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  1. Jacquetta of Luxembourg was the eldest child of the French Count of St Pol; her family descended from Charlemagne and were cousins to the Holy Roman Emperor. She grew up with war between France and England raging around her. John, Duke of Bedford was the youngest son of King Henry IV. Having lost his wife to plague in 1432, he arranged to marry ...

    • Jacquetta of Luxembourg Biography
    • First Marriage
    • Second Marriage
    • Wars of The Roses
    • Elizabeth Woodville’s Second Marriage
    • Royal Favor
    • Warwick’s Revenge
    • Was Jacquetta A Witch?
    • Jacquetta of Luxembourg in Literature
    • Background, Family

    Jacquetta was the oldest child of her parents’ nine children; her uncle Louis, later to be a Bishop, was an ally of England’s King Henry VI in his claim to the crown of France. She probably lived in Brienne in her childhood, though little record of that part of her life survives.

    Jacquetta’s noble heritage made her a fitting wife for the brother of England’s King Henry VI, John of Bedford. John was 43 years old and had lost his wife of nine years to the plague the year before he married the 17-year-old Jacquetta in a ceremony in France, the ceremony presided over by Jacquetta’s uncle. John had served for a time as regent fo...

    Jacquetta and the rather poor Richard Woodville fell in love and married secretly in early 1437, thwarting any marriage plans King Henry may have had, and drawing Henry’s anger. Jacquetta was not supposed to be able to exercise her dower rights if she married without royal permission. Henry settled the affair, fining the couple a thousand pounds. S...

    In the complex intrafamily feuds over succession, now called the Wars of the Roses, Jacquetta and her family were loyal Lancastrians. When Henry VI was in his extended isolation due to his mental breakdown, and Edward IV’s Yorkist army was at the gates of London in 1461, Jacquetta was asked to negotiate with Margaret of Anjou to keep the Yorkist ar...

    Edward’s victory also represented an opportunity to marry the new king to a foreign princess who would bring wealth and allies to England. Edward’s mother, Cecily Neville, and his cousin, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick (known as the Kingmaker), were shocked when Edward secretly and suddenly married the young Lancastrian widow, Elizabeth Woodville...

    The very large Woodville family benefited from their new status as relatives of the York king. In February after the wedding, Edward ordered Jacquetta’s dower rights restored, and thus her income. Edward appointed her husband the treasurer of England and Earl Rivers. Several of Jacquetta’s other children found favorably marriages in this new enviro...

    Warwick, who had been thwarted in his plans for Edward’s marriage, and who had been pushed out of favor by the Woodvilles, changed sides and decided to support Henry VI as fighting again broke out between the York and Lancaster sides in the complicated wars of succession. Elizabeth Woodville and her children had to seek sanctuary, along with Jacque...

    In 1470, one of Warwick’s men formally accused Jacquetta of practicing witchcraft by making images of Warwick, Edward IV and his queen, likely part of the strategy to further destroy the Woodvilles. She faced a trial but was cleared of all charges. Richard III resurrected the charge after the death of Edward IV, with Parliament’s assent, as part of...

    Jacquetta appears often in historical fiction. Philippa Gregory’s novel, The Lady of the Rivers, focuses on Jacquetta, and she is a major figure in both Gregory’s novel The White Queen and the 2013 television seriesby the same name. Jacquetta’s first husband, John of Lancaster, the Duke of Bedford, is a character in Shakespeare’s Henry IV, parts 1 ...

    Mother: Margaret of Baux (Margherita del Balzo), whose paternal ancestors were nobility of Naples, and whose mother, an Orsini, was a descendant of King John of England.
    Father: Peter (Pierre) of Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol and Count of Brienne. Peter’s ancestors included King Henry III of England and his consort, Eleanor of Provence.
    Siblings:
    For more details: Family Tree of Elizabeth Woodville(Jacquetta’s eldest child)
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  3. May 19, 2017 · This is a depiction of a 15th century Burgundian woman by the artist Petrus Christus dating from 1450-1460. Jacquetta of Luxembourg was the great-grandmother of King Henry VIII. She was the daughter of one of the oldest families in Luxembourg and northern France and could claim descent from Charlemagne. She would defy convention by marrying for ...

  4. Jacquetta WOODVILLE †1509 Married to John LE STRANGE 1444-1479. John WOODVILLE 1445-1469 Married in 1465 to Katherine NEVILLE 1397-1483. Richard WOODVILLE 1446-1491. Martha WOODVILLE 1450- Married to John BROMLEY. Eleanor WOODVILLE 1452- Married to Anthony GREY /1464-1480. Lionel WOODVILLE 1453-1484.

  5. Luxembourg (1390-1433), Count of St Pol, Conversano (Naples) and Brienne (France), Lord of Enghien and Viscount of Lille, and her mother was Marguerite del Balzo (or des Baux) (d. 1469), daughter of Francesco, Duke of Andrea (Italy) and Sveva Orsini. They had nine children, of whom Jacquetta was the eldest child and

  6. Jacquetta of Luxembourg. 1416 - 1472. Jacquetta, the daughter of Count Saint-Pol of Luxembourg, a family said to have traced their ancestry back to the water goddess Melusina, was first married at the age of seventeen to the Duke of Bedford (brother to King Henry V) and lived with him in France where he served as the regent for his nephew Henry ...

  7. Feb 13, 2020 · Jacquetta of Luxembourg was born around 1416 as the daughter of Peter I of Luxembourg, Count of Saint-Pol, Conversano and Brienne, and his wife Margaret of Baux. She probably spent her childhood in the north of France, which was then part of England. In 1422, King Henry V of England died and was succeeded by his nine-month-old son King Henry VI ...

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