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    Elizabeth of York

    Page 62
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    7. Mancini

      8. CSP Milan

      9. Mancini

      10. Ibid.

      11. Calendar of Patent Rolls: Edward IV, 1467–77

      12. HVIIPPE

      13. Cotton MSS. Vespasian, f. XIII

      14. Pietro Carmeliano, cited in Anglo: Spectacle, Pageantry and Early Tudor Policy

      15. An example is in Cotton MSS. Vespasian, f. III, p. 15, and probably comes from a book Cecily owned.

      16. CSP Spain

      17. CSP Venice; CSP Milan

      18. Collection of Ordinances

      19. In 1477 priests holding fellowships at Queens’ College, Cambridge, were instructed to offer daily prayers for “our sovereign lady, Queen Elizabeth, foundress of the College, the Prince, and all the King’s childer.” The college was founded by Andrew Dockett, a local rector, in 1446. Margaret of Anjou had become its patron in 1448.

      20. Sutton and Visscher-Fuchs: “A ‘Most Benevolent Queen’ ”; Women and the Book

      21. Stonyhurst MS. 37; Tudor-Craig

      22. Royal MS. 14, EIII; Wilkins; McKendrick, Lowden and Doyle

      23. Garrett MS. 168; Quaritch; Okerlund: Elizabeth of York

      24. Hinde

      25. Paston Letters; Additional MS. 6113

      26. Croyland Chronicle

      27. Only some masonry and the vaulted undercroft, which housed the domestic offices, survives of Edward III’s palace.

      28. Hedley

      29. “Narratives of the Arrival of Louis of Bruges”; Kingsford: English Historical Literature in the Fifteenth Century

      30. Green

      31. Brigden

      32. Mancini

      33. Rous

      34. More

      35. Calendar of Patent Rolls: Edward IV, 1467–77; B.L. Additional MS. 14289, f. 12; Lowe

      36. Shears

      37. Hicks: Edward V; Exchequer Records E.101/412/9-11; Harleian MS. 158, ff. 119v, 120v; Additional MS. 6113, ff. 97–98v, 111–12

      38. Foedera

      39. Commines; Foedera

      40. Commines

      41. Cotton MSS.

      42. Commines

      43. Additional MS. 6113

      44. Calendar of Close Rolls: Edward IV. This infant was possibly named for her aunt, Anne of York, Duchess of Exeter, or for her great-grandmother, Anne Mortimer, Countess of Cambridge, through whom the House of York claimed its senior descent from Edward III. Edward IV also professed a special devotion to St. Anne, mother of the Virgin Mary.

      45. Cokayne

      46. Leland: Itinerary

      47. Croyland Chronicle

      48. A detailed account of the proceedings by Thomas Whiting, Chester Herald, is in Excerpta Historica. See also Sutton and Visscher-Fuchs: Reburial

      49. At the Reformation the college was dissolved and half the church dismantled. Visiting the ruined choir in 1573, Elizabeth I was appalled to see that the tombs were much decayed, and ordered that new Renaissance-style monuments be built in the church to house the remains of Edward, Duke of York; Richard, Duke of York; Cecily Neville (who had been buried at Fotheringhay in 1495); and Edmund, Earl of Rutland. These are the sepulchres that can be seen today in the sanctuary. The once splendid castle where Mary, Queen of Scots, was executed in 1587, was pulled down in 1627, and all that remain are the twelfth-century earthworks, and a fragment of masonry.

      50. Plowden: Tudor Women. Holinshed, writing of Edward’s later plan of 1483 to marry Elizabeth to Henry Tudor, states the marriage had been suggested some years earlier, but Elizabeth was betrothed to the Dauphin at the time.

      51. André

      52. Commines

      53. CSP Milan

      54. He was born at Windsor—Edward IV refers to him as “our son, George of Windsor” (Calendar of Close Rolls: Edward IV)—not, as is sometimes stated, at the Dominican friary in Shrewsbury where his brother Richard had been born. The first mention of him is in a document of July 6, 1477, appointing him Lieutenant of Ireland.

      55. Calendar of Close Rolls: Edward IV

      56. The Register of the Most Noble Order of the Garter

      57. Hedley

      58. Croyland Chronicle

      59. Ibid.

      60. Anne Mowbray was reburied in the Poor Clares’ convent at Stepney. Her coffin was found during excavations in 1965, and after examination her remains were reburied later that year as close as possible to her original burial place in Westminster Abbey. A photograph of her remarkably preserved hair is in the Museum of London.

