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Joan Neville and her husband William Fitzalan Earl of Arundel lie together to this day in their beautiful tomb in the chapel at Arundel Castle.

Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury (d. 1460) and his wife Alice Montacute had 10 children, including two sons, Richard Earl of Warwick and John Marquis of Montagu whose stories have become very familiar to us through the roles they played in the madness that was to become known as the Wars of the Roses.  These brothers had six sisters who are slightly less well known but in some cases who went on to marry men that played significant parts in the wars and thus created a complicated tangle of allegiances.  Whether the sisters  would have had any input in matters can only be speculated upon.  The sisters lives spanned a period of an amazing 80 years – and was an extraordinary mix of splendour, wealth, indulgence, ceremony, hopefully some love, extreme anxiety and tragedy.  

They were

JOAN c.1424-1462

Joan married William Fitzalan d.1487 Earl of Arundel about 1438 when she would have been about 14.  Marriages would not have been consummated until the bride reached maturity and thus their first child was not born until 1450.   The marriage produced five children one of whom, Thomas married Margaret sister to Queen Elizabeth Wydeville/Woodville.  Fitzalan fought  for Warwick his brother in law at the 2nd Battle of St Albans in 1461.      Joan predeceased him dying about 9 September 1462 after a marriage that had endured for 24 years.   We have no way of knowing whether it was happy or otherwise but it is a fact that William never married again and seems thereafter  to have steered well clear of politics.  This ensured he attained the age of  70 years, a good age for the times.

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Joan Neville Duchess of Norfolk’s effigy,  Arundel Castle chapel.

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  1. Is the link working?

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    1. Yes it it for me. It links you to the post on my blog The Six Sisters of Warwick the Kingmaker.

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  2. […] irksome for me, and from an earlier period,  is the portrait that is frequently used to depict Richard Neville 16th Earl of Warwick, known as The Kingmaker.  Lets take a […]

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  3. […] working on a biography of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick – the man best introduced as The Kingmaker. I have written on the Wars of the Roses, on Richard, […]

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  4. […] Caversham, Oxfordshire in 1426.   She was sister and heir to Henry,  Duke of Warwick and wife to Richard Neville,  16th Earl of Warwick known as ‘The Kingmaker’.  Anne  was one of that distinguished band of ladies who suffered in […]

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  5. […] (1).  His father was George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence, his mother Isobel Neville, daughter of Richard Neville, the great Earl of Warwick who would become known as the Kingmaker.  Kings he had for uncles – […]

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  6. […] far to find a similar case of sibling marriages – the Neville sisters’ own parents (Lord Richard Neville and Lady Anne Beauchamp) and Lady Cecily Neville to Lord Henry Beauchamp in Leicester during 1434.. […]

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  7. […] and marriage during the nonage of the heir. So if you were, for example, a feudal tenant of the Earl of Warwick, and underage, he would be entitled to your wardship and marriage. The only overriding rule was […]

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  8. […] the early 1450s, he married Eleanor Neville, who was sister to Warwick the Kingmaker and a descendant of Edward III. This marriage arguably took the Stanleys up another division, so to […]

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  9. […] Ludford Bridge, Somerset was appointed to replace Warwick as Captain of Calais and commanded to take control of the town before the fugitive earl could gain […]

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  10. […] making incursions into his lands, Charles began to waver since Louis had connections with the Earl of Warwick. Charles’ wife, Margaret of York, no doubt also worked on convincing him to aid  her […]

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  11. […] her great grandfather,  William Bonville,  Lord Bonville, c.1393-1461,  was executed after the 2nd battle of St Albans on the 19th February  146I after what has been described as ‘mock trial‘ witnessed by Edward, […]

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  12. […] Shortly prior to this Richard Neville had already been outraged over the clandestine marriage of the king and Elizabeth Wydeville,  the ensuing secrecy of which had left him looking foolish as he had,  oblivious to the true situation,  carried on in his negotiations for a French bride of suitable rank for Edward.  Warwick would get his revenge in 1469 when he managed to execute a couple of Wydevilles, Thomas’ grandfather and uncle,  Richard and John Wydeville. […]

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