the bush was a hawthorn
The outside of a tudor house is usuallt make of straw , wood and mud. It was small and not impressive at all.
The Tudor Rose was a great PR exercise. The houses of York and Lancaster had been fighting for some time and each had their own rose emblem. The Tudor rose neatly combined these two roses into a single rose to show that unity had been achieved.
pink and luminous green
well it kind of depends on how it looks because everything looks different in its own unique way:) Makishia
the bush was a hawthorn
lancashire
The English Rose (the Tudor Rose) was the emblem of the Tudor Kings and is now the English emblem flower. See the link I will place below for more information.
The Tudor rose has been in existence for over 520 years. The Tudor rose came about by the joining of the Houses of York and Lancaster and the amalgamation of the badges associated with each House, the white rose of York and the red rose of Lancaster. The Wars of the Roses between the Houses of York and Lancaster (over succession to the English throne) ended in 1485 with the victory of the Lancastrian Henry Tudor, who founded the House of Tudor, which subsequently ruled England and Wales for 118 years. In order to bring a lasting peace, Henry married Elizabeth Plantagenet from the House of York and on the occasion of their wedding on 18 January 1486 adopted the new emblem of the white rose of York placed within the centre of the red rose of York as the emblem of the House of Tudor.
instuction about making a Tudor house
Tudor House School was created in 1897.
Nothing happened to the Tudor Rose. It is with us today and sometimes called the Union Rose. It is the traditional floral emblem of England
The Tudor Rose signifies the union of the two previously waring houses of York and Lancaster. One house sported the Red Rose (Lancaster) as its emblem and the other the White Rose (York). When Henry Tudor (of Lancaster) came to the throne as Henry VII, he married Elizabeth of York and merged the two roses (and the dynastic houses) into one and it became an important heraldic badge during the Tudor era that is still used to this day. The crowned Tudor Rose (white within the red) with a stalk and leaves is the Royal Badge of England and the uncrowned version is the proclaimed Floral Emblem of England.
they were the House of York and The House of Lancester Together they made the Tudor rose
The motto of Tudor House School is 'Learning for life'.
The Tudor rose (sometimes called the Union Rose) is the traditional floral heraldic emblem of England. When Henry Tudor took the crown of England from Richard III in battle, he brought about the end of the Wars of the Roses between the House of Lancaster (whose badge was a red rose) and the House of York (whose badge was a white rose). His father was Edmund Tudor from the House of Richmond, and his mother was Margaret Beaufort from the House of Lancaster; he married Elizabeth of York to bring all factions together. On his marriage, Henry adopted the Tudor Rose badge conjoining the White Rose of York and the Red Rose of Lancaster. The Tudor Rose is occasionally seen divided in quarters (heraldically as 'quartered') and vertically (in heraldic terms per pale) red and white. More often, the Tudor Rose is depicted as a double rose, white on red and is always described, heraldically, as 'proper'. It's a very symbolic emblem of English history.
The Tudor Rose is the heraldic emblem of England, and has featured on many British coins for hundreds of years.