It can be argued that Richard,
Duke of York comes very close to
defining an 'over-mighty subject'
He was a blood relation to the royal family
(a descendent of King Edward III) + an
owner of vast, landed estate that stretched
across England + English-owned parts of
France
He seemed to be everything Henry was not:
A capable politician
A warrior of distinction
A father of healthy sons
His strength of
personality matched his
ambition
Which by the 1450s was to
embrace the crown of England
York was not alone in aspiring even
greater land, wealth + power: these
aims were shared by almost all nobles
Where they differed - his
over-reaching ambition
Somerset, Suffolk +
Gloucester too were
'over-mighty subjects' - but
they only wanted to control
the crown
The outbreak of the Wars of the Roses
showed that Henry was no longer in
control of his nobility + in turn they had
allowed that political rivalry to spill over
into armed conflict
This suggests - the Wars of the Roses was as
much a war between nobles as one between the
monarchy and the nobles