News

Dr David Grummitt speaking at the launch event

Formal Launch of the Wars of the Roses Memorial Database

15 October 2025

Following a go live in March 2025, a crowd sourced Wars of the Roses Memorial Database was formally launched today at Delapre Abbey, next to the site of the 1460 battle of Northampton.

The database is a new online resource that  highlights the significant and long-lasting impact of the Wars of the Roses on the country and its population with a guide to the many monuments that mark this critical but often overlooked historical period. 

The intermittent series of battles and rebellions against royal authority which took place in the second half of the fifteenth century has left an indelible mark on the English landscape, its churches, and our historical imagination, not least in Shakespeare’s works, modern TV dramas such as The White Queen and Game of Thrones, and novels such as Ravenspur, The Kingmaker’s Daughter, and The King’s Mother.

Whilst some memorial chapels were dedicated at the time for those killed in the battles of the Wars, memorialisation has been a piecemeal affair, its extent underestimated and many memorials lost or forgotten. Yet, as the Wars of the Roses Memorial Database reveals, anyone walking the streets of Britain today may encounter monuments or markers that provide a direct link to the people, places and events of the Wars of the Roses. Ranging from 15th century funerary monuments and later memorials dedicated to some of the major protagonists and events, to stained glass windows, plaques and more recent interpretation panels at noteworthy locations. The online guide allows users to search by memorial type, allegiance, or location.

Simon Marsh, Research Coordinator for the Battlefields Trust said, ‘The Wars of the Roses Memorial Database is a crowd-sourced heritage resource that can be used, and added to, by everyone interested in this period of history We are hoping that over time the database will become an important resource to help the study of the period and encourage visits to these memorials’. 

Entries in the database range from the iconic, such as the recently installed tomb of King Richard III in Leicester cathedral, to the idiosyncratic, including the Blore Heath smithy plaque which records the legend of a local blacksmith reversing  the shoes on Queen Margaret’s horse to aid her escape after the battle of Blore Heath in September 1459.

Led by the Battlefields Trust, the website is the collective effort of historical experts from the Mortimer History Society, the Northamptonshire Battlefields Society, the Richard III Society, the Tewkesbury Battlefield Society, and the Yorkist History Trust. With over 150 records online at present, the site invites further submissions from the public for consideration.

A rich resource for anyone interested in the Wars of the Roses, British heritage, UK travel or the downright quirky, the Wars of the Roses Memorial Database is now accessible at https://www.battlefieldstrust.com/wotrmemorial/.

 

 
 
 
The Battlefields Resource Centre