark Satchwill
"Richard III"
Mark Satchwill

"Richard III"

Art: Richard III by Artist Mark Satchwill
 Add To Your Favorite ArtCreate and Send an ECard from this ArtView Larger Image of art 
 
 

(Detail Images)

Detail Image

  
 
 

Detail Image

  
 
 

Detail Image

  
 
 
Media:  watercolor, gouache and gold ink
Dimensions:  4 x 6 inches
Date of Work:  2008

Richard III is one of the most controversial monarchs in British History. After his brother Edward III's death in 1483 the succession was to pass to Edwards elder son, Edward IV, who was only aged 13. Richard executed Antony Wydeville, Earl Rivers, the child's guardian and took on the role of protector. Edward and his brother Richard were placed in the tower and by the end of the year had disappeared, presumed murdered. Richard had his brother's marriage to Elizabeth Wydeville declared illegitimate, thereby removing young Edward and Richard from the succession. He was crowned King in July of 1483. However, he only reigned for two years. A rebellion headed by Henry Tudor saw Richard defeated and killed at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, ending the reign of the Plantagenet's and the House of York. The fate of the Princes is still hotly debated - did Richard give the order for their deaths? A chest containing two children's skeletons was found buried under a staircase in the White Tower in 1674. It was presumed that these were the Princes. What is likely is that Tudor propaganda created the image of Richard as the hunchbacked and crippled villain of Shakespeare's play.


<< First Page     < Prior Page     Page 4 of 12     Next Page >     Last Page >>
Thumbnail View                  < Prior Item                  Item 20 of 59                  Next Item >                  Thumbnail View