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{{Infobox royalty
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Anne of York
| image =
| caption =
| image = The Daughters of Edward IV.jpg
| title = Lady Howard
| caption = The five daughters of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, (left to right): Elizabeth, Cecily, Anne, Catherine, and Mary. Royal Window, Northwest Transept, Canterbury Cathedral.
| spouse = [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk|Thomas Howard]] ''(later 3rd Duke of Norfolk)''
| spouse = [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk|Thomas Howard]] <br />(m. 1494/95; her death)
| issue =
| issue = Thomas Howard
| house = [[House of York|York]]
| house = [[House of York|York]]
| father = [[Edward IV of England]]
| father = [[Edward IV of England]]
| mother = [[Elizabeth Woodville]]
| mother = [[Elizabeth Woodville]]
| birth_date = 2 November 1475<ref name="dnb">* {{cite DNB|wstitle=Howard, Thomas II (1473-1554)|volume=28|pages=64-67}}</ref>
| birth_date = 2 November 1475
| birth_place = [[Westminster Palace]], London<ref name="dnb" />
| birth_place = [[Westminster Palace]], [[London]], England
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1511|11|23|1475|11|2}}<ref name="Richardson">Douglas Richardson. ''Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study In Colonial And Medieval Families,'' 2nd Edition, 2011. pg 275.</ref>
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1511|11|23|1475|11|2}}
| burial_place = ''first:'' [[Thetford Priory]], Norfolk<br />''later:'' [[Church of St Michael the Archangel, Framlingham|St Michael's]], [[Framlingham]]
| burial_place = {{unbulleted list |first: [[Thetford Priory]], [[Norfolk]]|later: [[Church of St Michael the Archangel, Framlingham]]}}
}}
}}
{{House of York|edward4}}
'''Anne of York''' (2 November 1475 – 23 November 1511), was the fifth daughter of King [[Edward IV of England]] and his [[queen consort]] [[Elizabeth Woodville]].


Soon after the death of her father and the usurpation of the throne by he uncle [[Richard III]], Anne, who was about eight years old, was declared illegitimate among the other children of Edward IV by Elizabeth Woodville. The princess' mother, fearing for the children's lives, moved them to [[Westminster Abbey]], where the late king's family received asylum and spent about a year. After the king promised not to harm his brother's family, Anne and her older sisters went to the court.
'''Anne of York, Lady Howard''' (2 November 1475<ref name="dnb" /> – 23 November 1511<ref name="Richardson" />) was born in the [[Palace of Westminster]], London, as the fifth daughter of King [[Edward IV of England]] and his wife, [[Elizabeth Woodville]].<ref name="dnb" /> She was [[First Lady of the Bedchamber]] to the queen in 1487–1494.<ref>Alison Weir: ''[http://erenow.com/biographies/elizabethofyork/15.html Elizabeth of York: A Tudor Queen and Her World]''</ref>


When Richard III was killed, and Henry Tudor took the throne under the name of [[Henry VII of England|Henry VII]], the act recognizing the children of Edward IV as bastards was canceled. Henry VII married the eldest Edward IV's daughters, [[Elizabeth of York|Elizabeth]], and Anne became a valuable diplomatic asset. Her marriage to a Scottish prince was planned, but in 1488 the prince's father, King [[James III of Scotland|James III]], was killed, and marriage negotiations were interrupted and never resumed. In 1495, Anne was married to [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk|Thomas Howard]], who had claimed marriage to her since the time of Richard III. The union with Howard was not happy and overshadowed by the death of their all children. Anne herself, who had poor health, died at the age of about 36 years.
==Betrothal==
On 5 August 1480, King Edward IV signed a treaty agreement with [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian I, Archduke of Austria]].<ref name="dnb" /> According to its terms, Anne was supposed to marry his eldest son [[Philip the Handsome|Philip]], the future [[Duke of Burgundy]].<ref name="dnb" /> The agreement also included the term that Maximilian would not pursue other contracts of marriage for the following three years.{{citation needed|date=April 2013}}


