Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Margaret of Anjou. Margaret of Anjou (French: Marguerite; 23 March 1430 – 25 August 1482) was Queen of England by marriage to King Henry VI from 1445 to 1461 and again from 1470 to 1471. Through marriage, she was also nominally Queen of France from 1445 to 1453. Born in the Duchy of Lorraine into the House of Valois-Anjou, Margaret was the ...

  2. Jun 21, 2021 · Margaret of Anjou was the wife of the last Lancastrian king of England, Henry VI, who reigned from 1422-61 and again from 1470-71. She was the second daughter and fourth surviving child of René, duke of Anjou, and his wife, Isabelle, daughter and heir of Charles II, duke of Lorraine. Margaret’s connections to many important European ruling ...

    • Emma Irving
    • Her marriage to Henry VI had an unusual requirement. Born in the French Duchy of Lorraine, Margaret of Anjou grew up in France before her marriage to Henry VI in 1445.
    • She was fierce, passionate and strong-willed. Margaret was fifteen years old when she was crowned queen consort at Westminster Abbey. She was described as beautiful, passionate, proud and strong-willed.
    • She was a great lover of learning. Margaret spent her early youth in at a castle in the Rhone Valley and at a palace in Naples. She received a good education and was probably tutored by Antoine de la Salle, a famous writer and tournament judge of the era.
    • Her husband’s rule was unpopular. A breakdown in law and order, corruption, the distribution of royal land to the king’s court favourites and the continued loss of land in France meant Henry and his French queen’s rule became unpopular.
  3. Mar 31, 2024 · Margaret of Anjou was married to Henry VI in a political marriage as part of the peace treaty between England and France in an attempt to end the Hundred Years War. During this time, she fulfilled the role of what a medieval queen would be expected to do, including participating in religious ceremonies, interceding on matters to the king ...

  4. Also, by the same author, “The Jewels of Queen Margaret of Anjou,” 42 (Sept., 1959), 113—131. Anne Crawford, “The King's Burden?—the Consequences of Royal Marriage in Fifteenth-century England,“ points out that Margaret's privy purse expenditures, which were unusually heavy compared to those of other queens of the period, were used ...

    • Patricia-Ann Lee
    • 1986
  5. Aug 7, 2019 · “A Letter from the Queen to Nicholas Straunge of Iseldon, respecting the marriage of his daughter Katherine” and “A Letter from the Queen to the Lord Chancellor” in Letters of Margaret of Anjou and Bishop Beckington and Others Written in the Reigns of Henry V and Henry VI ed. Cecil Monro (London: The Camden Society, 1863), 125, 132.

  6. When Margaret of Anjou died at the Chateau of Dampierre, near Saumur, on August 25, I482 it was as a woman not only. retired from the world but almost forgotten by it. She who had been for a time the virtual ruler of Lancastrian England, who had raised armies and intrigued with princes, had not enough money to pay her.

  1. People also search for