Yorkshire Post

Why site of key battle is far more than shrine to history

Wider use of field where 28,000 died in Wars of the Roses conflict is best way to protect it, says society

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ruby.kitchen@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

IT WAS the bloodiest battle ever fought on England’s soil, and changed the course of history.

The Battle of Towton, on Palm Sunday 1461, saw as many as 28,000 men killed in eight hours of brutal hand-to-hand combat in the War of the Roses’ fiercest fight.

For years, this battlefiel­d has been protected by a society set up in its name and today, as the man at its helm prepares to stand down, it is a changed place to that which it was.

For such sites of worldwide significan­ce, says Mark Taylor,

inset, of the Towton Battlefiel­d Society, can only be protected by changing perception­s about their everyday use.

“Battlefiel­ds aren’t about numbers and dates,” he said. “They are about people – and getting them engaged.

“There are lots of parts of our country that are very historical­ly important that aren’t protected – unless we stand up and doing something about it.

“The best way to do that is to make them relevant to the time we’re in.”

The society, led by volunteers, was set up to protect this rural landscape near Tadcaster.

The unique soil conditions make the fields a treasure trove for archeologi­cal finds, and it was here that England’s oldest known handguns and bullets were discovered.

There are arrowheads, spurs, belt buckles and strap ends, and in the 1990s a soldiers’ mass grave was found in the foundation­s of Towton Hall.

But rather than attempting to create a sheltered sanctuary to protect this space, the society has attempted to bring it into public use.

First came the Globe Theatre and Henry

IV, bringing Shakespear­e’s plays to the grounds on which they were set. On a sunny day in 2013, hundreds of people had watched as actors turned the quiet fields into a stormy re-enactment of this brutal battle.

Then there were the formal commemorat­ions, on Palm Sunday every year. Historians and villagers would recreate the medieval encampment, with soldiers and craftspeop­le, falconry, archery, gunnery and sword combat demonstrat­ions.

By 2015, this had proved so popular it had to be scrapped. The society couldn’t safely house 3,000 people in such a small space, and the re-enactments were called off.

But since that time, the battlefiel­ds have become more about wider use, encouragin­g visitors from around the country, dog-walkers and guided tours.

There are archery classes, guided walks and tapestry groups. This, the retiring chairman believes, is the only way to ensure that the significan­ce of this site is here to explore in another 500 years.

“Towton is in a beautiful part of the world, a remote part of the world,” said Mr Taylor, 51.

“It is used every day. And that’s what will make battlegrou­nds sustainabl­e, by putting them to proper use. That alone will protect them.

“Towton has transforme­d itself, galvanized by volunteers. The battlefiel­d has grown, from something of an enigma, to one that is understood, which is vibrant, protected, and captures people’s imaginatio­n.

“For battles to be alive and relevant, they have to fit the times. What we have secured is a really significan­t site for future generation­s to enjoy.

“Towton courses through my blood fighting, but now I can sit back and enjoy it. It’s time to let someone else take it in a new direction.”

 ?? MAIN PICTURE: SIMON HULME. ?? HISTORIC SIGNIFICAN­CE: The site of the Battle of Towton can only be protected by encouragin­g more visitors to use it, says Mark Taylor, retiring chairman of the Battlefiel­d Society, inset; once-popular re-enactments of the battle had to be called off...
MAIN PICTURE: SIMON HULME. HISTORIC SIGNIFICAN­CE: The site of the Battle of Towton can only be protected by encouragin­g more visitors to use it, says Mark Taylor, retiring chairman of the Battlefiel­d Society, inset; once-popular re-enactments of the battle had to be called off...
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