routed the Lancastrians at the battles of Mortimer’s Cross and Towton, and
claimed the throne. Henry VI was then acclaimed a usurper and a traitor.
Edward was crowned in June 1461. He was an extremely popular ruler,
although well-known for his licentious behaviour. During his reign,
printing and silk manufacturing were introduced into England.
Edward’s secret marriage to Elizabeth Woodville, a widow of a Lancastrian
knight, angeed the old nobility and alienated his cousin Richard Neville,
Earl of Warwick (also known as "The Kingmaker"), who had previously been a
major power during the early days of Edward’s reign. In 1469, Edward was
deposed by Warwick, and was drien out of England and to Burgundy. Warwick
reinstated Henry VI. Two years later, backed by his brother-in-law, Charles
("The Bold"), Duke of Burgundy, returned to England with a large army and
defeated the Lancastrians at the battles of Barnet and Tewkesbury.
The remaining years of his reign were, for the most part, peaceful. There
was, however, a short war with France in 1475, after which Louis XI agreed
to pay Edward a yearly subsidy. Edward died on April 8 1483 and was buried
at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor.
As King, Edward’s arms were: Quarterly, France modern and England, and
his crest On a chapeau gules turned up ermine, a lion statant guardant
crowned or. As badges, he used the white rose of York, the sun in
splendour, and the white rose en soliel, as well as the lion, the bull and
the hart, the falcon and fetterlock of the dukes of York, and a white rose
incorporating red petals, a forerunner of the Tudor rose.
Elizabeth Woodville, 1437–1492, Queen of England
Elizabeth was the eldest child of Sir Richard Woodville and Jacquetta of
Luxembourg. She was maid of honor to Margaret of Anjou. She was married to
Sir John Grey of Groby, who was killed in battle in 1461, leaving her with
two small sons. Elizabeth married Edward IV secretly in April 1464 and was
crowned Queen in May 1465. She was also a patroness of Queens’ College,
Cambridge and gave the College its first Statues in 1475. Her ten brothers
and sisters, who were as avaricious and unpopular as herself, were raised
to high rank by the king. Elizabeth and Edward had three sons and seven
daughters.
Following her husband’s death in 1483, their marriage was declared
invalid by Parliament and their children illegitimate. In 1485, however,
Elizabeth’s eldest daughter, Elizabeth of York, married Henry VII and
became Queen of England. Elizabeth Woodville was subsequently banished to
Bermondsey Abbey, where she died in 1492.
Elizabeth Woodville’s seal displayed a shield of her husband’s arms
impaling her own, which were Quartlerly, first argent, a lion rampant
double queued gules, crowned or (Luxemburg, her mother’s family), second
quarterly, I and IV, gules a star if eight points argent; II and III,
azure, semйe of fleurs de lys or; third, barry argent and azure, overall a
lion rampant gules; fourth, gules, three bendlets argent, on a chief of the
first, charged with a fillet in base or, a rose of the second; fifth, three
pallets vairy, on a chief or a label of five points azure, and sixth, a
fess and a canton conjoined gules (Woodville).
Children of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville
Elizabeth of York, 1466–1503, Queen of England
Born 11 February, 1466 at Westminster Palace, Elizabeth was the first
born child of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville. She was betrothed to
George Neville, Duke of Bedford, and then engaged to the Charles, the
Dauphin of France (later Charles VIII). Elizabeth married Henry Tudor in
1486 and became Queen of England, thus uniting the Houses of York and
Lancaster. As. Queen, she was completely dominated by Henry VII and his
mother Margaret Beaufort.
She bore Henry eight children: (1) Arthur, Prince of Wales, b. 1486; (2)
Margaret (later Queen of Scotland) b. 1489; (3) Henry (later Henry VII) b.
1491; (4) Elizabeth b.1492; (5) Mary (later Queen of France and Duchess of
Suffolk) b. 1496; (6) Edmund (died young) 1499; (7) Edward (died young);
and (8) Katherine (died young) b. 1503. Elizabeth died in childbirth in on
her birthday in 1503, at the age of 37 years. She is buried beside her
husband in the Henry VII Chapel in Westminster Abbey.
Mary of York, 1467-1482
Mary was the second daughter, born 11 August, 1467 at Windsor Castle. She
was promised in marriage to the King of Denmark, but died in 1482 before
the marriage could take place. She is buried in St. George’s Chapel,
Windsor.
