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  2. Duchess of York. In 1424, when Cecily was eight years old, she was betrothed by her father to his thirteen-year-old ward, Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York. Ralph Neville died in October 1425, bequeathing the wardship of Richard to his widow, Joan Beaufort. Cecily and Richard were married by October 1429.

    • Wife of The Protector and Claimant to The Crown of England
    • Edward IV
    • Fictional Depiction
    • Parents of Cecily Neville
    • More Family of Cecily Neville
    • Children of Cecily Neville

    Cecily Neville's husband was Richard, Duke of York, the heir to King Henry VI and protector of the young king in his minority and later during a bout of insanity. Richard was the descendant of two other sons of Edward III: Lionel of Antwerp and Edmund of Langley. Cecily was first betrothed to Richard when she was nine years old, and they married in...

    In 1461, Cecily and Richard's son, Edward, Earl of March, became King Edward IV. Cecily won the rights to her lands and continued to support religious houses and the college at Fotheringhay. Cecily was working with her nephew Warwick to find a wife for Edward IV, suitable for his status as the king. They were negotiating with the French king when E...

    Shakespeare's Duchess of York: Cecily appears in a minor role as the Duchess of York in Shakespeare's Richard III. Shakespeare uses the Duchess of York to stress the family losses and agonies involved in the War of the Roses. Shakespeare has compressed the historical timeline and has taken literary license with how events happened and the motivatio...

    Isabel Neville, married to George, Duke of Clarence, son of Cecily
    Anne Neville, married (or at least formally betrothed to) Edward, Prince of Wales, son of Henry VI, then married to Richard III, also a son of Cecily
    Joan (1438-1438)
    Anne (1439-1475/76)
    Henry (1440/41-1450)
    Edward (King Edward IVof England) (1442-1483) - married Elizabeth Woodville
    • Jone Johnson Lewis
  3. Jul 20, 2023 · At the age of forty-five, and with a gaggle of fatherless children to care for, Cecily Neville found herself a widow. After the death of her husband, Cecily established her residence at Baynard’s Castle in London, which, with Cecily’s sanction, would come to serve as the principal stronghold of the House of York during the Wars of the Roses.

  4. Cecily's marriage to Kyme and their children were not recognised by the Crown, and she herself was banished from court and deprived of the possessions inherited from her second husband's will.

  5. Cecily Neville was an important figure in England's Wars of the Roses. She and her husband, Richard, 3rd duke of York, founded the House of York, and helped two of their sons become kings. One of nine surviving children of the powerful earl of Westmoreland and Joan Beaufort, Cecily was the great-granddaughter of King Edward III on her mother's ...

  6. Apr 6, 2018 · Cecily, the youngest child of Joan Beaufort and Ralph Neville, was born on 3 May 1415 at Raby Castle. Like the rest of her siblings an advantageous marriage was arranged for her by her parents. She was possibly married by 1427 to Richard of York when she reached the age of twelve certainly she had…

  7. Cecily Neville died on 31 May 1495, 35 years after her husband, and was buried with him and their son Edmund, Earl of Rutland at Fotheringhay Church, in Northamptonshire. Her will made on 31 May 1495 at her castle of Berkhamsted in Hertfordshire, in the document she describes herself as: 'wife unto the right noble prince Richard late Duke of ...