      61. The Narrative of the Marriage of Richard, Duke of York; Illustrations of Ancient State and Chivalry

      62. Rotuli Parliamentorum

      63. Mancini

      64. Hicks: False, Fleeting, Perjur’d Clarence

      65. Mancini; Great Chronicle of London; Commines, Molinet, Roye, Vergil; Stow: Annals

      66. Calendar of Patent Rolls: Edward IV, 1467–77

      67. Wardrobe Accounts of Edward the Fourth, in PPE

      68. Hicks: False, Fleeting, Perjur’d Clarence

      69. Cited Jones: Psychology of a Battle: Bosworth, 1485

      70. Westervelt; Hicks: Richard III; Hicks: False, Fleeting, Perjur’d Clarence; Crawford: The Yorkists

      71. Croyland Chronicle; Vergil; More

      72. Vergil

      73. Ibid.

      74. Ross: Edward IV

      75. Calendar of Close Rolls: Edward IV

      76. Ibid.

      77. CSP Milan

      78. CSP Venice

      79. Harleian MS. 336, in Leland: Collectanea

      80. Warner

      81. Harleian MS. 336, in Leland: Collectanea

      82. Harleian MS. 4780

      83. Green; Platt

      84. Account of Garter King of Arms, in Additional MS. 6113, ff. 49, 74–74v; PPE

      85. Foedera

      86. Hall

      87. Foedera

      88. College of Arms MS. I, 11, f.21r-v; Sandford.

      89. Jones, in Women of the Cousins’ Wars; André

      90. Rous

      91. Foedera

      92. Kendall: Louis XI

      93. Croyland Chronicle

      94. Wardrobe Accounts of Edward the Fourth, in PPE

      95. Croyland Chronicle

      96. Ibid.

      3: “THIS ACT OF USURPATION”

      1. More

      2. Croyland Chronicle

      3. Vergil

      4. Commines

      5. Excerpta Historica

      6. McKelvey

      7. Calendar of Papal Registers

      8. Cotton MS. Cleopatra

      9. Mancini; Vergil

      10. Mancini

      11. Croyland Chronicle; Mancini

      12. Mancini

      13. Ibid.

      14. Ibid.

      15. Vergil

      16. Mancini

      17. Ibid.

      18. More

      19. Mancini

      20. Dockray: Richard III: A Source Book

      21. Crawford: The Yorkists

      22. Mancini

      23. Vergil

      24. Croyland Chronicle

      25. Shears

      26. Mancini

      27. More

      28. Mancini

      29. More

      30. Mancini

      31. Fabyan

      32. Croyland Chronicle; Great Chronicle of London; Fabyan; More; Vergil

      33. Vergil

      34. More; Hall

      35. Antiquarian Repertory

      36. Hall

      37. More

      38. Stonor Letters

      39. Mancini

      40. More; Hall. More relates a detailed conversation between the Queen and the Archbishop, but he almost certainly invented the speeches, basing them on what he knew had passed between them. This was a common practice in historical writing at that time.

      41. More

      42. Mancini

      43. André

      44. Rous

      45. Croyland Chronicle

      46. Registrum Thome Bourgchier

      47. Paston Letters; McSheffrey

      48. Warkworth

      49. This Sir John Mortimer married, after 1485, Marg
    aret, daughter of John Neville, Viscount Montagu, and sister of the George Neville, who had at one time been affianced to Elizabeth; Margaret Neville later married Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk.

      50. Tudor-Craig; Catalogue of Western Manuscripts and Miniatures. The manuscript was in the collection of Colonel Bradfer-Lawrence, but was sold at Sotheby’s in 1983.

      51. Croyland Chronicle

      52. Guildhall MSS.

      53. York Civic Records

      54. Croyland Chronicle

      55. Ibid.

      56. Mancini

      57. Ibid.; Croyland Chronicle

      58. Fabyan

      59. André

      60. Mancini

      61. Buck, ed. Kincaid; Kendall: Richard the Third; Black; Edwards: “The ‘Second’ Continuation of the Crowland Chronicle”

      62. Mancini

      63. Croyland Chronicle

      64. Commines

      65. Okerlund: Elizabeth Wydeville

      66. Ashdown-Hill: “The Fate of Edward IV’s Uncrowned Queen, the Lady Eleanor Talbot, Lady Butler”; Hampton; Mowat; Calendar of Patent Rolls: Edward IV, 1467–77; Rotuli Parliamentorum; Okerlund: Elizabeth Wydeville; Okerlund: Elizabeth of York. Ashdown-Hill argues that the story was true and that Edward did make a valid marriage with Eleanor Butler.