==Birth and early years==
Maximilian was the eldest son of [[Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor]], and had a good chance for pursuing the title of the [[Holy Roman Emperor]] for himself later.{{citation needed|date=April 2013}} His wife and mother to Philip was [[Mary of Burgundy|Mary]], [[Duke of Burgundy|Duchess of Burgundy]]. Both relations made Maximilian a valuable ally for Edward IV.{{citation needed|date=April 2013}} However, the marriage treaty was repudiated after Edward's death and was never concluded.<ref name="dnb" />
Anne was born on 2 November 1475 at the [[Palace of Westminster]] as the fifth daughter{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=1}} and seventh of ten children of of ten children of King [[Edward IV of England]] and [[Elizabeth Woodville]].{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=139}}{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=50}} Anne had six sisters, of whom only four reached adulthood –two eldests ([[Elizabeth of York|Elizabeth]] and [[Cecily of York|Cecily]]) and two younger ([[Catherine of York|Catherine]] and [[Bridget of York|Bridget]]); [[Mary of York|Mary]], who was eight years older than Anne, died at the age of 14 from some illness,{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=138}}{{sfn|Everett Green|1851|p=401}} and [[Margaret of York (1472)|Margaret]], who was about three years older than Anne, died in infancy. Anne also had five brothers: three full-blooded (the future [[Edward V of England|Edward V]], [[Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York|Richard]] and [[George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Bedford|George]]) and two half-brothers from her mother's first marriage to [[John Grey of Groby]]: [[Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset|Thomas]] and [[Richard Grey]]. Neither of Anne's three full-brothers survive adulthood: George died at about two years of age, while the other two brothers, Edward V and Richard, [[Princes in the Tower|disappeared from the Tower in 1483]] during the reign of their uncle King Richard III.{{sfn|Weir|2011|pp=2–3}}


Anne's paternal grandparents were [[Richard of York, 3rd Duke of York]] (who claimed the rights of the [[House of York]] to the English throne) and [[Cecily Neville, Duchess of York|Cecily Neville]], and her maternal grandparents were [[Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers]], and [[Jacquetta of Luxembourg]], Dowager Duchess of Bedford. She was baptized at [[Westminster Abbey]] shortly after birth, being named both after her paternal aunt [[Anne, Duchess of Exeter|Anne of York, Duchess of Exeter]] and her paternal great-grandmother [[Anne de Mortimer]]; the very name "Anne" was relatively new to the English royal family, and Anne became the first daughter of a king with that name.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=1}} In addition, the choice of the king was probably influenced by the superstitious reverence with which Edward IV was rumored to have held [[Saint Anne]]; the king turned to the patronage of the saint at critical moments in his life in the early stages of coming to power, and therefore felt indebted to her.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|pp=1–2}}
==Marriage==
[[File:York Sisters.jpg|thumb|200px|Daughters of King Edward IV. Stained glass window of the northwest [[transept]] of [[Canterbury Cathedral]], 16th century. Anne is depicted fourth in the left.{{efn|The stained glass window was made by order of Edward IV by the royal master William Neuve after the birth of his sixth (but fifth surviving) daughter [[Catherine of York|Catherine]] in August 1479, but before November 1480 – when was born his youngest daughter [[Bridget of York|Bridget]]. More recent research has determined the order of the sisters in the stained glass window as Elizabeth, Cecily, Anne, Catherine and Mary, however it is more likely that the York princesses are arranged in seniority on the stained glass window and Anne is depicted fourth from the left.<ref>{{cite book| last=Weir |first=Alison | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=PcU1AAAAQBAJ | title = Elizabeth of York: The First Tudor Queen | year = 2013 |publisher= Random House |isbn = 978-1-448-19138-3}}</ref>}}]]
As a sign of closeness between [[Richard III of England|King Richard III]] and the [[House of Howard|Howard]] family, Anne was betrothed to [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk|Thomas Howard]] in 1484.<ref name="dnb" /> After the overthrow of Richard III, Howard renewed his marital claim to Anne.<ref name="dnb" /> At this time, Anne was attending her sister [[Elizabeth of York|Elizabeth]], wife of [[Henry VII of England|King Henry VII]], as a lady-in-waiting.<ref name="dnb" />
In 1479, when Anne was not yet four years old, Edward IV began negotiations on the marriage of his daughter with [[Philip I of Castile|Philip]], son of the [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Archduke Maximilian of Austria]]; the initiative of the union came from the Archduke and was enthusiastically received in England,{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=3}} since the marriage was supposed to bring political benefits. Philip's mother, [[Mary of Burgundy]], was the heiress of vast lands and had influence on European affairs;{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} besides, her stepmother was Edward IV's sister [[Margaret of York]]. The following year, the agreement took on a more formal form: as a financial security for the princess, she was allocated an amount of 100,000 crowns; Archduke Maximilian agreed to pay Anne 6,000 crowns per year from the moment she reaches the age of 12 years –the age of marriage consent, and from the moment she arrived at the court of the future father-in-law and the engagement was ratified, Anne was to receive land in Artois worth 8,000 livres for her use. In the event that Anne refused the marriage, Edward IV or his successor had to pay 60,000 livres. In return, the archduke undertook to provide the English king with military and political support against France.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=3}} On 5 August 1480, negotiations were completed.{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=64}}


