Cecily Neville


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Joan Beaufort was the daughter of John of Gaunt, 3rd surviving son of Edward III, making Cecily, the Great-Grandaughter of a King.

When Cecily was nine years old, she was betrothed to her father's thirteen-year-old ward, Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York.
The pair were married in 1429 when Cecily had reached fourteen.
In 1438 at age 23, Cecily gave birth to her first child, Joan, who died in infancy.
She would, however, go on to have twelve more children.

Henry VI was prone to fits of insanity, and as such, Richard Plantagenet was appointed Lord Protector of the Realm.

The angry Queen had Richard Plantagenet dismissed from office.

Edmund Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, was killed during the battle and Henry, who had been wounded by an arrow was captured and returned to London by the victorious Yorkists.
Richard Plantagenet was again appointed Protector of England.
Margaret, true to character, was not going to accept this meekly. She gathered an army to advance her son's cause and York, Salisbury and Warwick were forced to flee.

With her husbands estates confiscated, Cecily managed to gain an annual grant of £600 to support herself and their children.

Warwick met the forces loyal to the king at Northampton, defeated them, and took the unfortunate Henry captive back to London.
Richard Plantagenet returned from exile and laid a formal claim to the throne.

When Richard Plantagenet and his heirs were officially recognised as Henry VI's successors in the Act of Accord, Cecily became a queen-in-waiting.

Richard Plantagenet, his second son Edmund, and Cecily's brother Richard Neville, were among the casualties.

During the beginning of Edward's reign, Cecily appeared beside him and maintained her influence.

Her nephew Richard Neville, The Earl of Warwick, rebelled against Edward IV, along with Edward's brother George...
The breach between Edward and his brother George was never healed, despite Cecily trying to reconcile them.
George was executed for treason on 18 February 1478.

Cecily Neville's youngest son Richard, their uncle, was appointed their protector by Edward's will, but he had them placed in the Tower of London, where they were never seen again... their fate is still a matter of dispute.

The two Princes in the Tower were then declared illegitimate by an Act of Parliament in 1484 and their uncle Richard crowned Richard III on 6th July 1483.

Cecily had lost her Husband, and all of her sons, in pursuit of the Throne.

Her great-grandson Arthur, was born that same year, followed by Margaret in 1489, Henry in 1491, and Mary in 1496.

The Mother of two Kings, and Grandmother to a Queen....all subsequent English, and later British monarchs, beginning with Henry VIII, are descendants of Elizabeth of York, and therefore of Cecily Neville.
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