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  1. Elizabeth Woodville (c. 1439-1492) was the daughter of a royal widow, Jacquetta Duchess of Bedford, and a minor gentleman, Sir Richard Woodville. Elizabeth’s first husband, was Sir John Grey, and they had two sons before he died at the Second Battle of St Albans. In September 1464 Edward IV revealed that he had secretly married Elizabeth ...

  2. Elizabeth and her brothers are often talked about when discussing the Woodville children, however, Elizabeth had several sisters who married relatively powerful men. The stories of the sisters are rarely told, until now. Sarah J. Hodder has decided to take on the task of exploring the lives of these hidden figures in her debut book, “The ...

  3. Élisabeth Woodville (aussi écrit Wydville, Wydeville ou Widvile, 1437 – 8 juin 1492) est reine consort d'Angleterre par son mariage avec le roi Édouard IV d'Angleterre de 1464 jusqu'à la mort de celui-ci en 1483. Sa famille, au moment de sa naissance, appartient à la petite aristocratie anglaise, la gentry, et elle se marie en premières ...

  4. 15 de jul. de 2019 · Known For: Wife of Edward, Prince of Wales, son of Henry VI; wife of Richard of Gloucester; when Richard became King as Richard III, Anne became Queen of England. Born: June 11, 1456 at Warwick Castle in London, England. Parents: Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick and his wife Anne Beauchamp. Died: March 16, 1485 in London, England.

  5. 22 de mai. de 2017 · Anne St. Leger (January 14, 1476 - April 21, 1526). Anne St. Leger's heirs inherited, by an Act of Parliament in 1483, the Exeter estates which had been seized on her mother's behalf from her mother's first husband. That Act gave a part of the inheritance to Richard Grey, one of Elizabeth Woodville's sons by her first marriage.

  6. 4 de mar. de 2023 · Abstract. This chapter focuses on the historiography of the queens of the Wars of the Roses: Margaret of Anjou, Elizabeth Woodville, and Anne Neville. It suggests that both the propaganda of civil war and later literary depictions have led to dramatically conflicting representations of these women and explores some patterns in recent scholarship.