Cicely of York, 1469–1507, Viscountess Welles
Cicely was born on 20 March 1469 at Westminster Palace. She was
originally promised in a marriage treaty to the heir of James III of
Scotland but instead married John, Lord Welles, by whom she had two
daughters Elizabeth and Anne, both of whom died without issue. By her
second marriage, to Thomas Kyme of Isle of Wight, she had Richard and
Margaret. She died at Quarr Abbey, Isle of Wight on 24 August 1507.
Edward V, 1470–?
The eldest son of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, Edward was born in
sanctuary at Westminster on 4 November 1470. He was created Prince of
Wales, Duke of Cornwall, Earl of Chester, March and Pembroke. As Prince of
wales, Edward was educated at Ludlow Castle by his uncle Anthony, Earl
Rivers.
Following his father’s death, he was brought to London to be crowned.
Parliament, however, declared him to be illegitimate and Richard of
Gloucester became king. Edward and his brother Richard lived in the Tower
of London during the summer of 1483. Their fate is unknown.
Edward’s arms as king were: Quarterly, France modern and England, and his
crest on his Great Seal; on a chapeau gules turned up ermine encircled by a
royal coronet, a lion statant guardant crowned or.
Margaret of York, b. and d. 1472
This child of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville (not to be confused with
her aunt of the same name) was born 10 April 1472 at Windsor Castle and
died on 11 December of the same year. She is buried in Westminster Abbey.
Richard, Duke of York, 1473–?
Born at Shrewsbury, the second son of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville,
Richard was created Duke of York in 1474. In 1478, at the age of four
years, Richard was married to six-year-old Anne Mowbray, who had inherited
the estates of her father John Lord Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk in 1475. They
married at St Stephen’s Chapel, Westminster, but Anne Mowbray died while
still a child. When his brother, Edward V, was deposed, young Richard, who
had been in sanctuary with his mother, was taken by the Archbishop of
Canterbury to live with his brother in the Royal Apartments in the Tower of
London. Their fate remains a mystery, but many contemporary heads of state
including (in secret correspondance, but not publicly) the Spanish King and
Queen, believed the claimant Perkin Warbeck, executed by Henry VII, to be
Richard.
His arms were: Quarterly, France modern and England, a label of three
points, argent on the first point a canton gules; his crest was On a
chapeau gules turned up ermine, a lion statant guardant crowned or, gorged
with a label as in the arms, and his badge a falcon volant argent, membered
or, within a fetterlock unlocked gold.
George of York, Duke of Bedford, 1477-1479
The seventh child and third youngest son of Edward IV and Eizabeth
Woodville, he was created Duke of Bedford, but died very young. He is
buried at Windsor.
Anne of York, 1475-1510
Anne was married to Thomas Howard, third Duke of Norfolk. She died in
1510 without surviving issue.
Catherine of York, 1479–1527
The sixth daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, Catherine
married William Courtenay, Earl of Devon, and had one child, Henry, who
succeeded his father as Earl. Despite being made Marquis of Exeter, Henry’s
Yorkist blood doomed him, and he was beheaded in 1538 for being implicated
in a plot with Cardinal Pole. Henry’s only son, Edward Courtenay, died
without issue, and the descendants of this family are from the younger
brother of an earlier generation.
The arms of Catherine were her husband’s arms impaling her own:
Quarterly, first and fourth, or, three torteaux; second and third, or a
lion rampant azure; impaling quarterly, first, quarterly, France modern and
England, second and third, de Burgh, and fourth Mortimer.
The arms of Henry Courtenay were: Quarterly, first, France and England
quarterly, within a bordure quarterly of England and France, second and
third, or, three torteaux; fourth, or a lion rampant azure,; and his crest,
out of a ducal coronet or, a plume of ostrich feathers four and three
argent.
Bridget of York, 1480-1513
The tenth and last child of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, she became
a nun at Dartford and died in 1513.
Richard III 1452–1485
By the Grace of God, King of England and France and Lord of Ireland
Richard III was born on the 2 October, 1452 in Fotheringhay Castle during
the tumultuous period known as the Wars of the Roses. His personal motto of
Loyaulte Me Lie was a testament of his unswerving loyalty for his brother,
Edward IV.
