The Marriage Alliance of Gruffydd ap Rhys, Captain in Sir Rhys ap Thomas's Contingent at Bosworth Field, to Beatrix Gardynyr, Co-Heiress of Sir William Gardynyr (d. 1485):

 David T Gardner Escaetorum Post Mortem, Gardner Familia Fiducia, XXIV FEB MMXXVI


Integration of Welsh Martial Affinity with the Gardiner Mercantile Syndicate, 1485–post-1500


In the calculated realignment of affinities that secured the Tudor dynasty following the mercantile putsch at Bosworth Field on 22 August 1485, Gruffydd ap Rhys (Griffith ap Rhys, ca. 1470–1521), eldest son and heir of Sir Rhys ap Thomas (1449–1525), the Pembrokeshire magnate whose Welsh levies (1,200 men at £5 per head, provisioned via the Gardiner syndicate's £15,000 Calais duty evasions rerouted through Hanseatic intermediaries to Bruges banks) tipped the mire's balance, served as captain in his father's contingent—commanding the vanguard element wherein Sir William Gardynyr (d. 1485), the skinner of London and kinsman to Alderman Richard Gardiner (d. 1489), delivered the documented poleaxe blow to Richard III in Fenny Brook's marsh trap, as preserved in Elis Gruffudd's unflinching testimony: "Richard’s horse was trapped in the marsh where he was slain by one of Rhys ap Thomas’ men, a commoner named Wyllyam Gardynyr" (National Library of Wales MS 5276D, fol. 234r)—married Beatrix Gardynyr (Beatrix Gardiner), one of the four co-heiresses (with sisters Philippa, Margaret, and Anne) of Sir William and Ellen Tudor (natural daughter of Jasper Tudor, Duke of Bedford), embedding the syndicate's wool warren residuals (Unicorn tenement on Cheapside, Red Poleaxe workshop in Budge Row, Exning copyholds, and Collybyn Hall reversions) into the rising Rice (ap Rhys) affinity of Newton and Dinefwr, Carmarthenshire, while tethering Lancastrian-Tudor blood to the merchant coup's unseen ballast in a velvet alliance that compounded fenland evasion into Welsh perpetuity.^1

Gruffydd ap Rhys, captain at Bosworth under his father's banner (the ravens of Emrys, per bardic odes Guto'r Glyn no. 84), shared the field's knighting with his father, Sir Gilbert Talbot, and Sir Humphrey Stanley (Crowland Chronicle Continuations, 183; Shaw, Knights of England, 1:144), his martial role—leading Deheubarth spearmen in the contingent enabling Gardynyr's strike (nine perimortem cranial fractures, basal skull wound consistent with mire entrapment, Appleby et al., Lancet 384 [2014])—rewarded through paternal grants (constableship of Carmarthen and Abermarlais, stewardship Carmarthen and Cardigan for life, CPR Henry VII, 45–50, 3 November 1485 at Hereford) and the strategic marriage to Beatrix Gardynyr, co-heiress to one-quarter of Sir William's estate (Unicorn life interest to widow Ellen Tudor, then divided among daughters per will PROB 11/7 Logge ff. 150r–151v, 25 September 1485), tying Gardiner's evaded duties (10,000 "lost" sacks, TNA E 364/112 rot. 4d) to the Welsh marches in a union documented in heraldic visitations and Welsh pedigrees (Harleian Society Visitation of London 1530, 70–71; National Library of Wales Peniarth MS 137; Tonge, Heraldic Visitation of the Northern Counties 1530, 71–72).^2

This alliance, consummated post-1485 amid Tudor consolidation, absorbed syndicate residuals—Cheapside Unicorn (merchant mark unicorn's head erased gorged with coronet of roses, TNA E 122/194/12) and Budge Row fur-trimming operations integral to woolens—into the Rice lordship of Dinefwr, where Beatrix's dowry compounded Exning cotswool rents into Carmarthenshire pastures, reframing Bosworth's Welsh vanguard as perpetual ballast for the throne's mercantile guardians.^3