      67. Helmholz. I am grateful to Professor Anthony Goodman for sending me this reference.

      68. Croyland Chronicle

      69. Ashdown-Hill: Eleanor, the Secret Queen

      70. The Croyland Chronicle is the only source correctly to report Edward’s supposed precontract with Eleanor Butler.

      71. Crawford: The Yorkists

      72. Arrivall

      73. Excerpta Historica

      74. Hicks: Robert Stillington

      75. Mancini

      76. Fabyan

      77. Mancini

      78. Rous

      79. Fabyan

      80. Croyland Chronicle

      81. Ibid.

      82. Mancini

      83. Croyland Chronicle

      84. Loades: The Tudors

      85. Myers: “The Princes in the Tower”

      86. Brigden

      4: “THE WHOLE DESIGN OF THIS PLOT”

      1. Croyland Chronicle

      2. Ibid.

      3. Cely Letters; Smyth

      4. Croyland Chronicle

      5. Ibid.

      6. Dockray: Richard III: A Source Book

      7. More

      8. Mancini

      9. More

      10. Rawcliffe, citing D. 1721/1/11, f. 5–9, Staffordshire Record Office

      11. Ross: Richard III

      12. Rotuli Parliamentorum

      13. Croyland Chronicle

      14. The matter is discussed extensively, and the sources evaluated, in my book The Princes in the Tower (1992); although my conclusions are substantially the same, I have revised some aspects in this book.

      15. More; Great Chronicle of London; Vergil. For a balanced, academic view, see Hicks: Edward V, who points out that three sources are usually sufficient evidence for academic historians. For More’s sources, see The Princes in the Tower.

      16. The basis of the British Library.

      17. For a full discussion of Buck’s sources, see A. N. Kincaid’s edition of his work.

      18. Cited by Kincaid, in his edition of Buck.

      19. Chambers; Markham

      20. Hicks: Edward V

      21. Ibid.

      22. Cotton MS. Vitellius A XVI

      23. Croyland Chronicle

      24. Rowse: Bosworth Field

      25. Hall

      26. Jones, in Women of the Cousins’ Wars

      27. Vergil

      28. Calendar of Papal Registers

      29. Vergil

      30. Ibid.

      31. Ibid.

      32. Croyland Chronicle

      33. André

      34. Caxton; The Caxton Project; Gill

      35. Dictionary of National Biography

      36. Croyland Chronicle

      37. Ibid.

      38. Ibid.

      39. Baldwin: Elizabeth Woodville

      40. Croyland Chronicle

      41. Vergil

      42. Stonyhurst MS. 37; Tudor-Craig

      43. Vergil

      44. Hicks: Edward V

      45. Vergil

      46. Croyland Chronicle. The original Parliament Roll was destroyed in 1485, but a transcript of the act survives in the Croyland Chronicle.

      47. Herlihy

      48. Peter Clarke; Hicks: Anne Neville

      49. Croyland Chronicle

      50. St. Aubyn. I can find no contemporary evidence to support this statement.

      51. Harleian MS. 433, f. 308; Original Letters Illustrative of English History

      52. Cheetham

      53. Croyland Chronicle

      54. Rotuli Parliamentorum

      55. Smyth

      56. Baldwin: Lost Prince; Harleian MS. 433; Smyth

      57. Mcmahon; Pevsner; Wiltshire Community History

      58. Victoria County History: North Yorkshire

      59. PPE

      60. Smyth

      61. Baldwin: Lost Prince; Victoria County History: North Yorkshire; Smyth. John Nesfield had died by April 1488, when his widow, Margaret Assheton, was granted letters of administration.

      62. Calendar of Patent Rolls: Edward IV, Edward V, Richard III

      63. For example, Kendall in Richard the Third

      64. Harleian MS. 433, III

      65. Ibid.

      66. Pierce

      67. Richard III: Crown and People

      68. For example, Myers in “The Princes in the Tower” and Kendall in Richard the Third

      69. Pierce

      70. Commines

      71. Buck; Strickland

      72. Croyland Chronicle. An empty tomb bearing the worn effigy of a boy in Sheriff Hutton Church, Yorkshire, has long been claimed to be Edward of Middleham’s. It once bore the Neville arms (as Anne Neville is shown wearing in the contemporary Salisbury Roll) and the royal arms differenced, so the identification may be correct. Hicks: Anne Neville.