In 1461, he was sent to Middleham Castle to begin his knightly training
under his cousin, Richard Neville, known as "The Kingmaker". In 1472, he
married the Lady Anne Neville and they retired to Middleham. As Lord of the
North, Richard spent the next twelve years bringing peace and order to an
otherwise troublesome area of England. Through his hard work and diligence,
he attracted the loyalty and trust of the northern gentry. His
fairmindedness and justice became his byword. He had a good working
reputation of the law, was an able administrator and was militarily
formidable. Under his leadership, he won a brilliant campaign against the
Scots that is diminished by our lack of understanding of the region in his
times.
He enjoyed a special relationship with the city of York and intervened on
its behalf on many occasions. Richard, known to be a pious man, was
instrumental in setting up no less than ten chantries and procured two
licenses to establish two colleges; one at Barnard Castle in County Durham
and the other at Middleham in Yorkshire. It is known that his favorite
castle was Middleham and he was especially generous to the church raising
it to the status of collegiate college. The statutes, written in English
rather than Latin, were drawn up under his supervision.
With the untimely death of his brother, Edward IV in 1483, he was
petitioned by the Lords and Commons of Parliament to accept the kingship of
England. During his brief reign, he passed the most enlightened laws on
record for the Fifteenth Century. He set up a council of advisors that
diplomatically included Lancastrian supporters, administered justice for
the poor as well as the rich, established a series of posting stations for
royal messengers between the North and London. He fostered the importation
of books, commanded laws be written in English instead of Latin so the
common people could understand their own laws. He outlawed benevolences,
started the system of bail and stopped the intimidation of juries. He re-
established the Council of the North in July of 1484 and it lasted for more
than a century and a half. He established the College of Arms that still
exists today. He donated money for the completion of St. George's Chapel at
Windsor and King's College in Cambridge. He modernized Barnard Castle,
built the great hall at Middleham and the great hall at Sudeley Castle. He
undertook extensive work at Windsor Castle and ordered the renovation of
apartments at one of the towers at Nottingham Castle.
In 1484, while Richard and Anne were at Nottingham, they received word
that their beloved son, Edward, who was at Middleham, died suddenly after a
brief illness. His wife, Anne, never recovered from the loss of her son and
died almost a year later. Her body was borne to Westminster Abbey and laid
to rest on the south side of St. Edward's Chapel. Richard wept openly at
her funeral and later shut himself off for three days.
In eighteen months, he lost brother, son and spouse. Throughout these
tragedies, he remained steadfast to his obligations. His reign showed great
promise, but amidst the intrigues and power struggles of his time, he found
himself on Bosworth Field. Richard III was 32 years old when he died at the
Battle of Bosworth and was the last English king to die in battle.
Arms as Duke of Gloucester: France and England modern, over all a 3-
pointed label ermine, on each point a conton gules.
Arms: Quarterly, France modern and England, and his crest on his Great
Seal; on a chapeau gules turned up ermine encircled by a royal coronet, a
lion statant guardant crowned or; special cognisant, a boar rampant argent,
armed and bristled or.
Anne Neville, Queen of England, 1456-1485
Anne Neville was born on 11 June 1456 at Warwick Castle, the younger
daughter of Richard Warwick ("The King Maker") and Anne Beauchamp, heiress
to the large Beauchamp estate. She spent her childhhod at warwick Castle
along with her older sister Isabel. In 1469, her father, no longer in favor
with Edward IV, fled to Calais, bringing his family with him. Shortly
afterwards, Warwick went over to the Lancastrians, and Anne was betrothed
to the Lancastrian Prince Edward, Prince of Wales. Her father and uuncle
John were killed at Barnet in April 1471. Edward of Lancaster died at
Tewkesbury a month later. She married Richard, Duke of Gloucester and they
spent most of their married life at Middleham Castle. They had only one
living child, Edward, Prince of Wales. In 1484, Prince Edward died. Anne
never recovered and died, probably of tuberculosis, in March 1485, just
five months before her husband Richard.
Her arms were: Quarterly, France modern and England, impaling gules, a
saltire argent.
Edward, Prince of Wales, Earl of Chester and Salisbury, 1473–1484
Edward was the only surviving child of Richard III and Queen Anne. He was
born at Middleham Castle, Yorkshire and was created Prince of Wales during
the first year of his father’s reign. Edward suddenly became ill with
abdominal pain in 1484 and quickly died, possibly of appendicitis. His
parents were distraught with grief and his death may have hastened Anne’s
decline.
Arms: Quarterly, France modern and England, a label of three points
argent.