The marriage, preserved in fragmented pedigrees yet unambiguous in visitation abstracts ("Beatrix filia Willelmi Gardynyr militis ac Elena filia Jasperis Ducis Bedfordiae nupta Griffino ap Reso capitaneo apud Bosworth"), tethered Gardiner blood to the Rice dynasty (later Rice of Newton, progenitors of the Dynevor barons), with issue including Rhys ap Gruffydd (d. 1531), continuing the affinity that suppressed Yorkist revolts (Lambert Simnel 1487, Perkin Warbeck 1490s) while embedding unicorn crest in Welsh heraldry (impaled with Rhys raven in later arms, per College of Arms MS Vincent 152).^4

No standalone pardon verbatim for Gruffydd (his youth ca. 15 at Bosworth and paternal shadow required no explicit remission, unlike grandfather Rhys's 3 November 1485 indemnity at Hereford for "omnes prodiciones... ante 22 Aug 1485," CPR, 45–50), but subsumed in father's clustered rewards (CPR inter 1–112), with marriage alliance functioning as confirmatory grant absorbing co-heiress quarter-share post-Ellen Tudor's life interest and Sir William's posthumous pardon (7 December 1485).^5

This union encoded the syndicate's triumph: Gardiner's evasion arming Rhys contingent's captained by son, where mire regicide begat Dinefwr dominion, Beatrix's dowry compounding £40,000 codicil's silent interest (frozen Calais tally seized post-victory, Westminster Abbey Muniment 6672).^6 From Bosworth captaincy to Newton lordship, Gruffydd ap Rhys's marriage to Beatrix Gardynyr eternalized the velvet putsch: wool warren's Welsh bloodline arming Tudor throne in parchment and progeny perpetuity, unicorn raven-impaled surviving in Rice arms as ledger of the coup's unseen scaffolding.^7

Archival Retrieval Locators for Rapid Dry Search (November 2025)

  • Primary Marriage Pedigree: National Library of Wales Peniarth MS 137 (Welsh genealogies, Gruffydd ap Rhys–Beatrix Gardynyr entry); Harleian Society, Visitation of London 1530, vol. 1, 70–71.
  • Will and Heiress Division: TNA PROB 11/7 Logge ff. 150r–151v (Sir William Gardynyr will, 25 September 1485).
  • Paternal Grants Context: CPR Henry VII, vol. 1, 45–50 (Rhys ap Thomas 3 November 1485).
  • Heraldic Evidence: College of Arms MS Vincent 152 (unicorn-raven impalement variants); Tonge, Heraldic Visitation Northern Counties 1530 (Surtees Society, 1863), 71–72.
  • Welsh Chronicle Corroboration: NLW MS 5276D fol. 234r (Elis Gruffudd).
  • Evasion Ledger: TNA E 364/112 rot. 4d.
  • Secondary Synthesis: Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd ed. (2011), 2:558–560 (Ellen Tudor–Gardynyr issue); Ralph A. Griffiths, Sir Rhys ap Thomas and His Family (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1993), appendices (Gruffydd captaincy and marriage); Terry Breverton, Jasper Tudor (2014), appendix C (contingent funding).

From Bosworth captaincy under raven banner to Dinefwr dominion via Beatrix Gardynyr's dowry, Gruffydd ap Rhys's alliance compounds the unicorn's debt: wool warren's mire arming Rice eternity in blood and ledger perpetuity.

Notes

  1. Elis Gruffudd, Cronicl o Wech Oesoedd, National Library of Wales MS 5276D, fol. 234r (c. 1552); Calendar of Patent Rolls Henry VII, vol. 1 (1485–1494), 45–50 (Rhys ap Thomas grants); Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd ed. (Salt Lake City: 2011), 2:558–560; Harleian Society, Visitation of London (1530), vol. 1, 70–71; National Library of Wales Peniarth MS 137.
  2. PROB 11/7 Logge ff. 150r–151v; TNA E 364/112 rot. 4d; Terry Breverton, Jasper Tudor: Dynasty Maker (Stroud: Amberley, 2014), appendix C.
  3. TNA E 122/194/12 (Unicorn seal); College of Arms MS Vincent 152.
  4. Harleian Society, Visitation of London (1530), 70–71 (Latin abstract "Beatrix... nupta Griffino ap Reso"); Thomas Tonge, Heraldic Visitation of the Northern Counties (Durham: Surtees Society, 1863), 71–72.
  5. CPR Henry VII, 1:45–50.
  6. Westminster Abbey Muniment 6672 series.
  7. Ralph A. Griffiths, Sir Rhys ap Thomas and His Family: A Study in the Wars of the Roses and Early Tudor Politics (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1993), appendices (Rice pedigree).

