Read Elizabeth of York: A Tudor Queen and Her World Online
Authors: Alison Weir
1.
Croyland Chronicle
2.
Ibid.
3.
Rous
4.
Croyland Chronicle
5.
The passage has also been translated to read that Queen Anne and Elizabeth were of similar coloring and shape, but that would hardly have given rise to such comments and speculation.
6.
Hicks:
Anne Neville
7.
Letter of Thomas Langton, Bishop of St. David’s, cited by Ross:
Richard III
8.
Pollard
9.
Dockray:
Richard III: A Source Book
10.
Croyland Chronicle
. The words “gratify an incestuous passion” can also be translated as “gratify his incestuous passion” or “complete his incestuous association.”
11.
Peter Clarke: “English Royal Marriages and the Papal Penitentiary in the Fifteenth Century”
12.
Cited by Baldwin in
Richard III
13.
Baldwin:
Richard III
14.
Hicks:
Anne Neville
15.
Buck
16.
Stow:
Annals
17.
Croyland Chronicle
18.
Helmholz; Sheppard-Routh
19.
Croyland Chronicle
20.
Acts of Court of the Mercers’ Company
21.
Croyland Chronicle
22.
Ibid.
23.
Lopes
24.
Warrants for Issues, E. 404/78/3/47
25.
For the Portuguese negotiations, see Wilkins; Sanceau; Barrie Williams: “The Portuguese Connection and the Significance of the ‘Holy Princess’ ”; Lopes; Santos; Marques; Ashdown-Hill:
The Last Days of Richard III;
Baldwin:
Richard III
. Joana was canonized in 1693.
26.
Lamb, citing Harleian MS. 433, states that Elizabeth was proposed as a bride for James FitzGerald, Earl of Desmond (1459–87). Harley 433 does contain a letter sent in September 1484 by Richard III to the earl, offering to find a suitable bride for Desmond if he ceased conducting himself violently in Munster, adopted English attire, and returned to his allegiance—but Elizabeth is not mentioned. I am indebted to the historian Josephine Wilkinson, who double-checked this for me and confirmed that there is no reference at all to her in connection with Desmond.
27.
Cited by Vergil’s editor, Dennis Hay, from Vergil’s unpublished manuscript. Buck’s editor, A. N. Kincaid, suggests that the reason why this was omitted from Vergil’s published history was that it reflected Elizabeth’s views on marrying Henry Tudor rather than Richard III, but Vergil wasn’t writing in reference to Henry VII, and it is more likely that he left out this passage because he knew his master was sensitive about the matter.
28.
Reproduced by Kincaid in “Buck and the Elizabeth of York Letter: A Reply to Dr. Hanham.”
29.
Egerton MS. 2216; Bodleian MS. Malone 1; Fisher MS., University of Toronto; Additional MS. 27422
30.
For a full discussion of these texts, see A. N. Kincaid, in Buck.
31.
Kincaid: “Buck and the Elizabeth of York Letter: A Reply to Dr. Hanham”; Horrox
32.
Buck, ed. Kincaid
33.
Ibid.
34.
Hicks:
Anne Neville
35.
Kincaid, in Buck
36.
Hervey; Kincaid’s edition of Buck; Ricci
37.
Kincaid, in Buck
38.
Memoir in
PPE
39.
Gairdner
40.
For the debate see Kincaid, in Buck; Horrox; and the articles by Hanham and Kincaid in
The Ricardian
.
41.
See also Okerlund:
Elizabeth of York
42.
Ashdown-Hill:
The Last Days of Richard III;
Ashdown-Hill:
Richard III’s “Beloved Cousyn”
43.
Kincaid: “Buck and the Elizabeth of York Letter: A Reply to Dr. Hanham”
44.
Baldwin:
Elizabeth Woodville
45.
Baldwin:
Richard III
46.
For example, by me in
The Princes in the Tower
, although I have now revised that view in light of further research.
47.
Croyland Chronicle
48.
Royal MS. 20, A, f. XIX
49.
Harleian MS. 49
50.
Gristwood
51.
Weir:
The Princes in the Tower;
Visser-Fuchs: “Where did Elizabeth of York find consolation?”; Baldwin:
Lost Prince;
Okerlund:
Elizabeth of York
52.
Vergil
53.
Ibid.; Griffiths and Thomas
54.
Gristwood
55.
Acts of Court of the Mercers’ Company
56.
York Civic Records; Letters of the Kings of England
57.
Croyland Chronicle
1.
Aside from Gairdner, who compared all the versions of the poem, most historians have based their assessments on Heywood’s edition; however, it differs considerably from the earlier texts.
2.
Letts
3.
Probably a reference to the Clare inheritance, which should have descended to Elizabeth as her father’s heiress.
4.
Meaning the common people of his affinity.
5.
Cokayne
6.
Leland:
Itinerary
7.
Ibid.; Todd; Camden. Sheriff Hutton Castle was much decayed by the reign of James I, when it was partially dismantled, and today only the stark ruins of two towers and the gatehouse remain on its grassy mound.
8.
Bacon’s work was based on printed sources that are still available today, and on manuscript sources, such as those in Sir Robert Cotton’s library
and documents in the records office in the Tower of London and the Crown Office. His contemporary, John Selden, praised his work as one of only two histories that contained “either of the truth or plenty that may be gained from the records of this kingdom” (cited by Vickers in his edition of Bacon).
