'Edward was a man of considerable charm, who perhaps relied too much  upon that charm to keep tensions within his entourage at bay'  
In  1461 Edward earl of March, a handsome, charismatic eighteen-year old,  usurped the English throne during the first and most fierce of the Wars  of the Roses. The years that followed witnessed a period that has been  described as a golden age. Yet, argues A. J. Pollard, Edward was a man  of limited vision, who squandered his talents and failed to secure his  own dynasty.