The court records of 1479 report that at the time when negotiations were underway for the marriage of Anne and Philip of Austria, the princess's nurse, "Agnes, wife of Thomas Butler", was dismissed with the appointment of a pension. The records show that Anne, who had not even reached the age of four, was considered old enough to be separated from her nurse.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=3}} Earlier, at the same time as Anne, Agnes Butler was engaged in raising the princess's younger brother George,{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=3 (note 4)}} who died in March 1479 at the age of about two years.{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=140}}
On 4 February 1495, Anne was married to [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk|Thomas Howard]] (later 3rd Duke of Norfolk) at [[Westminster Abbey]].<ref name="dnb" /><ref name="Richardson" /> Howard was the eldest son and heir of [[Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk|Sir Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Surrey]] (later 2nd Duke of Norfolk) by his first wife, [[Elizabeth Tilney]].<ref name="dnb" /><ref name="Richardson" /> As [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk|Thomas Howard]] did not succeed to the earldom of Surrey or the dukedom of Norfolk until after Anne's death, Anne was never Countess of Surrey or Duchess of Norfolk.


==Under Richard III==
The couple had four children who all died young.<ref name="dnb" /><ref name="Richardson" />
The project of Anne's marriage to Philip of Austria remained in force until the death of the princess's father{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=3}}{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} in 1483. The death of Edward IV was followed by a political crisis that dramatically changed the position of the former queen and her children. Anne's older brother, Edward V, who succeeded to the throne, was captured by his uncle Lord Protector Richard of Gloucester on his way from Wales to the capital; at the same time, [[Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers|Anthony Woodville]] and Richard Gray, Anne's maternal uncle and half-brother, who accompanied the young king, were arrested.<ref>{{cite book|last=Chalmers|first=Alexander|title=The General Biographical Dictionary: Containing an Historical and Critical Account of the Lives and Writings of the Most Eminent Persons in Every Nation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qW1kAAAAMAAJ |editor=J. Nichols |year=1817 |volume=32 |page=353}}</ref> Edward V was moved to the Tower of London to await his coronation, where he was later joined by his only brother, Richard; along with the rest of the children, including Anne, the Dowager Queen took refuge in Westminster Abbey.{{sfn|Weir|2011b|p=222}}


On 22 June 1483 the marriage of Edward IV with Elizabeth Woodville was declared illegal;{{sfn|Weir|2011b|p=222}} all the children of the late king were declared illegitimate by the Act of ''[[Titulus Regius]]'' and were deprived of their rights to the throne and all titles. A few days later, Anthony Woodville and Richard Grey were beheaded. On 6 July, Richard of Gloucester was proclaimed king under the name of Richard III; shortly thereafter Anne's brothers, who remained locked up in the Tower, disappeared.{{sfn|Weir|2011b|pp=222–223}}{{sfn|Norwich|2012|pp=355–365}}{{sfn|Ustinov|2012|pp=284–295}}{{sfn|Everett Green|1851|pp=413–414}} After Richard III took the throne and following his orders, his squire John Nesfield sent guards to Westminster, who, day and night, inspected everyone who entered and left the Dowager Queen's sanctuary, since there were fears that one of Anne's older sisters would be able to escape abroad and find an ally there for overthrow of Richard III.{{sfn|Everett Green|1851|p=413}} On Christmas Day 1483, Henry Tudor, whose mother was in a plot with Elizabeth Woodville against Richard III, swore in [[Rennes Cathedral]] that he would marry Anne's older sister Elizabeth or the next one Cecily (if the marriage to Elizabeth for any reason will be impossible{{sfn|Okerlund|2009|p=94}}) after taking the English throne. But the [[Buckingham's rebellion|uprising of the Tudor party]], led by the [[Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham|Duke of Buckingham]], failed even before Henry's oath in Rennes.{{sfn|Everett Green|1851|p=414}}
==Later life and legacy==
In 1486, at the lavish christening of her nephew [[Arthur, Prince of Wales|Arthur]], she carried the [[chrisom]]. And in 1489, at the christening of her niece [[Margaret Tudor|Margaret]], later Queen of Scots, she again carried the chrisom during the ceremony.


