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      • Anne Mortimer, chief heir to the rights of her great-grandfather Lionel, duke of Clarence, married Richard of York, 2nd earl of Cambridge. She died, age 21, in September 1411, shortly after giving birth to her son Richard Plantagenet, 3rd duke of York, who would be the father of English kings Edward IV and Richard III.
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  2. Anne de Mortimer (27 December 1388 – c. 22 September 1411) was a medieval English noblewoman who became an ancestor to the royal House of York, one of the parties in the fifteenth-century dynastic Wars of the Roses. It was her line of descent which gave the Yorkist dynasty its claim to the throne.

  3. Oct 15, 2023 · Anne (Mortimer) of York is a member of the House of Plantagenet. Anne de Mortimer (27 December 1390 – c. 21 September 1411) was the mother of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, and the grandmother of King Edward IV and King Richard III.

    • Female
    • Richard (York) of York
  4. Dec 7, 2019 · So that just leaves Anne Mortimer who was born in 1390. Anne married Richard of Conisburgh the youngest son of Edmund of Langley Duke of York who I have yet to post about. It was Richard’s sister Constance who plotted to send Anne’s brothers to their uncle in Wales in 1405.

  5. Dec 7, 2019 · So that just leaves Anne Mortimer who was born in 1390. Anne married Richard of Conisburgh the youngest son of Edmund of Langley Duke of York who I have yet to post about. It was Richard’s sister Constance who plotted to send Anne’s brothers to their uncle in Wales in 1405. The marriage between Richard and Anne Mortimer took place as early ...

  6. When Anne’s mother died in 1405 the two Mortimer sisters were described as ‘destitute’, Anne’s only income being a £50 per annum grant from the Crown. In May 1406, sixteen-year-old Anne married her cousin Richard of Conisburgh, grandson of King Edward III and the second son of Edmund of Langley, Duke of York and his wife Isabel ...

  7. Born on December 27, 1390 (some sources cite 1388); died in childbirth in September 1411; buried at Kings Langley Church, Hertfordshire, England; daughter of Roger Mortimer (1374–1398), 4th earl of March, and Alianor Holland (c. 1373–1405); married Richard of York also known as Richard of Conisbrough, 2nd earl of Cambridge, around May 1406 ...

  8. Anne Mortimer, Countess of Cambridge. 27 December 1390 - 21 September 1411. Anne Mortimer, ancestress of the House of York from whom they derived their claim to the throne, was was born at New Forest, Westmeath, one of her family's Irish estates on 27 December 1390.

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