As we mentioned here, Ashdown-Hill’s biography of Richard’s mother was published in April. Whilst his latest, to which we shall return later, was released today, we shall concentrate on Cecily here.

This is the book that summarises Cecily’s life by delineating her full and half-siblings, demonstrating that portraits (right) previously assumed to be of her and Richard, Duke of York, are of other people. Ashdown-Hill then lists her pregnancies and shows where each of her children were probably born – there is no mention of a Joan but there is further evidence about the birth date of the future Edward IV and Cecily’s ordeals during the first peak of the Roses battles. He deduces how much she knew and how she probably felt about Edward’s bigamy and the Wydevilles, together with the part she played, as a Dowager Duchess, in Richard III’s coronation, but also her years living under Henry VII and a “between the lines” interpretation of her will.

In all, the eighty years of Cecily’s life, survived only by two of her daughters are described in great detail in a book that demonstrates further painstaking research by an author who clearly knows even more about the fifteenth century than he did two years ago.

Now on to this one (right) …

 


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  1. […] Cecily Neville, Duchess of York, 3rd May, poetic narcissus (narcissus poeticus). Saint – Invention of the Cross – […]

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  2. […] the narration now features Sandra Heath Wilson (writer) and Elaine Churchward in a dialogue between Cicely Duchess of York and Margaret Duchess of […]

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  3. […] as part of her dower. Eventually everything reverted to Richard, Duke of York, and in later years Cecily, Duchess of York had […]

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  4. […] had been unfaithful to her husband, the 3rd Duke, with an archer named Blaybourne. The thought of Proud Cis deigning to even speak to a mere archer is laughable. But the story swirled around, calling […]

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  5. […] Proud Cis was married to Richard Neville?????? Wow, she slipped that one below the radar! I wonder if the […]

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  6. […]  The 8 year old Anne would marry the 6 year old Richard Neville, while Richard’s sister, Cecily would marry Henry Beauchamp, Anne’s brother which was the more important marriage of the two.   […]

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  7. […] save for one wall of masonry and its enormous motte; for a while, Richard III’s mother Cecily Neville lived at Clare Castle. A beautiful rosary was discovered there while building the nearby railway; […]

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  8. […] door below the tower that are of particular interest. In 1440, Richard Duke of York and his wife Cecily paid for the rebuilding of the church tower. Their faces, much eroded, still exist on the arch as […]

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  9. […] the throne, instead he “has his eye on it”. Pure ambition. I kept seeing images of him entering Proud Cis’s bedchamber of a night (or whatever time of day the itch took him). Bet he left his boots on and […]

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  10. […] Richard’s ancient ancestors was composed a few years ago to illustrate Richard III’s descent from heroes of the home nations: Alfred the Great (many times over, but two divergent lines soon afterwards), Malcolm III (Canmore), Llewellyn Fawr and Brian Boru.Slides 2-3 show not just the well-known connection through Edmund II (Ironside), St. Margaret of Wessex and her daughter Edith who married the shy Henry I, but also Edmund’s sister Elgiva, whose daughter married the Regent of Strathclyde leading through the Lords of Raby, who took on the Neville surname, to Cecily. […]

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  11. […] to years of  turmoil, destruction and bloodshed.  As J L Laynesmith puts it in her biography of Cicely Neville this injustice would ‘inevitably set generations of Nevilles at odds with one another and […]

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  12. […] Anyway, Edmund Beaufort had a pack of his own legitimate children with his wife, Eleanor Beauchamp. Margaret appears to be the second or third daughter, but made the ‘best’ first marriage, to Humphrey Stafford, Earl of Stafford—the heir of Humphrey Duke of Buckingham by his wife, Anne Neville, sister to Cecily Neville. […]

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  13. […] Edmund but her husband, who had been her rock and mainstay throughout most of her life.  However Cicely was to carry on and was destined to suffer even more tragedy later including the judicial murder of […]

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  14. […] The Duchess (of York) with these words nothing appeased, and seeing the King so set thereon that she could not pull him back, so highly she disdained it that under pretext of her duty to God, she devised to disturb this marriage, and rather to help that he should marry one Dame Elizabeth Lucy, whom the King had also not long before gotten with child. Wherefore the King’s mother objected openly against his marriage, as it were in discharge of her conscience, that the King was betrothed to Dame Elizabeth Lucy, and her husband before God. […]

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  15. […] to Margaret for those by his second wife Joan Beaufort.  The second set of offspring would include Cicely Neville, mother to two Yorkists kings, Edward IV and Richard III.   This grave miscalculation on the part […]

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  16. […] of the Dukes of Buckingham, with 15thc renovations being carried out by Anne Neville, sister of Cecily Neville, who was the wife of Humphrey Stafford and grandmother to the infamous 2nd Duke, Henry […]

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  17. […] palace declined in importance after that–although Edward IV granted it to his mother, Cecily Neville, and Richard III confirmed her tenancy. Like Clarendon Palace, which also lost favour in the mid to […]

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  18. […] Lauren Johnson will speak of Marguerite of Anjou, Dr Joanna Laynesmith of Cecily Neville, Melita Thomas of Elizabeth Woodville, Sarah Gristwood of Anne Neville, Dr Elizabeth Norton of […]

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