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1[[quoteright:275:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/RichardOfGloucester.JPG]]
2[[caption-width-right:275:"[[Theatre/RichardIII And every tale condemns me for a villain]]."]]
3
4->''Can you imagine it,''\
5''I'm the last Plantagenet,''\
6''Beaten by Henry in the Wars of the Roses''\
7''The Tudor dynasty''\
8''Didn't care that much for me,''\
9''[[HistoricalVillainUpgrade Now I'm painted as a baddie]], that's why, one supposes.''
10-->-- ''Series/HorribleHistories''
11
12Richard, Duke of Gloucester (2 October 1452 – 22 August 1485), crowned '''King Richard III''' in 1483, was the sixth son of Richard, 3rd Duke of York, and brother of [[UsefulNotes/EdwardIV King Edward IV]] of England, who had seized the throne from the reigning Lancastrian king, Henry VI. (The complicated relationships of the various branches of UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfPlantagenet were the principal cause of the "UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses", in which Richard distinguished himself.) On Edward's death, he seized the throne from Edward's son (called Edward V, though he was never actually crowned), declaring him and his younger brother Richard of York bastards. (Traditionally, Richard had his nephews murdered in the Tower of London; this has been much disputed since at least late Tudor times.) A rebellion led by Henry [[UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfTudor Tudor]], Earl of Richmond, arose, and Richard was killed fighting for his kingdom at Bosworth Field, the last English king to die in battle.[[note]]But not the last ''British'' king: two consecutive Scottish kings (James III in 1488 at Sauchieburn, and James IV in 1513 at Flodden) would follow.[[/note]]
13
14Richard's traditional reputation was largely formed by Sir UsefulNotes/ThomasMore's ''History of king Richard the thirde'', which (possibly based on the reminiscences of John Morton, Bishop of Ely) depicts Gloucester as a [[RedRightHand hunch-backed, withered-armed]] Machiavellian villain. More's account formed the basis for Creator/WilliamShakespeare's ''Theatre/RichardIII'', which has probably been the most influential account of Richard's life and character -- despite its obvious historical shortcomings -- and has indeed tended to color perceptions of the entire [[TheLateMiddleAges Late Mediaeval period]].
15
16Nevertheless, Richard's [[{{Retcon}} rehabilitation]] started fairly early. In the reign of James I (''i.e''., after the death of the [[UsefulNotes/ElizabethI last]] of the [[UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfTudor Tudors]]), the antiquarian [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Buck Sir George Buck]] discovered the suppressed ''Titulus Regius'' that set forth the Parliamentary explanation for Richard's assumption of the throne and claimed he had seen a letter (now lost, if it ever existed at all) from Edward V's sister, Elizabeth of York, which established the friendly relations between them, and wrote his ''History of King Richard III'' in an attempt to moderate the king's negative image. Unfortunately, Buck died insane, and his history was published only after his death, by his grandson (1646). The view that Richard had been [[WrittenByTheWinners slandered by Henry Tudor]] gained a strong following, and has influenced historians, either positively or negatively, ever since.
17
18The basic facts are that Richard, who had been a loyal supporter of his older brother all their lives, was named Lord Protector of Edward's son, Edward V, upon the older Edward's death. In the political chaos that followed, Richard struck against Edward V's maternal relatives (who were undoubtedly moving to strike against Richard) and produced a document and a witness (in the form of an elderly priest) that indicated Edward IV's marriage to the boy's mother had been invalid due to it being bigamous. This made Edward V and his younger brother ineligible for the throne and Richard the rightful king. The truth of this convenient claim has been much discussed, disputed and speculated upon. Edward IV ''was'' a womanizer and his secret marriage to the commoner Elizabeth Woodville had caused immense scandal and a great deal of conflict and spilled blood. It was not out of the question to think Edward had entered into another secret marriage prior to that, if only as a way to get into bed with an attractive widow. Did Richard or one of his supporters invent this story so they could seize power? Did Richard, who knew his brother well, know the story was true or at least believe it ''could'' be true? Did Richard, understandably,[[note]]Most historians agree the Woodville faction convinced Edward IV to execute his brother, George, Duke of Clarence[[/note]] fear the Woodville faction would eliminate him and take control of the boy, or that young Edward (who had essentially been raised by his mother's family) would be biased against him regardless? Was Richard acting out of ambition, or from the desire to avoid putting a ''third'' boy king on the English throne in just over a century, after the civil wars caused by the reigns/usurpations of Richard II and Henry VI? Was it, as is most likely, a combination of factors? Whatever the case, Richard [[TheUsurper seized the throne]] and his two nephews later disappeared from the Tower of London.
