
… what is really likely to have happened in the fifteenth century (as Harriss, Ashdown-Hill and Fields strongly suspect)?
At this rate, he will soon learn the fact of the pre-contract and how canon law works.

… what is really likely to have happened in the fifteenth century (as Harriss, Ashdown-Hill and Fields strongly suspect)?
At this rate, he will soon learn the fact of the pre-contract and how canon law works.
[…] an opportunity to do this literally and test the theory that Harriss, Fields, Ashdown-Hill and even Dan Jones have expounded, with varying probabilities. I would quite literally dig up a […]
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[…] only love after the death of Henry V, but Edmund Beaufort is far more likely, as Harriss and Ashdown-Hill , inter alia, both said. It was also thought so at the time, and hasty moves were made in […]
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[…] there is some evidence that Edmund Beaufort may have been the father of Edmund Tudor. This evidence is not conclusive but there isn’t any […]
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[…] Henry’s underage mother. Shame on Edmund Tudor for what would amount today as child abuse. And was he even a Tudor? There’s a strong case for believing he too was another Beaufort. Then it’s stated that Edmund […]
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[…] resulting in her leaving court and ending up with Owen Tudor. (it has also been rumoured her eldest son was Edmund Beaufort’s rather than Owen’s—the child even being named ‘Edmund’, an uncommon in either France or Wales.) Edmund was also […]
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[…] biggest joke is that it’s all from a review of Dan Jones‘s The Plantagenets: The Warrior Kings And Queens Who Made England’. If it really is a […]
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