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Elizabeth Woodville

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Elizabeth Woodville
Queen consort of England

(first time)
Tenure1 May 1464 – 3 October 1470
Coronation26 May 1465
Queen consort of England

(second time)
Tenure11 April 1471 – 9 April 1483
Bornc. 1437
Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire
Died(1492-06-08)8 June 1492 (aged 55)
Bermondsey, London
Burial
SpouseSir John Grey
m. c. 1452; dec. 1461
Edward IV of England
m. 1464; dec. 1483
IssueThomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset
Richard Grey
Elizabeth, Queen of England
Mary of York
Cecily of York, Viscountess Welles
Edward V of England
Margaret of York
Richard of Shrewsbury, 1st Duke of York
Anne of York, Lady Howard
George Plantagenet, Duke of Bedford
Catherine of York, Countess of Devon
Bridget of York
HouseHouse of York
FatherRichard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers
MotherJacquetta of Luxembourg

Elizabeth Woodville (also spelled Wydville, Wydeville or Widvile;[nb 1] c. 1437[1] – 8 June 1492) was Queen consort of England as the spouse of King Edward IV from 1464 until his death in 1483. At the time of her birth, her family was mid-ranked in the English aristocracy. Her first marriage was to a minor supporter of the House of Lancaster, Sir John Grey of Groby; he died at the Second Battle of St Albans, leaving Elizabeth a widowed mother of two sons. Her second marriage, to Edward IV, was a cause célèbre of the day, thanks to Elizabeth's great beauty, lack of great estates and being English yet still becoming queen, and she seized upon it to become a key figure in the ongoing dynastic civil wars now known as the Wars of the Roses. Edward was only the second King of England since the Norman Conquest to have married one of his subjects, and Elizabeth was the first such consort to be crowned Queen.[nb 2] Her marriage greatly enriched her siblings and children, but their advancement incurred the hostility of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, 'The Kingmaker' and his various alliances with the most senior figures in the increasingly-divided royal family.

This hostility turned into open discord between King Edward and Warwick, leading to a battle of wills that finally resulted in Warwick switching allegiance to the Lancastrian cause. Elizabeth remained politically influential even after her elder son, briefly proclaimed King Edward V of England, was deposed by her brother-in-law, Richard III, and she would play an important role in securing Henry VII's accession to the throne in 1485, which ended the Wars of the Roses. However, after 1485 she was forced to yield pre-eminence to Henry's mother, Lady Margaret Beaufort, and her influence on events in these years, and her eventual departure from court into retirement, remains obscure.[2][3]

Woodville's children included the Princes in the Tower and Elizabeth of York; by the latter she was maternal grandmother of Henry VIII and great-grandmother of King Edward VI, Queen Mary I of England and Queen Elizabeth I and the great-great-grandmother of Mary, Queen of Scots. Through her daughter, Elizabeth of York, she is the ancestor of every English monarch since Henry VIII and every Scottish monarch since James V of Scotland.

Early life and first marriage

Elizabeth was born about 1437, possibly in October [nb 3][4] at Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire. She was the first-born child of a socially unequal marriage that had briefly scandalised the English court. Her father, Richard Woodville, was at the time of his daughter's birth merely a Knight, and the Woodvilles, though an old and respectable family, were knightly rather than noble, a reasonably landed and wealthy family that had previously produced Commissioners of the Peace, Sheriffs, and MPs rather than peers of the realm. Richard's own father had made a good career in royal service, rising to be Chamberlain to John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford; Richard followed his father into service with the Duke, and so first met Jacquetta of Luxembourg. The daughter of Peter of Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol, and Margaret de Baux, she had been married off to the Duke of Bedford in 1433 at the age of 17; he was significantly older than Jacquetta, his second wife, and in ill-health, and he died in 1435, leaving Jacquetta a childless, wealthy widow. She was required to seek permission from the King before remarrying; but in March 1437, it was revealed that she had secretly married Woodville, who was far below her in rank and not considered a suitable husband for the lady still honoured as the King's aunt. The couple were fined £1000, but this would be remitted in October of the same year.