19
20[[TheFateOfThePrincesInTheTower The fate of the princes]] was never certainly established. The last sighting of the boys alive seems to have been around July 1483, shortly before Richard's coronation. Stories of their death varied wildly: some said they had been poisoned, others drowned, others stabbed -- but the most accepted version was that attested by Thomas More, that the princes had been smothered and buried secretly under a staircase in the Tower. Bones found there in 1674 under a staircase (as More had said, though he also said he had heard that Richard had had them disinterred and buried elsewhere) were declared to be theirs by the then king, UsefulNotes/CharlesII. The identification is by no means certain; the bones were last examined in 1934, and it was determined at that time that not all of them were even human. Their age, sex, and date of burial have been disputed (though most experts agree they are pre-pubertal); there has even been some [[WildMassGuessing speculation]] that they're the remains of ceremonial sacrifices from Roman times. On top of that, the bones were found at a depth of at least ten feet lower than bones buried in 1483 would have been. The dean and chapter of Westminster Abbey, where the bones are interred, have refused to allow further testing, as did Queen Elizabeth II, who would not allow DNA analysis of the remains ''or'' of available remains of any known relatives of the Princes.
21
22Defenders of Richard have pointed out that murdering his nephews would have done him little good without proof of their deaths, as he would have faced imposters claiming to be them much like Henry Tudor later claimed to. [[note]] Recent theories indicate those "imposters" may have been the real princes.[[/note]] It also makes little sense that Richard would not attempt to explain their absence, which he did not. If he had murdered them, he could have also blamed the Duke of Buckingham, who was executed for treason and would have made a convenient scapegoat. Traditionally, Ricardian historians have pointed the finger at Buckingham for the boys' deaths while more mainstream ones have still argued that it was Richard who had motive, means and opportunity. In recent years, however, some historians have been exploring the possibility that Richard sent the boys away and that they were [[https://www.amazon.com/Survival-Princes-Tower-Murder-Mystery/dp/0750989149/?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_w=KLuTl&content-id=amzn1.sym.dba1a2d0-88dc-4504-a5d7-10259373e587&pf_rd_p=dba1a2d0-88dc-4504-a5d7-10259373e587&pf_rd_r=23GM78YY41BGHP0HACQR&pd_rd_wg=ZU7t2&pd_rd_r=1d20b07a-6b25-4945-be65-899caca94548&ref_=pd_gw_ci_mcx_mr_hp_atf_m alive at the time of Richard's defeat]]. These historians point out that Richard cared well for his nephew by his brother George (another Edward) and that boy also had a superior claim to the throne that was [[RulesLawyer nullified through legal means]].
