It's boring to force a whitewash. R3 is of course a very capable monarch, but usurpation is an indisputable reality, and it is natural that the suspicion of killing the prince is the most difficult to escape. After all, if you look at Chinese history, you know that cutting grass is absolutely necessary to eradicate the roots. No one in China believes that he is a tyrant because of this. He failed in the end because many nobles thought that he did kill his nephew and turned against him. Although Shakespeare wrote him too unbearably, I think his psychological portrayal is very good. R3 is not as popular with his mother as George among the three York brothers, and he is not born with a disability like the love four. , Lack of love in one's life requires birth and death for the family. Psychological imbalance is inevitable, and ambition is normal after the four deaths of love. He is also a descendant of the royal family with great talents and great military exploits. He may be loyal to his elder brother and he may be willing to do so. A similar example is the case of the battle of Yongle Jingnan in the Ming Dynasty in China, but Zhu Di killed his nephew but opened a prosperous generation, and his life was much better than R3.
As for whether R3 and the queen have feelings, this is probably only the person involved knows. However, R3 does not seem to have many mistresses, and the fifteen years of married life with Annie gave birth to four children, and it does not look particularly ruthless. Given that he died so tragically in the end, it might be a comfort to have a wife in love. But for him, the love of men and women must not be as attractive as the love of the crown.
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