The House of Yorks
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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.
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