Despite this inauspicious start, the married couple soon prospered, thanks mainly to Jacquetta's continuing prominence in the royal family. She retained her rank and dower as Duchess of Bedford, the latter initially providing an income of between £7000 and £8000 per year (it would diminish over the years due to territorial losses in France and collapsing royal finances in England); Richard was honoured with military ranks, in which he proved himself a capable soldier. Further honours for both came when Henry VI married Margaret of Anjou, whose uncle was Jacquetta's brother-in-law: the Woodvilles were amongst those chosen to escort the bride back to England, and the family benefitted further through this double connection to the royal family, Richard being raised to the rank of Baron Rivers in 1448. Their children therefore would have grown up enjoying privilege and material comfort.

Thomas More claimed that Elizabeth was synonymous with "Isabel Grey", a maid of honour to Margaret of Anjou, Queen of Henry VI, in 1445; modern historians (such as A.R. Myers, George Smith, and David Baldwin) have noted that there are several more likely candidates to be this lady, including Lady Isabella Grey, who accompanied Margaret to England from France in 1445, or an Elizabeth Grey who was a widowed mother by 1445.[5]

In about 1452, Elizabeth Woodville married Sir John Grey of Groby, who was killed at the Second Battle of St Albans in 1461, fighting for the Lancastrian cause, which would become a source of irony as Edward IV was the Yorkist claimant to the throne. Elizabeth's two sons from this first marriage were Thomas (later Marquess of Dorset) and Richard.

Elizabeth was called "the most beautiful woman in the Island of Britain" with "heavy-lidded eyes like those of a dragon",[6] suggesting a perhaps unusual criterion by which beauty in late medieval England was judged.

Queen consort

Edward IV had many mistresses, the most notorious being Jane Shore, and did not have a reputation for fidelity. His marriage to the widowed Lady Grey took place secretly and, though the date is not accepted as exactly accurate, it is traditionally said to have taken place (with only the bride's mother and two ladies in attendance) at her family home in Northamptonshire on 1 May 1464,[7] just over three years after he had taken the English throne subsequent to leading the Yorkists in an overwhelming victory over the Lancastrians at the Battle of Towton. Elizabeth was crowned Queen on Ascension Day, 26 May 1465.

In the early years of his reign, Edward's governance of England was dependent upon a small circle of supporters, most notably his cousin, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick. At around the time of Edward's secret marriage, Warwick was negotiating an alliance with France in an effort to thwart a similar arrangement being made by his sworn enemy Margaret of Anjou, wife of the deposed Henry VI. The plan was that Edward should marry a French Princess. When his marriage to Elizabeth, who was both a commoner and from a family of Lancastrian supporters, became public, Warwick was both embarrassed and offended, and his relationship with Edward never recovered. The match was also badly received by the Privy Council, who according to Jean de Waurin told Edward with great frankness that "he must know she was no wife for a prince such as himself."

With the arrival on the scene of the new queen came a host of siblings who soon married into some of the most notable families in England.[8] The marriages of her sisters to the sons of the earls of Kent, Essex and Pembroke have left no sign of unhappiness on the parts of the parties involved, nor does that of her sister, Catherine Woodville, to the queen's 11-year-old ward Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, though the duke stood with the duke of Gloucester in opposition to the Woodvilles after the death of Edward IV. The one marriage which may be considered shocking was that of her 20-year-old brother John Woodville to Katherine, Duchess of Norfolk, daughter of Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland, by Joan Beaufort, and widow of John Mowbray, 2nd Duke of Norfolk. The wealthy Katherine had been widowed three times and was probably in her sixties.