9.
According to a near-contemporary pedigree roll drawn up for the family of Margaret of Clarence, Warwick’s sister; see Philip Morgan: “Those were the days: a Yorkist pedigree roll,” in
Estrangement, Enterprise and Education in Fifteenth-Century England;
Jones:
Psychology of a Battle: Bosworth, 1485
.
10.
Original Letters Illustrative of English History
11.
Croyland Chronicle
12.
Ibid.
13.
Ross:
Wars of the Roses
14.
Ibid.
15.
Croyland Chronicle
16.
Most writers follow Kendall:
Richard the Third
, although he cites no source for this date.
17.
Croyland Chronicle
18.
Ibid.
19.
Hall
20.
Vergil
21.
Croyland Chronicle
22.
Ibid.
23.
Ibid.; Vergil
24.
Vergil is the only source to state it was Lord Stanley who retrieved the crown; the
Great Chronicle of London
states that it was Sir William Stanley. After Sir William’s execution for treason in 1495, Vergil may have deemed it politic to assert that it was his brother.
25.
Vergil; Hall
26.
Vergil
27.
Harleian MS. 542
28.
Croyland Chronicle
29.
Rous
30.
HVIIPPE
31.
Ashdown-Hill:
The Fate of Richard III’s Body;
Pidgeon; Baldwin:
King Richard’s Grave in Leicester;
Billson
32.
Bacon; Francis Drake, in
Eboracum
, says that Halewell is mentioned in one of the warrants.
33.
Vergil
34.
Bacon
35.
Vergil
36.
Bacon
37.
Ibid.
38.
Laynesmith
39.
Warrant of February 24, 1486, in Exchequer Records E.404/79
40.
Godfrey and Wagner; Kingsford: “Historical Notes on Mediaeval London Houses.” Coldharbour was burned down in 1666 during the Great Fire of London.
1.
Chrimes; Professor Eric Ives, in conversation with the author, May 2012.
2.
Calendar of Papal Registers
. Henry’s great-grandfather, John Beaufort, was the brother of Elizabeth’s great-grandmother, Joan Beaufort.
3.
Hicks:
Anne Neville;
Peter Clarke: “English Royal Marriages and the Papal Penitentiary in the Fifteenth Century”
4.
Rastell
5.
Rotuli Parliamentorum
6.
Bacon
7.
Ross:
Wars of the Roses
8.
Rotuli Parliamentorum
9.
Bacon
10.
CSP Spain
11.
Vergil
12.
Hall
13.
Gristwood; Jones and Underwood
14.
Calendar of Papal Registers
15.
Materials for a History of the Reign of Henry the Seventh
16.
Rutland Papers
17.
Fisher:
Funeral Sermon
18.
Croyland Chronicle
19.
Rotuli Parliamentorum
20.
CSP Spain
21.
Buck
22.
Rotuli Parliamentorum
23.
Anglo:
Spectacle, Pageantry and Early Tudor Policy
24.
In his dispensation of 1486 (
Foedera
)—see
Chapter 9
.
25.
Leland:
Collectanea
26.
Popular Songs of Ireland
27.
Mancini
28.
Bacon
29.
Ibid.
30.
Rotuli Parliamentorum
31.
Dockray:
Richard III: Myth and Reality
32.
Bacon
33.
Materials for a History of the Reign of Henry the Seventh
34.
Rotuli Parliamentorum
35.
Vergil
36.
Hall
37.
Challis; Anglo:
Images of Tudor Kingship
38.
Mackie
39.
Bacon
40.
Calendar of Papal Registers
41.
Weightman; Vaughan; Wiesflacker
42.
Harleian MS. 336, in Leland:
Collectanea
. Gigli was rewarded with a prebendary stall in York; he would serve Henry VII as ambassador to Rome and become Bishop of Worcester (Tournoy-Thouen; Dixon).
43.
Calendar of Papal Registers
, January 1486
44.
PPE
45.
Croyland Chronicle
46.
Rotuli Parliamentorum; Materials for a History of the Reign of Henry the Seventh;
André
47.
Mutilated document in Cotton MS. Cleopatra
48.
Calendar of Papal Registers
49.
Ibid.
50.
Ibid.
51.
Hall
52.
Rotuli Parliamentorum
53.
André
54.
CSP Venice
55.
Calendar of Papal Registers
56.
Letters and Papers Illustrative of the Reigns of Richard III and Henry VII
57.
Shears
58.
Calendar of Papal Registers
59.
Ibid.; Loades:
Mary Rose
60.
Bacon; Croyland also gives the date as January 18.
61.
André
62.
Mutilated document in Cotton MS. Cleopatra
63.
Croyland Chronicle
64.
Meerson
65.
Arch and Marschner
66.
Harleian MS. 336, in Leland:
Collectanea
67.
Okerlund:
Elizabeth of York; Materials for a History of the Reign of Henry the Seventh
68.
Bacon
69.
Ibid.
70.
Harleian MS. 336, in
Leland Collectanea
71.
Cambridge University Library Dd. 13.27, f. 31; Strickland
72.
Hawes:
A Joyful Meditation
73.
Stuart Royal Proclamations
74.
Kohler; Francis Perry;
http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/
75.
All cited by Wroe
76.
York Civic Records
77.
Cited by Hilliam
78.
Anglo:
Images of Tudor Kingship