Edmund of Langley before the King of Portugal, from Wavrin’s Chroniques d’Angleterre

How’s this for a blooper? The youngest of Edward III’s sons was “Edmund Langley, later bishop of York”. Um, I wonder what Edmund‘s wives, children, and the line of the House of York would have thought of THAT!

The blooper is from The Life and Times of Chaucer, by John Gardner. Edmund is listed correctly in the index!


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  1. Also, of course, he was not the youngest son. Thomas of Woodstock was quite considerably his junior. Edmund was only a year younger than Gaunt.

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  2. […] not only high in the King’s favour but an active courtier, as well as being the son-in-law of Edmund of Langley, Duke of York. Given that he moved in such circles he must have had reasonable hope of success. He was also […]

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  3. […] death of Isabelle’s brother is not clear. As it was, they had to wait for the death of Edward, Duke of York at the battle of Agincourt to secure most of the Despenser inheritance as he had been allowed to […]

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