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  1. Aug 16, 2023 · According to Greek mythology, the goddess of flowers, Chloris, created a new flower by breathing life into a woodland nymph who had died. Dionysus, the god of wine and plant life gave it a beautiful perfume, and Aphrodite, the goddess of beauty and pleasure, gave the rose its name by rearranging the letters of Eros, her son and the god of love ...

  2. Feb 6, 2012 · The Wars of the Roses is the 19th-century name given to the English civil wars fought roughly between 1450 and 1509. The principal conflicts took place in 1459–1461 (First War), 1469–1471 (Second War), and 1483–1485 (Third War). The wars developed during the reign of King Henry VI (1422–1461) and they stemmed from the loss of the ...

  3. The Wars of the Roses take their name from the heraldic symbols of the rival factions: the red rose of the House of Lancaster and the white rose of the House of York. Both houses were actually off-shoots of the House of Plantagenet, respectively founded by two sons of the 14th Century monarch, Edward III. However, it was during the reign of the ...

  4. The Wars of the Roses were a series of wars between two families that wanted to be king. The York family had a white rose, and the Lancaster family had a red one. It was fought between 1455-1485, but after 30 years, it ended with a new king coming to power. In the Wars of the Roses, people used emblems to show their side.

  5. The Wars of the Roses was a conflict between two rival sides of the Plantagenet close Plantagenets The name given to people who belonged to the House of Plantagenet - a royal house. Descendants of ...

  6. Despite the obvious interest aroused by battle, murder and sudden death, the Wars of the Roses have been astonishingly neglected by modern historians, and even by the more recent historical novelists. Medieval History ebbs with the Hundred Years War, and Modern History begins with the Tudors, while ...

  7. The Wars of the Roses (1455-1485) was a series of civil wars fought over the throne of England between adherents of the House of Lancaster and the House of York. Both houses were branches of the Plantagenet royal house, tracing their descent from King Edward III. The name "Wars of the Roses" was not used during the time of the wars, but has its ...

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