Edward IV was not quite 41 when he died, quickly and unexpectedly. Many theories have been put about over the years from flu to diabetes, to deliberate poisoning.

A new theory by Marylynn Salmon, author of the controversial and almost impossible to obtain ‘SECRETS OF THE HOUSE OF YORK has now emerged, and as you might expect from the title of her previous work, it is a wild one.

Ms Salmon believes that Edward died of syphilis. She gives her reasons as

  1. It is now known that this sexually transmitted disease was in Europe before the Renaissance
  2. There were mentions of symptoms in documents of the time which indicate syphilis (she does not name these except for one document saying he ‘gave up his spirit.’
  3. During Edward’s reign, courtiers described Edward suffering “a damp chill to his very marrow” while on a fishing trip. Ms Salmon thinks this was a medieval term for ‘having sex’. 
  4. Edward would have had a weak immune system because he didn’t hang out with many others, being king.

Okay, I am going to take these on, one by one.

1 It is true that some early cases of syphilis have been found in skeletons from medieval England but they are rare as hen’s teeth.

2 There is a possibility that Edward had been unwell during Richard’s Scottish campaign, however, there are no mentions of what ailed him. Saying ‘he gave up his spirit’ is a common enough phrase to do with dying people; I have no idea how it relates to a possible disease.

3 In all my reading on medieval lives, I have never heard ‘a chill to the marrow’ used in relation to ‘having sex.’ It merely means cold to the core of your body, which would particularly noticeable if one was coming down with a viral illness and had cold shivers.

4 This is just bonkers. Edward was a soldier and a very hands-on king (in many ways!) Kings were not kept away from people in his era and that aside, you do not ‘strengthen your immune system’ by exposure to dangerous pathogens…Royals and nobles often survived diseases like the Plague and the Sweat by shutting themselves in their castles and only allowing a few trusted servants in and out–essentially, they locked down until the threat had passed.

In case you were wondering, these are the symptoms of late stage syphilis–blindness, paralysis, aortic aneurysms, dementia, deafness. It can also eat your nose away and make you lose your hair. None of these signs were noted in regards to Edward IV.

Edward’s last child was also born in 1480. Syphilis takes many years to claim its victims. If Edward had the disease, Elizabeth Woodville would have almost certainly had it too and there was a high chance it would also be passed on to at least some of their children.

Here is a link to the article: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/king-edward-ivs-cause-death-30618527


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  1. Personally I still think he suffered from gallbladder problems late in life, due to his lifestyle. Gallstones can resolve on their own, but if they happen to block the flow of pancreatic enzymes, pancreatitis develops. If severe acute pancreatitis is left untreated, it is fatal.
    I think I made a more detailed comment about this on sparkypus’ blog A Medieval Potpourri, under the post ‘The Mysterious Death of Edward IV’.

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  2. It was commented on during Edwards later life that he was overweight and was drinking quite a lot and at the point of death was incoherent. I have always thought a stroke much more likely.

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  3. Taking Ms Salmon’s theory, he could equally have been knocked over by a trolleybus on his way to the pub. We should not discount the possibility.

    Medieval kings lived in public! Sure, they had their private moments, but it’s hard to think of many scenarios where a king would literally be alone. There would always be someone there and not always the same someone. The intimate attendants had a rota.

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  4. My theory is that Edward IV died of appendicitis.  Although he had been a slim, athletic man in his youth, he had become obese in his later years.  He lived an extremely unhealthy lifestyle with too much food, wine and partying.  One of Richard’s complaints about the Woodvilles was that they encouraged Edward IV’s bad habits.  

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  5. ahh Edward, he did have some ill health in the early 1460’s, apparently serious enough that he missed a Garter dinner feast and required a host of special cures sent to him – I think I read that the (modern) speculation was something akin to measles BUT prob a venereal disease – this would have been just before the secret Wydville marriage. As to the boating party, or fishing party that March 1483, a curious junket around Easter anyway, but I would not discount the double meaning of pecher – with and without the accent mark – one is “fishing” and the other form is “to sin” or “sinning” – it’s a longtime favorite play on the word. Georges Seurat (the post-impressionist in the late 1880’s) used the visual equivalent of this wordplay with this Sunday Afternoon at La Grande Jatte where you see men or ‘ladies’ fishing. The whole scene is replete with what the very unfashionable lower classes did on Sunday, mistresses (and the like) with their married escorts (whose wives were in the better parts of Paris, riding with their lovers or perhaps at the Opera). To the French viewer in Seurat’s day they would have immediately understood, ‘fishing’ and trolling for sex as much the same thing at the little isle of Jatte (btw, Seurat had a double life himself, with a common law wife, well, a mistress, with whom even his closest painter allies and supporters knew nothing; only after his sudden death from the flu did they learn; things never change).
    For myself, I favor poison.

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  6. […] daughter of William Courtney, Earl of Devon, and his wife Princess Katherine, the daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville. Poor Margaret was supposed to have died young after choking on a fishbone […]

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  7. […] is an illustration of the coronation of Edward IV, showing the new king’s golden splendour, and bottom right, his dark brother, the “vile, […]

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  8. […] is an interesting story attached to the early days of the House of York. Edward IV wasn’t the first to be accused of being contracted to one woman while pretending to be married to […]

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  9. […] She eventually remarried Richard Welles, 7th Baron Welles, but he was executed on the orders of Edward IV only about a year after the marriage. Margery may have then become a […]

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  10. […] On 2 August 2019 I wrote this post—which contained the following link https://x.com/liz_lizanderson/status/1016611053394976768 concerning a portion of medieval livery badge thought to be that of Henry Holand, 3rd Duke of Exeter. The 3rd duke fought for Henry VI and died mysteriously at sea, it’s thought at the instruction of the very Yorkist Edward IV. […]

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