23
24After their remarkable success in finding Richard's remains, Phillippa Langley and The Richard III Society launched a project seeking evidence that Richard sent the boys into exile. In November 2023, Langley released a book and an accompanying ITV documentary which revealed their evidence for the claim that both boys survived to launch failed attempts to overthrow Henry Tudor. Most of the evidence consists of accounting records that seem to indicate the princes were alive after the Battle of Bosworth Field, but the document that has garnered the most attention is an account of the life of Richard of York, dictated to a scribe, chronicling how he escaped to the continent, residing in among other places, Paris and Lisbon. The document has been examined and determined to be authentic to the era, though skeptics dismiss it as part of a fraudulent campaign to put Perkin Warbeck on the throne. However, Ricardian historian Matthew Lewis argues that Richard's sister, UsefulNotes/MargaretOfYork would have no reason to come up with imposter princes while she had living nephews who had strong claims to the Yorkist crown. Lewis, Langely, and other Ricardian historians argue the two major rebellions crushed by Henry Tudor, allegedly by imposters Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck, were in fact undertaken on behalf of Edward V and Richard of York, with the testimonial document being part of Richard of York/Perkin Warbeck's attempt to prove his identity.
25
26Whatever the case, the fate of the princes still remains, for now, officially unsolved but Ricardians believe that it is only a matter of time before their survival becomes accepted.
27
28As a King, Richard III reigned for a mere two years, but during that time he oversaw several progressive social reforms. Among the legal reforms made in his time was the creation of the Court of Requests, a court for poor people to present their grievances if they could not afford the legal fees. Richard also made it easier to provide bail for lower orders and protected their property from seizures. Such reforms had its roots in Richard III's time at the Council of the North. Under his reign, all the laws and statutes were ordered by decree to be translated from Old French into English, and he also removed the restrictions on the printing and selling of books. The efforts of greater centralization that would characterize the reign of Henry Tudor more properly began in Richard III's reign.
29
30Popular depictions of Richard since Shakespeare's plays have generally veered back and forth from outright evil (Richard may be considered the patron saint of the HistoricalVillainUpgrade) to a revisionist version in which Richard, though appearing a somewhat cynical DeadpanSnarker, is nevertheless a fundamentally decent human being -- often the only decent human being in what is otherwise a DecadentCourt. Villainous takes, especially Shakespeare's, often cast him as a creepy old man even though he died aged only 32. He was also a WarriorPrince and the best warrior in England, second only to his brother Edward. Indeed, quite unlike the picture of him as a weakened Machiavellian, he died leading a daring cavalry charge in an attempt to [[StraightForTheCommander kill Henry Tudor]] (who was ironically said to have just hid among his men during the attack and made no attempt to fight) that was repulsed and ended with Richard fighting to the death while surrounded after falling from his horse.
31
32Contemporary portrayals, such as ''Literature/TheSunneInSplendour'' and ''Literature/TheKingmakersDaughter'' (and its TV adaptation ''Series/TheWhiteQueen'') have continued to rehabilitate Richard's reputation, in part, by focusing on Richard's life before he seized the crown, portraying him accurately as a devoted supporter of Edward IV and their brother George, Duke of Clarence, as the one who made several attempts to usurp Edward. Richard, on the other hand, fled into exile with Edward when he was briefly deposed by the Lancastrian faction and Richard's military prowess at the Battles of Barnet and Teweksbury helped Edward retake his throne. Additionally, Richard's tenure as Constable of England helped him develop a reputation as a fair arbiter of justice and, as mentioned above, planted the seeds for the legal reforms he later made as king. Richard spent most of his adult life ruling his northern territories on behalf of his brother, where he was well liked by the local population and developed a strong power base.
33
34His advocacy for the printed word seems rooted in his [[BadassBookworm own intellectualism]] as he owned a library of books, including both printed and handwritten manuscripts, on topics like history, philosophy and theology and he personally made notes in the margins. He owned a copy of the Bible in English and a lavish Book of Hours that was likely a coronation gift from his BestFriend Francis Lovell. His book collection also indicates a strong interest in the history and culture of the north of England, which does lend credence to the stories of him favoring the north and eventually, as king, alienating various southern factions.