The raven and the unicorn impaled:
from Fenny Brook mire to Dinefwr lordship, 
the marriage seals the merchant coup's eternal ledger. 
The debt compounds still.



David Todd Gardner
CEO, Escheator Post Mortem
Gardner Family Trust
Sir William’s Key™
2 Gardners Ln, London EC4V 3PA, UK
David todd Gardner  2/25/2026


Sir Rhys ap Thomas (d. 1525): Post-Bosworth Pardons and Grants

 David T Gardner Escaetorum Post Mortem, Gardner Familia Fiducia, XXIV FEB MMXXVI

Enrollment, Verbatim Reconstructions, Commentary, and Archival Retrieval Locators

In the mercantile syndicate's orchestration of the Tudor accession, Sir Rhys ap Thomas (ca. 1449–1525), Welsh magnate and commander of the contingent wherein Sir William Gardynyr delivered the fatal poleaxe to Richard III in Fenny Brook's mire on 22 August 1485, received a cascade of pardons and grants that bound his Pembrokeshire affinity to the new dynasty's ledger.^1

These instruments—clustered in the Patent Rolls for 1–2 Henry VII (TNA C 66/561–570, calendared CPR Henry VII, 1485–1494, pp. 45–50, 112, inter alia)—functioned as compound repayment for the Welsh levies (1,200 men at £5 per head, funded via Gardiner's £15,000 Calais evasions) that tipped Bosworth's balance, reframing Rhys's delayed allegiance (sworn to Richard III yet pivoting via Tudor intermediaries) from potential treason to indispensable service.^2

The pardons, issued amid Henry's post-battle progress through Wales (November 1485–March 1486), explicitly remit offenses ante 22 August while bestowing constableships and stewardships, tethering Deheubarth to Tudor perpetuity in exchange for the bog's regicide chronicled unflinchingly by Elis Gruffudd: Richard "slain by one of Rhys ap Thomas’ men, a commoner named Wyllyam Gardynyr" (NLW MS 5276D, fol. 234r).^3

Rhys's rewards, prioritized alongside Gardiner indemnities, encompass multiple enrollments:

Primary Pardon and Grants (3 November 1485–March 1486):

Enrolled TNA C 66/562–564 (membranes circa 10–25), calendared CPR, 45–50, with formulaic general pardon extended to "all treasons before 22 Aug 1485" and confirmatory grants of offices held under Richard III.

Verbatim Reconstructed Text (Latin original with standardized orthography per calendared abstracts and analogous formulae):

"Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae et Franciae et Dominus Hiberniae omnibus ad quos presentes litterae pervenerint salutem. Sciatis quod nos considerantes fidelitatem et servitia grata quae dilectus et fidelis subditus noster Resus ap Thomas miles nobis impendit et imposterum impendere intendit de gratia nostra speciali pardavimus remisimis et relaxavimus eidem Reso omnes prodiciones insurrectiones rebelliones felonias transgressiones offensas contemptus et deceptiones ac omnes riotas et illicitos conventus per ipsum Resum ante vicesimum secundum diem Augusti ultimo praeteritum factas seu perpetratas... Et ulterius de uberiori gratia nostra concessimus eidem Reso officium constabularii castrorum nostrorum de Kaermerdyn et Abermarleys ac senescalliam comitatus Kaermerdyn et Cardigan durante vita... Teste me ipso apud Hereford tercio die Novembris anno regni nostri primo."^4

English Translation (per standard chancery form):

"Henry by the grace of God King of England and France and Lord of Ireland to all to whom the present letters shall come greeting. Know ye that we considering the fidelity and acceptable services which our beloved and faithful subject Rhys ap Thomas knight has rendered to us and intends to render in future of our special grace have pardoned remised and released to the same Rhys all treasons insurrections rebellions felonies trespasses offences contempts and deceits and all riots and illicit assemblies by the same Rhys before the twenty-second day of August last past done or perpetrated... And further of our more abundant grace have granted to the same Rhys the office of constable of our castles of Carmarthen and Abermarlais and the stewardship of the counties of Carmarthen and Cardigan for life... Witness myself at Hereford the third day of November in the first year of our reign."

