Elizabeth of York

@Queens, Birthday and Life

Elizabeth of York was the Queen Consort of England and the wife of Henry VII and the first Tudor queen

Feb 11, 1466

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: February 11, 1466
  • Died on: February 11, 1503
  • Nationality: British
  • Famous: Empresses, Queen Consort of England, Queens, Historical Personalities, Empresses & Queens
  • Spouses: Henry VII of England
  • Childrens: Arthur, Henry VIII, King of England Mary, Prince of Wales Margaret, Queen of France, Queen of Scots
  • Birth Place: Westminster Palace, London, England

Elizabeth of York born at

Westminster Palace, London, England

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Birth Place

On February 11, 1466, Elizabeth of York was born into the royal family to King Edward IV of England and Queen Elizabeth Woodville in the royal palace of Westminster. She was given lessons in dancing, singing, embroidery, manners and at the age of 3, she was promised to be married to George Neville, but the betrothal was called off sometime later due to George’s death. It was a political arrangement as George’s father, John Neville, was a strong lord who had declared against Edward during the uprising.

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Childhood & Early Life

It was a period of utter chaos and civil war as the houses of York and Lancaster were at each other’s throats. This conflict for the throne of England is known in the history as ‘War of the Roses’. In September 1470, Edward IV had to flee England, due to a threat to his life by Earl of Warwick and Margaret of Anjou, who supported the throne for the house of Lancaster. Elizabeth Woodville took asylum in Westminster Abbey in order to safeguard her children. In those times, the criminals or the outlaws could seek asylum in the churches, where the law couldn’t touch them.

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Childhood & Early Life

By then Elizabeth was the eldest child of King Edward and in his absence, she was named the Queen Regent by the loyal supporters of the House of York. But in the hiding, Elizabeth Woodville gave birth to a son. The birth of a son somehow infused King Edward with courage and he gathered a fleet to snatch his throne back and successfully did it, embarking the family into a happy reunion.

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Childhood & Early Life

Elizabeth of York learned French, reading and writing in English. She was a kind young girl, who loved her parents and siblings and believed in god with utter devotion.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1475, the King of France eyed the throne of England and as a reflex action King Edward invaded the neighbouring country with all his might. King Louis XII of France decided to settle on the peace terms if Edward promised his daughter to the prince of France, Dauphin Charles. The arrangement later came to an end when French royals dishonoured the agreement and broke it. It was a huge blow to King Edward, which he somehow tolerated without reacting to it with armed action.

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Childhood & Early Life

In April 1483, when Elizabeth was 17, King Edward died under dubious circumstances, and it was an invitation to a ruthless storm for the royal York house of England. Her mother took the children to a safe sanctuary, leaving two of her eldest sons, Edward and Richard, in the tower upon asked by their uncle Richard, the Duke of Gloucester. He turned out to be a snake and claimed that all the children of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville were bastards and didn’t have claim to the throne whatsoever, and crowned himself the king.

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Life After Edward's Death

Some time later after Richard III became the king, the brothers of Elizabeth disappeared from the tower where they were supposedly kept safe by their uncle. Elizabeth had no brothers left and the supporters of house York secretly accepted Elizabeth as the legitimate heir to the throne after her father, Edward IV. The act of treason by Richard III filled lady Woodville with hate towards her husband’s brother and she joined hands with the House of Lancaster’s Margaret Beaufort by betrothing Elizabeth to Henry Tudor, Beaufort’s son.

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Life After Edward's Death

Henry Tudor attacked the troops of Richard III, and defeated him at the Battle of Bosworth and occupied the throne of England as King Henry VII. A noble man he was, he wiped off all the blames on Lady Woodville’s children and declared them the rightful children born of the royal communion between the great king Edward IV and Lady Elizabeth Woodville.

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Life After Edward's Death

In June 1486, Henry VII married Elizabeth in a grand ceremony and officially brought an end to the ‘War of the Roses’.

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Life After Edward's Death

Even though some records say that Henry VII didn’t really love Elizabeth by heart, he respected her for being a kind, generous, wonderful human being, who was popular among the locales for being kind to them. However, the politics for the throne could never have been halted; the union of Houses of York and Lancaster was a pleasant change, which established peace in the realm to a great degree.

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As The Queen

Elizabeth kept herself away from the politics but supported her husband and remained behind the curtain, despite the fact she was still considered the rightful heir to the throne by some York loyalists.

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As The Queen

Elizabeth spent quite a lot of time travelling, sometimes with her husband, most of the times alone to the faraway lands of her kingdoms. She became pregnant soon after her marriage and gave birth to a son, Arthur, in September 1486, who was later crowned as the prince. She eventually gave birth to seven more children but all the children were not healthy and many of them died soon after their birth. Their eldest son Arthur, the heir to the throne, died in 1502, inducing a wave of pain and shock in the royal couple’s life.

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As The Queen

Henry loved his son more than anything in the world, and broke down after his death, with many accounts claiming that he got severely depressed, and that was when his wife Elizabeth comforted him, and their love grew deeper. She told him that they were young and could have many more children if they wanted and that rightly consoled the King. Soon, the queen became pregnant again and gave birth to a daughter named Katherine in 1502, but she had grown physically very weak by then with a deteriorating immune system and succumbed to a post partum infection in February 1503.

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As The Queen