Elizabeth Woodville's arms as queen consort, the royal arms of England impaling Woodville (Quartlerly, first argent, a lion rampant double queued gules, crowned or (Luxemburg, her mother’s family), second quarterly, I and IV, gules a star of eight points argent; II and III, azure, semée 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 (here shown in inverse: the rose should be argent on a chief gules); fifth, three pallets vairy, on a chief or a label of five points azure, and sixth, argent a fess and a canton conjoined gules (Woodville))[9][10]

When Elizabeth's relatives, especially her brother, Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers, began to challenge Warwick's pre-eminence in English political society, Warwick conspired with his son-in-law, the Duke of Clarence, the king's younger brother. One of his followers accused Elizabeth's mother, the Duchess of Bedford, of practising witchcraft. Jacquetta was acquitted the following year.[11] Warwick and Clarence twice rose in revolt and then fled to France. Warwick formed an uneasy alliance with the Lancastrian Queen Margaret of Anjou and restored her husband Henry VI to the throne in 1470, but, the following year, Edward IV returned from exile and defeated Warwick at the Battle of Barnet and the Lancastrians at the Battle of Tewkesbury. Henry VI was murdered soon afterwards.

Following her husband's temporary fall from power, Elizabeth had sought sanctuary in Westminster Abbey, where she gave birth to a son, Edward (later Edward V of England). Her marriage to Edward IV produced a total of ten children, including another son, Richard, Duke of York, who would later join his brother as one of the Princes in the Tower.[4] Five daughters also lived to adulthood.

Queen Elizabeth engaged in acts of Christian piety, which was in keeping with what was expected of a medieval queen consort. Her acts included making pilgrimages, obtaining a papal indulgence for those who knelt and said the Angelus three times per day, and founding the chapel of St. Erasmus in Westminster Abbey.[12]

Queen Mother

Following Edward's sudden death, possibly from pneumonia, in April 1483, Elizabeth for 63 days became Queen Mother as her young son, Edward became king, with his uncle, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, acting as Lord Protector. Fearing the Woodvilles would attempt to monopolise power, Richard quickly moved to take control of the young king and had Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers, and Richard Grey, brother and son to Queen Elizabeth, arrested. The young king was transferred to the Tower of London to await the Coronation. With her younger son and daughters, Elizabeth again sought sanctuary. Lord Hastings, the late king's leading supporter in London, initially endorsed Richard's actions, but Richard then accused him of conspiring with Elizabeth against him. Hastings was summarily executed. Whether any such conspiracy really occurred is not known.[13] Richard accused Elizabeth of plotting to "murder and utterly destroy" him.[14]

Richard now moved to take the throne himself and on 25 June 1483 he had Elizabeth's son and brother executed in Pontefract Castle, Yorkshire. In an act of Parliament, the Titulus Regius (1 Ric. III), he declared his elder brother's children with Elizabeth illegitimate on the grounds that his brother had made a previous promise (known as a precontract) to marry the widow Lady Eleanor Butler, which was considered a legally binding contract that rendered any other marriage contract invalid. One source, the Burgundian chronicler Philippe de Commines, says that Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells, claimed to have carried out an engagement ceremony between Edward and Eleanor.[15] The act also contained charges of witchcraft against Elizabeth, but gave no details and had no further repercussions. As a consequence, the Duke of Gloucester and Lord Protector became King Richard III. Young Edward who was no longer king and his brother Richard, Duke of York, remained in the Tower of London. They were never seen again after mid-1483.

Life under Richard III

Elizabeth, now referred to as Dame Elizabeth Grey,[4] conspired to free her sons and restore her eldest to the throne. However, when the Duke of Buckingham, one of Richard III's closest allies, entered the conspiracy, he told her that the princes had been murdered. Elizabeth and Buckingham now allied themselves with Lady Margaret Beaufort and espoused the cause of Margaret's son Henry Tudor, a great-great-great-grandson of King Edward III,[16] the closest male heir of the Lancastrian claim to the throne with any degree of validity.[nb 4] To strengthen his claim and unite the two feuding noble houses, Elizabeth and Margaret agreed that Henry should marry the eldest daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth, Elizabeth of York, who upon the death of her brothers became the Yorkist heiress. Henry agreed to this plan and in December publicly swore an oath to that effect in the cathedral in Rennes, France. A month earlier, an uprising in his favour, led by Buckingham, had been crushed.

