Edoardo IV ed Elizabeth Woodville

« Older   Newer »
 
  Share  
.
  1. marie.
     
    .

    User deleted


    Visto che ora arriva The White Queen:

    Elizabeth_Woodville King_Edward_IV

    CITAZIONE
    The Grey family is descended from the Ferrers de Grey of Groby, and the Woodvilles. Elizabeth Woodville was one of the beauties of England in the 1400's. She was married to the much older John de Grey, 7th Baron Ferrers of Groby. They had two sons, including Thomas, when her husband died in the second Battle of St. Albans (1461).
    That battle was one of the many in the War (of the Roses) between the fragile Lancastrian king HenryVI and his Yorkist cousins. Henry's loyal subjects lost the battle in 1461, and Henry went to prison. His most loyal subject, the 12th Earl of Oxford, John de Vere and his eldest son (of five) were executed.
    Having won the second Battle of St. Alban's, the Yorkist faction crowned young Edward IV as the new king.
    As a widow, Elizabeth was given to taking her children on walks in the countryside, and it was while hunting nearby that the very young King Edward IV met her walking with her children. He was so taken with her that he fell in love. He wooed her madly. The older men at court who ran England dissapproved strongly of any queen who was not of the correct family, and they dismissed Elizabeth as unsuitable for the king to marry. Edward would not be thwarted, and he arranged to get married secretly, without anyone knowing for months afterwards. When it finally all came out, his Earls were furious, for they had all been plotting to marry one of their own daughters to the king.

    Nevertheless, the king and his queen were happy together. In addition to her older sons, Thomas and Richard Grey, Elizabeth had two more sons by king Edward, and many daughters.
    Unexpectedly, in his prime of life, the king fell victim to a mortal illness, and died.
    The late king's brother, Richard, was appointed Lord Protector of the realm. But, instead of crowning the young Prince of Wales, he threw both of the dead king's boys into prison in the Tower of London. Then, he crowned himself king, Richard III. As his final act of treachery, he had the boys murdered and buried secretly beneath a masonry staircase in the Tower.
    The dead boys' elder half brothers, Elizabeth's grown up sons Thomas and Richard Grey, joined a rebellion against the new king. However, Richard Grey was captured and beheaded without trial. Thomas escaped to France, to join the rebels under Henry Ap Tudor.
    .....

    The name 'Cecil' is first heard of in the 'Annales Cambraie', as in the entry for 1022 A.D., referring to Llewelin, son of Seisill, king of the Venedotiae.
    Four hundred years later, the Cecil family name was, in Wales, spelt 'Sysill', when squire David Sysill signed on to support the campaign of the Earl of Richmond, Henry Ap Tudor, to sieze the kingdom of the English from Richard III. Richmond's shadow court had already been in open rebellion for seven desperate years, including their period of exile in France.
    In the final contest, as Richard III and his army approached Bosworth field from the east, David Sysill was arriving from the west with the army of Henry Ap Tudor.
    Thomas Grey was not in England that day. Since fleeing England, with a warrant for his arrest hanging over his head, and joining forces with Henry's court in exile, he had trained with the rebel army and taken his place at their side, but had been left in France due to an earlier failed attempt on his part to return secretly to England to meet with his mother.
    Nevertheless, this day Tom would see his family avenged, and his title and lands restored to him, for, at Bosworth field, as the two armies hacked away at each other, Richard III broke free of the protection of his private guards to personally attack Henry Ap Tudor. Henry's men slew Richard III. Henry, the victor, at once received the homage and fealty of all combatants, and the entire host returned to London town to see Henry crowned king.
    Tom Grey and David Sysill were both rewarded by the king for services rendered. David became Yeoman of Arms to the new king Henry VII.

    source
     
    Top
    .
  2.  
    .
    Avatar

    Ignite, my love. Ignite.

    Group
    pinturicchio
    Posts
    1,028
    Location
    Venezia

    Status
    Anonymous
    Mancava il topic su di loro XD Comunque i matrimoni d'amore erano merce rara, questo è un'eccezione anche se mi pare di aver letto in una bio che lui era molto più preso di lei, almeno all'inizio.
     
    Top
    .
  3. marie.
     
    .

    User deleted


    CITAZIONE
    Mancava il topic su di loro XD

    Piano piano copriremo tutta la guerra delle due rose *risata malefica*

    A me di lui interessa anche l'amante, mi pare Jane Shore? Sono una romanticona con la coppia sposata per amore, però lei sembra un bel tipo!
     
    Top
    .
  4.  
    .
    Avatar

    Ignite, my love. Ignite.

    Group
    pinturicchio
    Posts
    1,028
    Location
    Venezia

    Status
    Anonymous
    Si è lei. XD Però mi pare che avesse una relazione non solo con lui ma anche con dei suoi tipo parenti. Edward ha avuto una barca di amanti alla fine ma lei è durata tantissimo, fino alla sua morte e mi pare di aver letto che il re le fosse devotissimo. Alla fine Elizabeth dopo il colpo di fulmine se l'è tranquillamente dimenticata.
     
    Top
    .
  5. marie.
     
    .