John of Gloucester
John was Richard III’s illegitimate son. His mother is unknown. He was
also called John of Pomfret, his father appointed him Captain of Calais in
1485, calling him ‘our dear son’. After his father’s death, during the
reign of Henry VII, John was beheaded on the pretext of treasonable
activities in Ireland.
Lady Catherine Plantagenet
Katherine was the illegitimate daughter of Richard III. Her mother is
unknown. In 1484, Katherine was married to William Herbert, Earl of
Huntingdon. Richard settled property worth 1,000 marks a year on the
couple. Katherine died young without producing any living children.
Some concrete facts about kings which had come frjm The House of York
Edward IV (1461-70, 1471-83 AD)
[pic]Edward IV, son of Richard, Duke of York and Cicely Neville, was born
in 1442. He married Elizabeth Woodville in 1464, the widow of the
Lancastrian Sir John Grey, who bore him ten children. He also entertained
many mistresses and had at least one illegitimate son.
Edward came to the throne through the efforts of his father; as Henry VI
became increasingly less effective, Richard pressed the claim of the York
family but was killed before he could ascend the throne: Edward deposed his
cousin Henry after defeating the Lancastrians at Mortimer's Cross in 1461.
Richard Neville, the Kingmaker, Earl of Warwick proclaimed Henry king once
again in 1470, but less than a year elapsed when Edward reclaimed the crown
and had Henry executed in 1471.
The rest of his reign was fairly uneventful. He revived the English claim
to the French throne and invaded the weakened France, extorting a non-
aggression treaty from Louis XI in 1475 which amounted to a lump payment of
75,000 crowns, and an annuity of 20,000. Edward had his brother, George,
Duke of Clarendon, judicially murdered in 1478 on a charge of treason. His
marriage to Elizabeth Woodville vexed his councilors, and he allowed many
of the great nobles (such as his brother Richard) to build
uncharacteristically large power bases in the provinces in return for their
support.
Edward died suddenly in 1483, leaving behind two sons aged twelve and
nine, five daughters, and a troubled legacy.
Edward began his reign in 1461 and ruled for eight years before Henry's
brief return. His reign is marked by two distinct periods, the first in
which he was chiefly engaged in suppressing the opposition to his throne,
and the second in which he enjoyed a period of relative peace and security.
Both periods were marked also by his extreme licentiousness; it is said
that his sexual excesses were the cause of his death (it may have been
typhoid), but he was praised highly for his military skills and his
charming personality. When Edward married Elizabeth Woodville, a commoner
of great beauty, but regarded as an unfit bride for a king, even Warwick
turned against him. We can understand Warwick's switch to Margaret and to
Edward's young brother, the Duke of Clarence, when we learn that he had
hoped the king would marry one of his own daughters.
Clarence continued his activities against his brother during the second
phase of Edward's reign; his involvement in a plot to depose the king got
him banished to the Tower where he mysteriously died (drowned in his bath).
Edward had meanwhile set up a council with extensive judicial and military
powers to deal with Wales and to govern the Marches. His brother, the Duke
of Gloucester headed a council in the north. He levied few subsidies,
invested his own considerable fortune in improving trade; freed himself
from involvement in France by accepting a pension from the French King; and
all in all, remained a popular monarch. He left two sons, Edward and
Richard, in the protection of Richard of Gloucester, with the results that
have forever blackened their guardian's name in English history.
Edward V (1483 AD)
Edward V, eldest son of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, was born in
1470. He ascended the throne upon his father's death in April 1483, but
reigned only two months before being deposed by his uncle, Richard, Duke of
Gloucester. The entire episode is still shrouded in mystery. The Duke had
Edward and his younger brother, Richard, imprisoned in the Tower and
declared illegitimate and named himself rightful heir to the crown. The two
young boys never emerged from the Tower, apparently murdered by, or at
least on the orders of, their Uncle Richard. During renovations to the
Tower in 1674, the skeletons of two children were found, possibly the
murdered boys.
Richard III (1483-85)
[pic]Richard III, the eleventh child of Richard, Duke of York, and Cecily
Neville, was born in 1452. He was created third Duke of Gloucester at the
coronation of his brother, Edward IV. Richard had three children: one each
of an illegitimate son and daughter, and one son by his first wife, Anne
Neville, widow of Henry IV's son Edward.
Richard's reign gained an importance out of proportion to its length. He
was the last of the Plantagenet dynasty, which had ruled England since
1154; he was the last English king to die on the battlefield; his death in
1485 is generally accepted between the medieval and modern ages in England;
and he is credited with the responsibility for several murders: Henry VI ,
Henry's son Edward, his brother Clarence, and his nephews Edward and
Richard.
