Richard III of England unwisely continued to trust Thomas Stanley and his brother, William, even after he had briefly imprisoned Thomas in 1483 on suspicion of conspiracy. At the Battle of Bosworth Field, the Stanleys betrayed him, coming in on the side of the Lancastrians at a crucial moment. It is Thomas who is alleged to have retrieved Richard's lost crown from the battlefield and placed it on the head of his own stepson. In gratitude, he was created Earl of Derby on October 27, 1485, and never looked back. His brother, William, did not fare so well. In 1495, William made the mistake of supporting the pretender Perkin Warbeck, and was executed for treason.
Thomas Stanley (1625-1678) was an English author and translator. Born in Cumberlow, Hertfordshire, he was educated at the University of Cambridge and subsequently embarked on a legal career. Having published translations of poetry from the original Greek, Latin, French, Spanish and Italian, he began his great work, A History of Philosophy in 1655, not completing it for another seven years.
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