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      • Following Warwick’s death at the Battle of Barnet on 14 April 1471, Isabel and Anne became co-heiresses but their mother Anne Beauchamp, who was descended from the Despensers, had first to be declared legally dead before George could access his wife’s inheritance as Richard Neville was earl in jure uxoris.
      thehistoryjar.com › 2021/11/19 › anne-neville-queen-of-england
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  2. Margaret and Anne sailed back on the day of the Battle of Barnet while Anne Beauchamp took another ship. Hearing her husband had died, Anne immediately took sanctuary in Beaulieu Abbey where she stayed for two years. As the wife of a traitor, she had lost everything to the Crown. But Anne Beauchamp, Countess of Warwick, did not accept this.

  3. Little Anne Beauchamps Inquisition post mortem in September 1449 essentially found her aunt Anne, Richard Neville’s wife, to be the sole heiress to the Beauchamp lands and titles, as Duke Henry’s only full sister.

  4. Nov 19, 2021 · Following Warwick’s death at the Battle of Barnet on 14 April 1471, Isabel and Anne became co-heiresses but their mother Anne Beauchamp, who was descended from the Despensers, had first to be declared legally dead before George could access his wife’s inheritance as Richard Neville was earl in jure uxoris.

  5. Oct 31, 2015 · You have to feel a degree of sympathy for Warwick’s widow, Anne Beauchamp, who was actually the daughter of Richard Beauchamp, the previous Earl of Warwick and his wife Isobel Despenser. Her brother died in 1446 and her niece died in 1449 making her husband- Richard Neville- the Earl of Warwick.

  6. The Battles of Barnet and Tewkesbury by P W Hammond, Gloucester, 1990. ‘The Battle of Barnet’ by Sheila Hutchison in The Lady, 8th April 1971. The Battle of Barnet by Fiona Jones (revised ed), Barnet Museum, 2017. ‘A Ricardian Riddle: The Casualty List for the Battle of Barnet’ by Livia Visser-Fuchs in The Ricardian, March 1988.

  7. Jan 27, 2022 · You have to feel a degree of sympathy for Warwick’s widow, Anne Beauchamp, who was actually the daughter of Richard Beauchamp, the previous Earl of Warwick and his wife Isobel Despenser. Her brother died in 1446 and her niece died in 1449 making her husband- Richard Neville- the Earl of Warwick.

  8. In 1446, through a failure in the male line of the Beauchamp family, the earldom and estates passed to Richard Neville, husband of the Beauchamp heiress Anne Beauchamp. Richard would be posthumously remembered as ‘Warwick the King-maker’, because of his oscillating support of the Yorkist Edward IV and the Lancastrian Henry VI during the ...

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