Harrow, J., Warden of the Mercers' Company, with the Duke of York at Wakefield, [11]; wounded and put to death, [15]; head stuck on a gate at York, [17]
Hastings, Wm., [23]; knighted on the field of Towton, [36]; created Lord Hastings, [36]; flight with Edward IV., [42], [44]; at Barnet, [49]; at Tewkesbury, [71], [74], [89]; his conspiracy, [97], [98]; arrest and execution, [99]; his son a minor, [109]; Richard's generosity to his widow and family, [99]; falsifications of dates respecting his death, [210-216]
Haute, Sir John, [79]
Haute, Sir Richard, [88]; arrested, [90]; beheaded, [100]
Hedgley Moor, [59]
Hedingham Castle, [107]
Henry IV. (Bolingbroke), his usurpation and its consequences, [103], [117]; marriage with the Bohun heiress, [128]
Henry V. (of Monmouth), his character, war, and persecution of heretics, [103]
Henry VI. (of Windsor), taken prisoner at Northampton, [7]; marriage, [54]; assent to the Act making the Duke of York heir apparent, [9]; hunting at Greenwich, [11]; re-captured by his wife, [17]; at York during the battle of Towton, flight to Scotland, [34], [58]; at Hexham, [59]; concealed at Bolton Hall, [59]; his death, [78]; buried at Windsor, [139]; false date for his death and insinuations by Morton, Polydore Virgil, Warkworth, Fabyan, Rous, Croyland, [193-195]; his accounts reveal the truth, [197], [198], [199]; Mr. Gairdner's views respecting his death, [290-4]; founded Eton College, [116]
Henry VII., see Tudor, Henry; business of vilifying his predecessor, [171], [173]; inspired the story of the murder of the princes, as Lord Bacon suspected, [169], [236], [250], [251]; his conduct respecting the Act settling the crown on Richard, [218]; his illegal executions after Bosworth, [246], [247] n.; his character and government, [248], [249], [251], [253]; his usurpation, [250]; marriage, 254: strong motive for the crime, [254]; his other victims, [255]; silences the relations, [257], [270], [271]; gives out the story, [258], [259]; fear of detection, [267]; murder of the princes, [269]; rewards to Tyrrel and others, [268], [269], [270]; got Tyrrel into his power by treachery, [273]; cruel treatment and death of Edward, Earl of Warwick, [275]; contemplating another crime on his death-bed, [277]; restitution to Tyrrel's son, [277]; died tormented by remorse, [278]; things unexplained in his conduct, [279], [280]. See Murder of the princes