Richard's first Parliament of January 1484 stripped Elizabeth of all the lands given her during Edward's reign.[17] On 1 March 1484, Elizabeth and her daughters came out of sanctuary after Richard publicly swore an oath that her daughters would not be harmed or molested and that they would not be imprisoned in the Tower of London or in any other prison. He also promised to provide them with marriage portions and to marry them to "gentlemen born". The family returned to Court, outwardly reconciled to Richard III. After the death of Richard's queen, Anne Neville, in March 1485, rumours arose that the now-widowed King was going to marry his beautiful teenaged niece Elizabeth of York.[18] Richard issued a denial; though according to the Crowland Chronicle he was pressured to do this by the Woodvilles' enemies who feared, among other things, that they would have to return the lands they had confiscated from the Woodvilles.

Life under Henry VII

In 1485, Henry Tudor invaded England and defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field. As King, Henry VII married Elizabeth of York and had the Titulus Regius revoked.[19] Elizabeth was accorded the title and honours of a queen dowager.[20]

Scholars differ about why Dowager Queen Elizabeth spent the last five years of her life living at Bermondsey Abbey, to which she retired on 12 February 1487. Among her modern biographers, David Baldwin believes that Henry VII forced her retreat from the Court, while Arlene Okerlund presents evidence from July 1486 that she was already planning her retirement from court to live a religious, contemplative life at Bermondsey Abbey.[21] Another suggestion is that her retreat to Bermondsey was forced on her because she was in some way involved in the 1487 Yorkist rebellion of Lambert Simnel, or at least was seen as a potential ally of the rebels.[22]

At Bermondsey Abbey, Elizabeth was treated with all the respect due to a queen dowager, lived a regal life, and received a pension of £400 and small gifts from Henry VII. She was present at the birth of her granddaughter, Margaret, at Westminster Palace, in November 1489, and at the birth of her grandson, the future Henry VIII, at Greenwich Palace, in June 1491. Her daughter, Queen Elizabeth, visited her on occasion at Bermondsey, although one of her other daughters, Cecily of York, visited her more often.

Henry VII briefly contemplated marrying his mother-in-law off to King James III of Scotland, when James' wife, Margaret of Denmark, died in 1486.[23] However, James was killed in battle in 1488, rendering the plans of Henry VII moot.

Elizabeth died at Bermondsey Abbey on 8 June 1492.[4] With the exception of the Queen, who was awaiting the birth of her fourth child, and Cecily of York, her daughters attended the funeral at Windsor Castle: Anne of York (the future Lady Anne Howard), Catherine of York (the future Countess of Devon) and Bridget of York (a sister at Dartford Priory). Elizabeth Woodville's will specified a simple ceremony.[24] The surviving accounts of her funeral on 12 June 1492 suggest that at least one source "clearly felt that a queen's funeral should have been more splendid" and may have objected that "Henry VII had not seen fit to arrange a more queenly funeral for his mother-in-law", despite the fact that the simplicity was the queen's own wish.[24] Elizabeth was laid to rest in the same chantry as her husband King Edward IV in St George's Chapel in Windsor Castle.[4]

Ancestry

Family of Elizabeth Woodville
16. Richard de Wydeville
8. John Wydeville
4. Sir Richard Wydeville of Grafton
9. Isabel Gobion
2. Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers
20. John Bittlesgate
10. Thomas Bittlesgate
5. Joan Bittlesgate
22. Sir John de Beauchamp
11. Joan de Beauchamp
23. Joan de Bridport
1. Elizabeth Woodville
24. Guy of Luxembourg, Count of Ligny
12. John of Luxembourg, Lord of Beauvoir
25. Mahaut of Châtillon, Countess of Saint-Pol
6. Peter of Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol
26. Louis of Enghien
13. Marguerite of Enghien
27. Giovanna of Sanseverino
3. Jacquetta of Luxembourg
28. Bertrand III del Balzo, Count of Andria and Squillace
14. Francesco del Balzo, 1st Duke of Andria
29. Marguerite d'Aulnay
7. Margherita del Balzo
31. Nicola Orsini, Count of Nola
15. Sueva Orsini
31. Jeanne de Sabran

