The war of the roses.
Both houses in the War of the Roses had a rose as their family crest; for the Lancasters it was a red rose, for the Yorks it was a white rose. Their combined family, the Tudors, had a white rose within a red rose.
Tudors is the same in English and French. The masculine proper noun -- whose above-mentioned form references the House of Lancaster-connected victors in fifteenth-century England's War of the Roses and represents the Anglicization of the Welsh surname Tewdur -- will be "tyoo-dohr" in French.
The Tudors
the Tudors
Neither. The roses (white and red) which symbolized the Lancasters and Yorks in the war of the roses were united when Henry VII took the throne, which united the two dynasties.
In England, the War of the Roses takes place between two houses, that of Lancaster and that of York. The two successfully marry together and their son is the successor of England who begins the house of Tudors.
The Greek Side
north
The Trojans.
Allies
Patroclus fought on the Greek side.