    User deleted


    Mi ricorda mica Enricone Ottavo? :rolleyes: anche se il suo colpo di fulmine è stato un "po'" più lungo. Però in effetti ho trovato un articolo di Ives che li accosta, è CHILOMETRICO ma interessante:

    CITAZIONE
    Marrying for Love: The Experience of Edward IV and Henry VIII
    historytoday
     
    Top
    .
  6.  
    .
    Avatar

    Ignite, my love. Ignite.

    Group
    pinturicchio
    Posts
    1,028
    Location
    Venezia

    Status
    Anonymous
    Che bell'articolo *.* Quante somiglianze soprattutto!
     
    Top
    .
  7. marie.
     
    .

    User deleted


    Questa cosa qua è illuminante - razionalmente è chiara da subito però è fantastico vederla nero su bianco XD

    CITAZIONE
    One key difference between marriage and a liaison is permanence. A diplomatic marriage was until death and guaranteed by foreign backing. Henry never really managed to be free of Katherine of Aragon. His sense of liberation was palpable on hearing she was dead: ‘God be praised that we are free of all suspicion of war’. In practice, of course, a king could keep marriage effectively separate from his private life. Francis I of France disliked sleeping with Eleanor of Portugal but their union was unaffected; a minimum expected attention was all that was required. By contrast, a relationship based on attraction ends when passion has run its course. Edward jettisoned his mistresses with almost no trace. Henry quietly disposed of Bessie Blount, his first known mistress, by marrying her off. His second, Mary Boleyn, was conveniently already the wife of a favoured courtier, making specific compensation unnecessary. But what if a passionate relationship that had been regularised by marriage became rocky? Henry VIII’s marriage to Anne Boleyn was storms and sunshine, and every time the two quarrelled observers prophesied disaster. ‘A king’, Henry grumbled, ‘should not have to stand that kind of treatment from a wife!’ From a mistress he would expect it.

    Edward IV secretly marries Elizabeth Woodville

    AE4FbzR


    Anthony Woodville presenting his book to Edward IV

    b5TagjB

     
    Top
    .
  8.  
    .
    Avatar

    Senior Member

    Group
    slashers
    Posts
    11,658

    Status
    Offline
    Lui mis at da sempre simaptico, per lei ivnece oscillo tra l'ammirazione e l'antipatia più nera, non so perchè ma mi sta antipatica a pelle.
    Da lady nessuno a regina, lei e i suoi tredici fratelli e sorelle, e anche lei è stata prolifica, eppure c'era sempre quelal voce secondo cui luie ra già sposato
     
    Top
    .
  9. marie.
     
    .

    User deleted


    CITAZIONE
    eppure c'era sempre quelal voce secondo cui luie ra già sposato

    ODDIO, con chi?

    Lei per me ormai è Rebecca Ferguson, quindi mi piace XD lui sembra Enrico VIII da giovane!
     
    Top
    .
  10.  
    .
    Avatar

    Senior Member

    Group
    slashers
    Posts
    11,658

    Status
    Offline
    CITAZIONE (marie. @ 5/6/2013, 17:05) 
    CITAZIONE
    eppure c'era sempre quelal voce secondo cui luie ra già sposato

    ODDIO, con chi?

    Lei per me ormai è Rebecca Ferguson, quindi mi piace XD lui sembra Enrico VIII da giovane!

    con una certa Eleanor Talbot, che morì in convento , sposata nel 1468, ma lo dice una sola fonte.
    lei mi sta antipatica, colpa del libro della Gregory dove la presenta come una Mary Sue, leggendo Shakespeare mi stava pure simaptica, e nel film del '95 con Ian mcKellen mie ra piaciuta, ma quel libro me l'ha resa indigesta
     
    Top
    .
  11. marie.
     
    .

    User deleted


    Chissà dove l'ho sentita questa qua, nel libro c'era? Il nome non m'è ignoto XD si vede che Edward aveva il vizio di sposarsi in segreto!
     
    Top
    .
  12.  
    .
    Avatar

    Senior Member

    Group
    slashers
    Posts
    11,658

    Status
    Offline
    Nel libro c'era, in tutti e tre, escluso il terzo.
    Dimenticavo, la Shore si chiamava Elizabeth, non Jane, questo me lo ricordo piùttosto bene
     
    Top
    .
  13. marie.
     
    .

    User deleted


    Wiki la porta come Elizabeth "Jane" Shore, però hai ragione tecnicamente il nome è Elizabeth!
     
    Top
    .
  14.  
    .
    Avatar

    Senior Member

    Group
    slashers
    Posts
    11,658

    Status
    Offline
    HYppie



    dite quello che volete ma io adoro questo film, e qui lei viene ben descritta *_*
    * torna a scaricarlo *
     
    Top
    .
  15.  
    .
    Avatar

    Senior Member

    Group
    pope
    Posts
    37,198

    Status
    Anonymous
    Quel film è perfetto ùù

    Questa pare sia lei:

    946204_464868293599093_1846302781_n


    933881_447375615348361_1990651348_n

    CITAZIONE
    Beautiful, signed letter of Elizabeth Woodville to the Bishop of Lincoln, Chancellor of England, appointing itinerant justices in her forests. From Windsor, 16th July 1477.

    fb
     
    Top
    .
29 replies since 2/6/2013, 10:46   637 views
  Share  
.
Top
Top