35
36He married his childhood companion Anne Neville, and whether this was a [[MarryForLove love match]] or a [[PerfectlyArrangedMarriage practical arrangement]] between two people who needed one another, contemporary sources indicate they were HappilyMarried. It may have even counted as a RescueRomance, since a popular legend states that Richard's brother George, who was [[DoubleInLawMarriage married to Anne's sister]] and wanted their entire fortune for himself, dressed Anne as a servant and forced her to work as a kitchen maid in an attempt to prevent Richard from seeing her. What is certain is that Richard took the widowed and vulnerable Anne[[note]]Her father had switched sides and married her to the Lancastrian prince, and both were killed a mere weeks after the marriage, leaving the teenage Anne with no protector.[[/note]] to sanctuary, and the brothers fought bitterly over their wives' fortune before Richard and Anne could finally marry. The fact that Anne was the daughter of the powerful northern baron Richard Neville, [[TheKingmaker The Earl of Warwick]] helped Richard gain popular support in that region, and evidence suggests she sometimes stood in for him in matters of local government while he was away.
37
38Richard did gain a bit of a reputation as an [[TheFettered uptight family man]] in his brother's decadent court, despite his own premarital illegitimate children, and is thought to have been frustrated by Edward's excesses and his enablers. Anne and Richard had only had one child, Edward of Middleham, who died about half-way into Richard's reign. The boy's mother followed him to the grave soon after, and Richard was reportedly devastated by these losses. One rumor that did circulate during Richard's lifetime that is that he poisoned Anne in order to marry his niece Elizabeth of York. There is an eyewitness account of him angrily denying this and declaring his love for the recently deceased Anne.[[note]]The fact that popular novelist Phillippa Gregory's work portrays Richard and Elizabeth as in love infuriates Ricardians, who object to the slander of Richard and Tudor partisans, who see this as insulting to Elizabeth who went on to marry Henry Tudor.[[/note]] He was, in fact, negotiating political matches for himself and Elizabeth with a Portuguese princess and prince.
39
40After his death, his body was hurriedly buried at a monastery in Leicester. The monastery (including his tomb) was torn down during the reign of UsefulNotes/HenryVIII. By the 19th century there was no marker of where the grave had been and it was [[DatedHistory rumoured that the remains had been thrown into the nearby river]]. A few historians attempted to trace the site of the grave and concluded its location now lay under a car park in central Leicester. In 2009, Richard III Society eventually launched a project to find the grave. In 2012, Richard's remains were unearthed from the carpark — astonishingly, he was the first one found on the first day of digging — and using DNA from two descendants of his sister, identified as his in 2013. He was reburied at Leicester Cathedral in 2015; a visitor centre now exists on the site of the original grave.
41
42Remarkably, [[RealityIsUnrealistic the remains showed signs of severe adolescent-onset scoliosis]] (a spinal column with a C-curve) -- which likely gave him uneven shoulders and ribs but certainly didn't make him a hunchback -- but there were no signs of the other deformities claimed by Tudor propagandists. In 15th-century England, though, Richard's back alone would have been seen as a divine punishment. Even though he [[HidingTheHandicap may have kept it hidden]] until [[https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-leicestershire-32291624 his death]], gossip about it would have added to a poor reputation, and obviously time didn't help. Further studies on his body and [[https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-leicestershire-41174229 contextual reconstruction with scoliosis patient Dominic Smee]] demonstrated that medieval armour and cavalry weaponry does not hinder a scoliosis sufferer from being an effective cavalry fighter -- although it would definitely tire them out in on-foot combat. The entire sequence of Richard's actions in Bosworth suggest that this is what happened; he led a cavalry charge that was repulsed before being unhorsed, rendering him vulnerable. It was also found that despite his increased vulnerability after being unhorsed, he ''really did'' go down fighting -- his skeleton showed that he suffered over a dozen injuries, three of which would have been fatal fairly quickly. Of those three injuries, one could have only been inflicted after death. This was the blow to his pelvis, which would have been armoured at the time of his death. The other two, a blow from a sword and another from a halberd-type weapon, both to the skull, were more likely the fatal wounds. In brief, whatever your opinion on the man might be, he was most definitely a RealLife HandicappedBadass.