Issue of Elizabeth Woodville

By Sir John Grey

By King Edward IV

In literature

Edward's love for Elizabeth is celebrated in sonnet 75 of Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella.[26] (written by 1586, first pub. 1591). She is a character in Shakespeare's Henry VI Part 3 (written by 1592) and Richard III. (written approx. 1592)

Portraits of Elizabeth Woodville in novels include:

  • Dickon (1929) by Marjorie Bowen, which paints Elizabeth as a schemer at the very heart of the various conspiracies against Richard III.
  • The Daughter of Time (1951), Josephine Tey's classic mystery, which shows Elizabeth as less evil than self-centered and overly-ambitious for her family.
  • The King's Grey Mare (1972) by Rosemary Hawley Jarman, a fictionalized biography of Elizabeth which deftly incorporates several supernatural themes, among them the sinister legend of the European water spirit Melusine, from whom Elizabeth's family claim descent, and Elizabeth's mother's historical ties to witchcraft and devil worship.
  • The Sunne in Splendour (1982) by Sharon Kay Penman, a meticulously researched biographical novel of Richard III.
  • Lady of the Roses (2008) by Sandra Worth, another less than sympathetic portrayal of Elizabeth Woodville.
  • A Secret Alchemy (2009) by Emma Darwin.
  • The White Queen (2009) by Philippa Gregory, which borrows Rosemary Hawley Jarman's supernatural elements from The King's Grey Mare. Elizabeth also appears in other novels in Gregory's "Cousins' War" series.

Screen portrayals

Film

Television

Schools named after Elizabeth Woodville

Notes

  1. ^ Although spelling of the family name is usually modernized to "Woodville", it was spelled "Wydeville" in contemporary publications by Caxton and her tomb at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle is inscribed thus; "Edward IV and his Queen Elizabeth Widvile".
  2. ^ John divorced his wife, Isabel of Gloucester, shortly after his accession, and she was never crowned; Henry IV's first wife Mary de Bohun died before he became King.
  3. ^ No record of Elizabeth's birth survives. However, her parents were pardoned for marrying without royal permission on 24 October 1437, and David Baldwin conjectures that the pardon may have coincided with the birth of Elizabeth, the couple's first-born child. See Baldwin, David, Elizabeth Woodville: The Mother of the Princes in the Tower
  4. ^ Henry's claim to the throne was weak due to Henry IV's declaration barring the accession to the throne of any heirs of the legitimized offspring of his father, John of Gaunt (son of King Edward III) by his third wife Katherine Swynford. The original act legitimizing the children of John of Gaunt and Katherine Swynford passed by Parliament and the bull issued by the Pope in the matter legitimised them fully, which made the legality of Henry IV's declaration questionable.