      73. Croyland Chronicle

      74. Great Chronicle of London

      75. Gristwood

      76. Croyland Chronicle

      5: “HER ONLY JOY AND MAKER”

      1. Croyland Chronicle

      2. Ibid.

      3. Rous

      4. Croyland Chronicle

      5. The passage has also been translated to read that Queen Anne and Elizabeth were of similar coloring and shape, but that would hardly have given rise to such comments and speculation.

      6. Hicks: Anne Neville

      7. Letter of Thomas Langton, Bishop of St. David’s, cited by Ross: Richard III

      8. Pollard

      9. Dockray: Richard III: A Source Book

      10. Croyland Chronicle. The words “gratify an incestuous passion” can also be translated as “gratify his incestuous passion” or “complete his incestuous association.”

      11. Peter Clarke: “English Royal Marriages and the Papal Penitentiary in the Fifteenth Century”

      12. Cited by Baldwin in Richard III

      13. Baldwin: Richard III

      14. Hicks: Anne Neville

      15. Buck

      16. Stow: Annals

      17. Croyland Chronicle

      18. Helmholz; Sheppard-Routh

      19. Croyland Chronicle

      20. Acts of Court of the Mercers’ Company

      21. Croyland Chronicle

      22. Ibid.

      23. Lopes

      24. Warrants for Issues, E. 404/78/3/47

      25. For the Portuguese negotiations, see Wilkins; Sanceau; Barrie Williams: “The Portuguese Connection and the Significance of the ‘Holy Princess’ ”; Lopes; Santos; Marques; Ashdown-Hill: The Last Days of Richard III; Baldwin: Richard III. Joana was canonized in 1693.

      26. Lamb, citing Harleian MS. 433, states that Elizabeth was proposed as a bride for James FitzGerald, Earl of Desmond (1459–87). Harley 433 does contain a letter sent in September 1484 by Richard III to the earl, offering to find a suitable bride for Desmond if he ceased
    conducting himself violently in Munster, adopted English attire, and returned to his allegiance—but Elizabeth is not mentioned. I am indebted to the historian Josephine Wilkinson, who double-checked this for me and confirmed that there is no reference at all to her in connection with Desmond.

      27. Cited by Vergil’s editor, Dennis Hay, from Vergil’s unpublished manuscript. Buck’s editor, A. N. Kincaid, suggests that the reason why this was omitted from Vergil’s published history was that it reflected Elizabeth’s views on marrying Henry Tudor rather than Richard III, but Vergil wasn’t writing in reference to Henry VII, and it is more likely that he left out this passage because he knew his master was sensitive about the matter.

      28. Reproduced by Kincaid in “Buck and the Elizabeth of York Letter: A Reply to Dr. Hanham.”

      29. Egerton MS. 2216; Bodleian MS. Malone 1; Fisher MS., University of Toronto; Additional MS. 27422

      30. For a full discussion of these texts, see A. N. Kincaid, in Buck.

      31. Kincaid: “Buck and the Elizabeth of York Letter: A Reply to Dr. Hanham”; Horrox

      32. Buck, ed. Kincaid

      33. Ibid.

      34. Hicks: Anne Neville

      35. Kincaid, in Buck

      36. Hervey; Kincaid’s edition of Buck; Ricci

      37. Kincaid, in Buck

      38. Memoir in PPE

      39. Gairdner

      40. For the debate see Kincaid, in Buck; Horrox; and the articles by Hanham and Kincaid in The Ricardian.

      41. See also Okerlund: Elizabeth of York

      42. Ashdown-Hill: The Last Days of Richard III; Ashdown-Hill: Richard III’s “Beloved Cousyn”

      43. Kincaid: “Buck and the Elizabeth of York Letter: A Reply to Dr. Hanham”

      44. Baldwin: Elizabeth Woodville

      45. Baldwin: Richard III

      46. For example, by me in The Princes in the Tower, although I have now revised that view in light of further research.

      47. Croyland Chronicle

      48. Royal MS. 20, A, f. XIX

      49. Harleian MS. 49

      50. Gristwood

      51. Weir: The Princes in the Tower; Visser-Fuchs: “Where did Elizabeth of York find consolation?”; Baldwin: Lost Prince; Okerlund: Elizabeth of York

      52. Vergil

      53. Ibid.; Griffiths and Thomas

      54. Gristwood

      55. Acts of Court of the Mercers’ Company

      56. York Civic Records; Letters of the Kings of England

      57. Croyland Chronicle

      6: “PURPOSING A CONQUEST”

      1. Aside from Gairdner, who compared all the versions of the poem, most historians have based their assessments on Heywood’s edition; however, it differs considerably from the earlier texts.

      2. Letts

     


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