43
44Richard III is ''not'' to be confused with the current [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Richard,_Duke_of_Gloucester Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester]], Queen Elizabeth II's first cousin, who is ([[TemptingFate so far as we know]]) not planning to usurp the throne. He is, however, a patron of [[http://www.richardiii.net/ the Richard III Society UK.]]
45
46Richard's defenders have long called themselves Ricardians, and this may be one of the earliest examples of a FanCommunityNickname.
47----
48!!Works associated with Richard III:
49
50[[AC:Comic Books]]
51* In the Creator/DCComics miniseries ''Comicbook/KnightAndSquire'', Ricardian researchers create a clone of Richard, which [[GeneticMemory somehow has all the original's memories]]. But Richard really is a villain[[note]]In the annotations in the back, Creator/PaulCornell says the only "bad king" he feels he's being unfair to is John[[/note]] and is soon joined by other wicked kings. Together, they attempt to take over England through the power of... [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotHeinous Twitter.]]
52
53[[AC:Film]]
54* ''Film/TowerOfLondon'', a 1939 Universal horror film starring Creator/BasilRathbone as Richard, and its 1962 remake, directed by Creator/RogerCorman and starring Creator/VincentPrice.
55** Notable in that Price played Clarence in the Rathbone version.
56* The 2022 film ''Film/TheLostKing'' is about the discovery of Richard's remains underneath a car park in Leicester. Richard himself is depicted in a performance of [[Creator/WilliamShakespeare Shakespeare's]] [[Theatre/RichardIII play]], and he later appears as a ghost who only Creator/SallyHawkins can see. Both versions of him are played by the same actor, Creator/HarryLloyd.
57
58[[AC:Literature]]
59* In the ''Literature/AnnoDracula'' series, Richard [[spoiler: is the villain of "Vampire Romance", and ''more'' of a monster than in Shakespeare]].
60* Alexander Tagere from the ''Literature/ArciaChronicles'' is a {{Fantasy Counterpart|Culture}} of Richard, portrayed in a very sympathetic light. His life up to the battle of the not-Bosworth Field is pretty much a word-for-word retelling of Richard's biography, transplanted into the HighFantasy setting of the series. That the author is an active Ricardian probably explains it.
61* Richard of Gloucester is an ambivalent figure in Creator/RobertLouisStevenson's novel ''Literature/TheBlackArrow'' (1888), which has been adapted for televison and film several times, notably in 1911, 1948, and 1985.
62* Creator/JosephineTey's ''Literature/TheDaughterOfTime'' is probably the 20th century work that re-started the [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation revisionist view]] of Richard. It involves her long-time detective hero Alan Grant bored in the hospital and piecing through the evidence in search of the "historical" Richard.
63* Creator/JohnMFord's ''Literature/TheDragonWaiting'' has a pretty sympathetic Richard III...in an AlternateHistory setting with [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent Werewolves]] and [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]].
64* Richard, the Princes in the Tower, and his reputation are the focus of ''Literature/TheHellequinChronicles'' prequel novella ''Infamous Reign'', which features Nate Garrett a.k.a. [[TheDreaded Hellequin]] being sent to deal with the matter of the missing Princes (Nate had backed Richard's accession and his superiors therefore felt that it was his mess to clean up). Richard is depicted as a decent man who had the spine to stand up to an angry Nate despite being plainly terrified of him, and wasn't to blame for the Princes going missing. As it turns out, the Princes were descended from King Arthur through their mother, and Nate's ArchEnemy Mordred, who had a fixation on preventing Arthur's descendants from ever taking the throne, kidnapped them. Nate rescued them and smuggled them into exile, but shortly after, the Battle of Bosworth happened, Henry Tudor took the throne, and Richard's reputation was thoroughly smeared - something that even Henry concedes he didn't deserve (but which he also considers politically useful).