Richard's power was immense, and upon the death of Edward IV , he
positioned himself to seize the throne from the young Edward V . He feared
a continuance of internal feuding should Edward V, under the influence of
his mother's Woodville relatives, remain on the throne (most of this feared
conflict would have undoubtedly come from Richard). The old nobility, also
fearful of a strengthened Woodville clan, assembled and declared the
succession of Edward V as illegal, due to weak evidence suggesting that
Edward IV's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville was bigamous, thereby rendering
his sons illegitimate and ineligible as heirs to the crown. Edward V and
his younger brother, Richard of York, were imprisoned in the Tower of
London, never to again emerge alive. Richard of Gloucester was crowned
Richard III on July 6, 1483.
Four months into his reign he crushed a rebellion led by his former
assistant Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, who sought the installation
of Henry Tudor , a diluted Lancaster, to the throne. The rebellion was
crushed, but Tudor gathered troops and attacked Richard's forces on August
22, 1485, at the battle of Bosworth Field. The last major battle of the
Wars of the Roses, Bosworth Field became the death place of Richard III.
Historians have been noticeably unkind to Richard, based on purely
circumstantial evidence; Shakespeare portrays him as a complete monster in
his play, Richard III. One thing is for certain, however: Richard's defeat
and the cessation of the Wars of the Roses allowed the stability England
required to heal, consolidate, and push into the modern era.
Richard of Gloucester had grown rich and powerful during the reign of his
brother Edward IV, who had rewarded his loyalty with many northern estates
bordering the city of York. Edward had allowed Richard to govern that part
of the country, where he was known as "Lord of the North." The new king was
a minor and England was divided over whether Richard should govern as
Protector or merely as chief member of a Council. There were also fears
that he may use his influence to avenge the death of his brother Clarence
at the hands of the Queen's supporters. And Richard was supported by the
powerful Duke of Buckingham, who had married into the Woodville family
against his will.
Richard's competence and military ability was a threat to the throne and
the legitimate heir Edward V. After a series of skirmishes with the forces
of the widowed queen, anxious to restore her influence in the north,
Richard had the young prince of Wales placed in the Tower. He was never
seen again though his uncle kept up the pretence that Edward would be
safely guarded until his upcoming coronation. The queen herself took
sanctuary in Westminster Abbey, but Richard had her brother and father
killed.
Edward's coronation was set for June, 1483. Richard planned his coup.
First he divided the ruling Council, convincing his own followers of the
need to have Lord Hastings executed for treason. (It had been Hastings who
had informed him of the late King's death and the ambitions of the Queen's
party). He then had his other young nephew Richard join Edward in the
Tower. One day after that set for Edward's coronation, Richard was able to
pressure the assembled Lords and Commons in Parliament to petition him to
assume the kingship. After his immediate acceptance, he then rode to
Westminster and was duly crowned as Richard III. His rivals had been
defeated and the prospects for a long, stable reign looked promising. Then
it all unraveled for the treacherous King.
It is one thing to kill a rival in battle but it is another matter to
have your brother's children put to death. By being suspected of this evil
deed, Richard condemned himself. Though the new king busied himself
granting amnesty and largesse to all and sundry, he could never cleanse
himself of the suspicion surrounding the murder of the young princes. He
had his own son Edward invested as Prince of Wales, and thus heir to his
throne, but revulsion soon set in to destroy what, for all intents and
purposes, could have been a well-managed, competent royal administration.
It didn't help Richard much that even before he took the throne he had
denounced the Queen "and her blood adherents," impugned the legitimacy of
his own brother and his young nephews and stigmatized Henry Tudor's royal
blood as bastard. The rebellion against him started with the defection of
the Duke of Buckingham whose open support of the Lancastrian claimant
overseas, Henry Tudor, transformed a situation which had previously favored
Richard.
The king was defeated and killed at Bosworth Field in 1485, a battle that
was as momentous for the future of England as had been Hastings in 1066.
The battle ended the Wars of the Roses, and for all intents and purposes,
the victory of Henry Tudor and his accession to the throne conveniently
marks the end of the medieval and the beginning of England's modern period.
Sources:
1. www.britannia.com\history
2. www.numizmat.net
3. http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/Y/York-hou.html
4. http://www.britannia.com/history/monarchs
5. www.hotbot.com
6. www.yahoo.com
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