References

  1. ^ Karen Lindsey, Divorced, Beheaded, Survived, xviii, Perseus Books, 1995
  2. ^ Helen Jewell, Women in Medieval England (Manchester UP, 1996), p135
  3. ^ Baldwin, David, Elizabeth Woodville: Mother of the Princes in the Tower
  4. ^ a b c d e Hicks, Michael (2004). "Elizabeth (c.1437–1492) (subscription required)" (Document). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8634Template:Inconsistent citations {{cite document}}: Unknown parameter |accessdate= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |url= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  5. ^ Myers, p. 182 n.2; Smith, p. 28.
  6. ^ Jane Bingham, The Cotswolds: A Cultural History, (Oxford University Press, 2009), 66
  7. ^ Robert Fabian, The New Chronicles of England and France, ed. Henry Ellis (London: Rivington, 1811), 654; “Hearne’s Fragment of an Old Chronicle, from 1460-1470,” The Chronicles of the White Rose of York. (London: James Bohn, 1845), 15-16.
  8. ^ Ralph A. Griffiths, "The Court during the Wars of the Roses". In Princes Patronage and the Nobility: The Court at the Beginning of the Modern Age, cc. 1450–1650. Edited by Ronald G. Asch and Adolf M. Birke. New York: Oxford University Press, 1991. ISBN 0-19-920502-7. 59-61.
  9. ^ Boutell, Charles (1863). "A Manual of Heraldry, Historical and Popular" (Document). London: Winsor & Newton. p. 277Template:Inconsistent citations{{cite document}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  10. ^ Blazon of Woodville quoted from: [1], The House of York
  11. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1467-77, pg. 190.
  12. ^ Sutton and Visser-Fuchs, "A 'Most Benevolent Queen;'"Laynesmith, pp. 111, 118-19.
  13. ^ C. T. Wood, "Richard III, William, Lord Hastings and Friday the Thirteenth", in R. A. Griffiths and J. Sherborne (eds.), Kings and Nobles in the Later Middle Ages, New York, 1986, 156–61.
  14. ^ Charles Ross, Richard III, University of California Press, 1981 p81.
  15. ^ Philipe de Commines, The memoirs of Philip de Commines, lord of Argenton, Volume 1, H.G. Bohn, 1855, pp.396-7.
  16. ^ Genealogical Tables in Morgan, (1988), p. 709.
  17. ^ "Parliamentary Rolls Richard III". Rotuli Parliamentorum A.D. 1483 1 Richard III Cap XV.
  18. ^ Richard III and Yorkist History Server
  19. ^ "Rotuli Parliamentorum A.D. 1485 1 Henry VII - Annullment of Richard III's Titulus Regius".
  20. ^ "Rotuli Parliamentorum A.D. 1485 1 Henry VII - Restitution of Elizabeth Queen of Edward IV".
  21. ^ Arlene Okerlund, Elizabeth: England's Slandered Queen. Stroud: Tempus, 2006, 245.
  22. ^ Bennett, Michael, Lambert Simnel and the Battle of Stoke, New York, St. Martin's Press, 1987, pp.42; 51; Elston, Timothy, "Widowed Princess or Neglected Queen" in Levin & Bucholz (eds), Queens and Power in Medieval and Early Modern England, University of Nebraska Press, 2009, p.19.
  23. ^ http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O110-MargaretofDenmark.html.
  24. ^ a b J. L. Laynesmith, The Last Medieval Queens: English Queenship 1445-1503, Oxford University Press, New York, 2004, pp.127-8.
  25. ^ Richardson, Douglas (2011). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, ed. Kimball G. Everingham II (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. ISBN 1449966381, pp 304-7
  26. ^ University of Toronto Library, Astrophel and Stella, sonnet 75
  27. ^ www.elizabethwoodvilleprimaryschool.co.uk/
  28. ^ www.ews.northants.sch.uk/ - Elizabeth Woodville Secondary School.

Further reading

  • David Baldwin, Elizabeth Woodville (Stroud, 2002) [2]
  • Christine Carpenter, The Wars of the Roses (Cambridge, 1997) [3]
  • Michael Hicks, Edward V (Stroud, 2003) [4]
  • Rosemary Horrox, Richard III: A Study of Service (Cambridge, 1989) [5]
  • J.L. Laynesmith, The Last Medieval Queens (Oxford, 2004) [6]
  • A. R. Myers, Crown, Household and Parliament in Fifteenth-Century England. London and Ronceverte: Hambledon Press, 1985.
  • Arlene Okerlund, Elizabeth Wydeville: The Slandered Queen (Stroud, 2005); Elizabeth: England's Slandered Queen (paper, Stroud, 2006) [7]
  • Charles Ross, Edward IV (Berkeley, 1974) [8]
  • George Smith, The Coronation of Elizabeth Wydeville. Gloucester: Gloucester Reprints, 1975 (originally published 1935).
  • Anne Sutton and Livia Visser-Fuchs, "'A Most Benevolent Queen': Queen Elizabeth Woodville's Reputation, Her Piety, and Her Books", The Ricardian, X:129, June 1995. PP. 214–245.
English royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
Margaret of Anjou
Queen consort of England
Lady of Ireland

1 May 1464 – 30 October 1470
Succeeded by
Preceded by Queen consort of England
Lady of Ireland

11 April 1471 – 9 April 1483
Vacant
Title next held by
Anne Neville

Removal of unsourced assertion.

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