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  1. May 8, 2024 · Her political influence is to be admired, as is being granted the title femme sole, which gave her the economic and self-independence that a woman of current time could possess, but Beaufort’s biggest contributions could be said to be her patronage of education and the arts.

  2. Nov 23, 2023 · Queen Margaret of Anjou, consort to Henry VI and driving force of the Lancastrian cause. In the fifteenth-century, by the common law of England, the legal personality of the ‘feme sole’ (an ...

  3. Feb 8, 2019 · Femme sole status provided unscrupulous creditors an opportunity to sue married women independently for their husbands’ debts. The petition of Joan, wife of John Kirton, lays out the usual scenario. Her husband was purportedly indebted to Thomas Bailly for the sum of five marks for nonpayment. In the hopes of inspiring eventual repayment ...

    • Ward of The Crown
    • First Marriage
    • Teenage Pregnancy and Wars of The Roses
    • Margaret : Maternal Love and Self-Preservation
    • Marriage of Political Convenience
    • Assisting Rebellion
    • The First Tudor King’s Mother

    Born at Bletsoe Castle, Bedfordshire to John Beaufort, Duke of Somerset and Margaret Beauchamp of Bletso, there is some debate about Margaret’s birth date, having been either 1441 or 1443. Her father was to lead a military campaign to France on behalf of King Henry VI which prompted Somerset to discuss with the king the matter of his potential deat...

    At the age of three, Margaret was contracted to marry John de la Pole, the son of William 1st Duke of Suffolk, the very man who had appropriated Margaret’s lands through theft. This ambitious move was seen by King Henry as a cunning way for William to try and secure a future with a ward (Margaret) who had a potential claim to the throne. However, S...

    This was a period of civil disruption in what became known as the Wars of the Roses, a violent conflict between the Lancastrian and Yorkist factions vying for control of the crown. Edmund Tudor, a Lancastrian and married to Margaret, was captured and taken prisoner. Within a year while in captivity at Carmarthen Castle in Wales, he died of the plag...

    The civil war continued between bitter enemies, the Yorkist and Lancastrian factions. The House of Plantagenet (Lancaster) represented by a red rose, and the House of York, represented by a white rose. continually fought over control of the throne of England, culminating in the Battle of Towton on 29 March 1461. The Yorkists overwhelmed their oppon...

    In June 1472 Margaret married for the fourth time nobleman Lord Thomas Stanley, not out of love but more to do with political expedience as it allowed Margaret to return to King Edward’s court, giving her a possible route to help make her son king. A close relationship developed between Margaret and Edward’s queen, Elizabeth Woodville, who asked Ma...

    The moment for Margaret to seize the opportunity to dethrone King Richard came in 1483 when the Duke of Buckingham raised a rebellion against King Richard. But Henry Tudor who was privy to this plan was in Brittany and had to set out for England to take part in the rebellion. His arrival was too late, while Buckingham failed in his endeavours and w...

    Henry Tudor’s success at attaining the crown of England in 1485 was without doubt due to the indefatigable persistence and support from his mother Margaret, whose love for her son and belief in his divine right to be king had driven her through dangerous and turbulent times. Now with a new life as a Countess and also referred to as ‘My Lady, the Ki...

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  5. Mar 31, 2024 · Margaret Beaufort. Margaret Beaufort’s influence in the Wars of the Roses, and what she achieved, cannot be understated. Her family ties were the main factor that governed her early life but she then used that to her advantage. Though not a queen herself, as the mother of a future king she was an important player in the Wars of the Roses.

  6. Jan 15, 2019 · The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB) is an authoritative reference work for all significant figures in British history. The entry on Margaret Beaufort is by her biographers Michael K. Jones and Malcolm G. Underwood, so represents in miniature the contents of Jones and Underwood 1992 (cited under Biographies and Studies ).

  7. feme sole, in Anglo-American common law, a woman in the unmarried state or in the legally established equivalent of that state. The concept derived from feudal Norman custom and was prevalent through periods when marriage abridged women’s rights. Feme sole (Norman French meaning “single woman”) referred to a woman who had never been ...

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