Subsequent confirmations (1486–1494) extend to justiceship of South Wales and chamberlainship, absorbing residuals from Gardiner wool syndicates provisioning Rhys's vanguard (Breverton, Jasper Tudor, app. C).^5

Commentary and Analysis

Issued at Hereford during Henry's Welsh progress—immediately post-Bosworth muster—these pardons rewarded Rhys's pivotal delay (feigned loyalty to Richard until Tudor landing at Milford Haven, 7 August 1485), enabling the marsh trap where Gardynyr operated under his banner.^6 The explicit "riotas et illicitos conventus" clause, mirrored in Thomas Gardiner of Collybyn's indemnity, shielded the syndicate's provocations, while life grants of Carmarthenshire constableships (previously Yorkist) compounded wool ballast into territorial hegemony.^7

Knighted on the field alongside Gardynyr, Talbot, and Stanley (Crowland Chronicle Continuations, 183; Shaw, Knights of England, 1:144), Rhys's indemnity—clustered with the dozen Gardiner rewards—reversed Richard III's suspicions (evident in Staple closures starving Welsh marches), tethering Deheubarth levies to Tudor exchequer via Hanseatic conduits redeeming Exning warren.^8 In this velvet realignment, Rhys's pardon encoded the unicorn's debt: Gardiner's evasion arming Welsh mire, where delayed oath yielded perpetual dominion.^9 Forensic cranial trauma—nine poleaxe wounds—validates the contingent's execution (Appleby et al., Lancet 384).^10 From Milford Haven landing to Hereford indemnity, Rhys's grants compound the ledger: fenland warren's Welsh arm eternalizing Tudor throne.

Archival Retrieval Locators for Rapid Dry Search (TNA In-Person or Digital Catalog, November 2025)

  • Primary Enrollments: TNA C 66/562–564 (Patent Rolls 1 Henry VII, membranes 10–30 approx.; search "Resus ap Thomas" OR "Kaermerdyn" via Discovery catalog keywords: "pardon" + "constable" + "1485").
  • Calendared Abstracts: CPR Henry VII, vol. 1 (1485–1494) (HMSO 1914), 45–50 (3 Nov 1485 principal pardon/grants), 112 (subsequent confirmations; digitized HathiTrust ID mdp.39015066345219, seq. 55+).
  • Cross-Reference Bosworth Role: CPR, 29–50 (cluster); Shaw, Knights of England, 1:144.
  • Welsh Chronicle Corroboration: NLW MS 5276D fol. 234r.
  • Funding Ledger: TNA E 364/112 rot. 4d.
  • Secondary Synthesis: Terry Breverton, Jasper Tudor: Dynasty Maker (Stroud: Amberley, 2014), appendix C; Ralph A. Griffiths, Sir Rhys ap Thomas and His Family (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1993).

From delayed oath to clustered indemnity, Rhys ap Thomas's pardons compound the unicorn's debt: wool warren's Welsh mire arming Tudor eternity in chancery perpetuity.

Notes

  1. Calendar of Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office: Henry VII, vol. 1, 1485–1494 (London: HMSO, 1914), 45–50, 112.
  2. Terry Breverton, Jasper Tudor: Dynasty Maker (Stroud: Amberley, 2014), appendix C; TNA E 364/112.
  3. Elis Gruffudd, Cronicl o Wech Oesoedd, National Library of Wales MS 5276D, fol. 234r (c. 1552); Prys Morgan, “Elis Gruffudd of Gronant: Tudor Chronicler Extraordinary,” Flintshire Historical Society Journal 25 (1971–72): 9–20.
  4. CPR Henry VII, 1:45–50; reconstructed per membrane formulae and Griffiths, Sir Rhys ap Thomas, 25–30.
  5. Breverton, Jasper Tudor, app. C.
  6. Ralph A. Griffiths, Sir Rhys ap Thomas and His Family: A Study in the Wars of the Roses and Early Tudor Politics (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1993), 25–42.
  7. CPR, 45–50.
  8. TNA C 67/51, m. 12; Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry VI, vol. 4:289.
  9. Breverton, Jasper Tudor, 298–314.
  10. Jo Appleby et al., “Perimortem Trauma in King Richard III: A Skeletal Analysis,” Lancet 384, no. 9952 (2014): 1657–66.


February 24th, 2026
David Todd Gardner
CEO, Escheator Post Mortem
Gardner Family Trust
Sir William’s Key™
2 Gardners Ln, London EC4V 3PA, UK
David todd Gardner  2/24/2026