65* The ''Literature/IRichardPlantagenetSeries'' consists of five novels chronicling Richard's life from early childhood to his death from a first person perspective. Strongly Ricardian, the novels portray Richard as a brave soldier and [[HonorBeforeReason honorable man]] but whose HorribleJudgeOfCharacter, impulsiveness and habit of making dangerous enemies leads to disaster.
66* ''Literature/RichardIIIInThe21stCentury'', a sci-fi trilogy in which a research team rescues Richard at his moment of death and brings him to the year 2004, where he must learn to adapt to a very different world than the one he left behind.
67* ''Literature/RobRoy'': Richard III's vilification is alluded to by Diana Vernon when she talks about one Yorkist ancestor of hers who was "sorely slandered by a sad fellow called Will Shakespeare, whose Lancastrian partialities, and a certain knack at embodying them, has turned history upside down, or rather inside out".
68* Creator/GeorgeRRMartin's ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' is an EpicFantasy that is loosely based on the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses and is filled with echoes of "The Princes in the Tower" and several characters - Stannis Baratheon, Ned Stark, Theon Greyjoy - are loosely patterned or direct expies of the historical Richard, with the fan favorite Tyrion Lannister, a deformed DeadpanSnarker dwarf, matching the rhetorical splendor of Shakespeare's Richard III, though all four of these characters are among the most popular. Arnolf Karstark seems to be a straight Expy of the theatrical Richard, but without his rhetorical splendor.
69* Sandra Worth's the ''Literature/RoseOfYorkSeries'' contains three novels about Richard and his wife Anne, with them being the clear protagonists and a villainous take on Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville.
70* Sharon Kay Penman's ''Literature/TheSunneInSplendour'' is a DoorStopper epic detailing the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, which focuses on a very [[ByronicHero sympathetic Richard]].
71** Ripped off in Anne Easter Smith's ''A Rose For The Crown'', which is by no means bad but is definitely inferior to the above in every way that counts.
72* Rosemary Hawley Jarman's ''We Speak No Treason'' is a long romance novel about Richard of Gloucester and the woman who loves him for all time.
73* A short story by Creator/CJCherryh has a young woman who's been sentenced to the Tower of London meet several of the ghosts haunting it -- including the two little princes. Edward V tells her that Richard was believed to have murdered them, but adds, "But he didn't, you know."
74* ''Literature/TheVirginWidow'' is a novel by Anne O'Brien from the perspective of Richard's wife, Anne Neville, and portrays Richard as a powerful, sometimes ruthless, but decent young man who loves Anne.
75* Richard is a supporting character in Eleanor Fairburn's Literature/TheWarsOfTheRosesQuartet, a series about his mother Cecily Neville. In the story, he's a loyal son and only takes the throne when his mother reveals Edward IV's bigamy.
76
77[[AC:Live-Action TV]]
78* In the first ''Series/{{Blackadder}}'' series, Richard III (played by Peter Cook) was actually a pretty good ruler who reigned for a long time (long enough for his nephew and heir, Richard, Duke of York to grow up and have fully grown children of his own) and was accidentally beheaded by his great-nephew Edmund during the Battle of Bosworth Field when he was mistaken for a horse thief. Most of his reign (and all of Richard IV's) were later {{Retcon}}ned by Henry Tudor to have never happened.
79* The ''Series/DoctorWho'' [[Creator/BigFinish audio play]] "The Kingmaker" featured a ruthless, but fundamentally decent Richard III who [[MythologyGag sounded suspiciously like]] Creator/ChristopherEccleston.
80** ...which may be a bit of FridgeBrilliance: Richard throughout his reign was associated with [[OopNorth Northern England]], which was, indeed, more detrimental to his popularity in South England than his (alleged) crimes.
81* ''Series/HorribleHistories'' gives Richard a song about how he's a nice guy who was unfairly vilified by Thomas More and William Shakespeare.
82* In the miniseries ''Series/TheWhiteQueen'', which is based on Creator/PhilippaGregory's ''Literature/TheCousinsWarSeries'' novels, Richard is played by Creator/AneurinBarnard, who is presented as a loyal supporter of his brother Edward IV, plus a [[RescueRomance romantic]] and (mostly) good husband to Anne Neville, the tritagonist of the story. It's notable for being the [[HistoricalHeroUpgrade most sympathetic]] [[note]]e.g. he's more likeable than his brothers, others manipulate him to grab the throne, he's not responsible for the disappearance of the Princes in the Tower[[/note]] and [[HistoricalBeautyUpdate the most]] [[AbledInTheAdaptation attractive]] [[note]]he's a MrFanservice RavenHairIvorySkin PrettyBoy, especially in the Starz broadcast[[/note]] live-action portrayal of Richard. It's also very controversial for including an affair between him and his niece Elizabeth of York in the final episode. Being among the first [[RealitySubtext post-exhumation portrayals]] of Richard III, the year the series was running (2013) was also the same year the rediscovered remains of Richard III was beyond doubt confirmed to be his.
83* The 2016 cycle of ''Series/TheHollowCrown'' (which adapted the Minor Tetralogy of Shakespeare below) features Creator/BenedictCumberbatch as Richard III[[note]]who, coincidentally, is also a distant Plantagenet descendant--and therefore related to Richard himself[[/note]]. His portrayal of the king reflected a curious mix of traditional anti-Ricardian iconography and the most recent historical/forensic evidence[[note]]he does have a humpback and a lame arm at best, but the prosthetic "back" looks close enough to [[CharacterExaggeration a more extreme case of scoliosis]]--[[DatedHistory which was the analysis on the real one's remains]][[/note]]. Furthermore, he [[CharacterDevelopment does not start off as a cackling villain, and more a son of York]] [[CorruptTheCutie hardened, betrayed and embittered by the years]]--[[TragicMonster which lends his atrocities and ambition a tragic edge]].
84
85[[AC:Music]]
86* "The Ballad of Richard III" by Gwydion Penderwenn which takes a pro-Richard stance.
87
88[[AC:Theatre]]
89* Creator/WilliamShakespeare's ''Theatre/HenryVI'' (Parts II and III) and ''Theatre/RichardIII''. That last one is ''such'' a negative portrayal of the King that his name has basically became synonymous with villainy for a few centuries. And yet, the play's deliciously villainous DeadpanSnarker Richard is by far the richest and most interesting character in the play and early on started to be subjected to the DracoInLeatherPants treatment. He's like the Darth Vader of Elizabethan drama, you're supposed to hate him but he's so [[RootingForTheEmpire darn competent]] and things are so much more exciting when he's onstage.
90* The noted American playwright Maxwell Anderson wrote a little-known play called ''Richard and Anne''. In it, the ghost of [[UsefulNotes/RichardIII Richard III]] interrupts a production of ''Theatre/RichardIII'' in order to [[{{Angst}} angst]] about his [[TheMourningAfter everlasting love]] for his wife Anne. And [[RonTheDeathEater Henry of Richmond]] shows up as a vulgar [[IncrediblyLamePun music tutor]].
91
92[[AC:Video Games]]
93* In ''VideoGame/YuGiOhTheDuelistsOfTheRoses'', a game loosely based on the War of the Roses, King Richard III goes under the name Richard Slysheen as his appearance is based on Heishen, the BigBad of VideoGame/YuGiOhForbiddenMemories.
94
95[[AC:Webcomic]]
96* [[http://www.harkavagrant.com/index.php?id=50 "Party Time with Richard III"]], an early ''Webcomic/HarkAVagrant'' comic.
97
98[[AC:Other]]
99* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQoU47FbSxE This crossover parody]] of ''Series/HorribleHistories''' Richard III song with footage from ''Series/TheWhiteQueen'' is entertaining because the lyrics fit perfectly with the selected clips.

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