After the failure of Buckingham's rebellion, Richard III began negotiations with his brother's widow. On 1 March 1484, the king publicly swore that the daughters of Edward IV would not be harmed or molested; in addition, Richard III promised that they would not be imprisoned in the Tower or any other prison, that they would be placed "in respectable places of good name and reputation", and later be married to "men of noble birth" and given dowry lands with an annual income of 200 marks each.{{sfn|Ustinov|2015|pp=214–215}}<ref>{{cite ODNB |last=Horrox|year=2004|first=Rosemary|title=Cecily, Viscountess Welles (1469–1507)|url=https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-4984|type=online |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/4984}}</ref> On the same day, the memorandum was delivered to the Dowager Queen, along with provisions. The princesses with great joy agreed to leave their gloomy abode and go under the care of their "gracious uncle", who allocated them chambers in his palace. Tudor historian [[Edward Hall]] wrote that Richard III "made all the daughters of his brother solemnly arrive at his palace; as if with new familiar and loving entertainment they were supposed to forget...the trauma inflicted on them and the tyranny that preceded this".{{sfn|Everett Green|1851|p=416}}
In 1510, her nephew [[Henry VIII of England|King Henry VIII]] granted Anne and her heirs the various properties as compensation for the lands claimed in right of her great-grandmother, [[Anne de Mortimer]], wife of [[Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge|Richard, 3rd Earl of Cambridge]].<ref name="dnb" /> These properties included the Castle and Manor of Wingfield and several other prominent properties.<ref name="dnb" />


Soon after the daughters of Edward IV arrived at court, the king began to look for suitable suitors for his nieces: for Anne, he chose [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk|Thomas Howard]], the son and heir of the [[Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk|1st Earl of Surrey]] and second-in-line to the [[Dukedom of Norfolk]], to show his favor to [[Howard family|his family]].{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=64}} The betrothal was signed in 1484,{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=64}} but the king didn't have time to formalize the marriage.
In January 1511, Anne of York was present at the christening of New Year's prince Henry, Duke of Cornwall, who sadly didn't live for long after. She stood proxy for the prince's godmother Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy and would hence be right in middle of the ceremony, playing a prominent role.


==Under Henry VII and Henry VIII==
Anne died on 23 November 1511 and was buried at [[Thetford Priory]].<ref name="Richardson" /> After [[the Reformation]], she was relocated, along with other Howards, to the large aisle chancel of the [[Church of St Michael the Archangel, Framlingham|Church of St Michael the Archangel]], Framlingham.<ref name="Richardson" />
In August 1485, Richard III died at the [[Battle of Bosworth]], and Henry Tudor became the new king by right of conquest under the name of Henry VII, who had previously sworn to marry Anne's older sister. Upon ascending the throne, Henry VII repealed the ''Titulus Regiu''s act, which deprived the children of Edward IV of titles and rights to the throne; the act itself and all its copies were removed from the archives, as well as all the documents associated with them.{{sfn|Ustinov|2012|p=296}}{{sfn|Ustinov|2012|pp=310–311}}


When Elizabeth of York married the new king, Anne was only twelve years old, and she, along with her other sisters, were at court under the tutelage of the queen, their eldest sister and only patroness. The princess began to participate in court ceremonies. She attended the christening of her first nephew, [[Arthur, Prince of Wales]] on 24 September 1486; Anne carried the baptismal veil, which, after the ceremony, covered the head of the prince, and she herself was accompanied on the right hand by the knight-constable [[Richard Guildford]] and on the left the by knight-marshal John Turbeville. Anne performed the same role at the christening of her eldest niece [[Margaret Tudor|Margaret]] in 1489. The princess took part in the [[Easter]] celebrations, [[Pentecost]] and [[Christmas]], as well as other events at the court of Henry VII.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=4}}
Anne and Thomas are considered to have survived their own children. He was a childless widower following her death. He later married a very reluctant [[Elizabeth Howard, Duchess of Norfolk|Lady Elizabeth Stafford]], daughter of [[Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham]] and [[Eleanor Percy, Duchess of Buckingham|Lady Eleanor Percy]] by whom he had surviving issue including [[Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey]].

Shortly after his accession to the throne, Henry VII began to make matrimonial plans for his wife's relatives and seek an alliance with Scotland. The king planned to marry his mother-in-law Elizabeth Woodville to the widowed King [[James III of Scotland|James III]], and his heir [[James IV of Scotland|James, Duke of Rothesay]] was to marry one of the daughters of the late king.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|pp=4–5}} Since Cecily, the former bride of James, was already engaged to the king's uncle [[John Welles, 1st Viscount Welles|John Welles]], and Catherine was to become the wife of the prince's younger brother, it was necessary to choose between Anne and the youngest of her sisters, Bridget. Bridget planned to enter a monastery, and thus Anne remained the only candidate, but with the death of James III in 1488, all negotiations were terminated and never resumed.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=5}}

In 1488, on [[St. George's Day]], Anne, among twenty other ladies, was present in the retinue of her sister the queen; she was dressed in a robe of scarlet velvet and sat on a snow-white [[palfrey]], whose saddle was draped in a golden cloth embroidered with white roses, the symbol of the [[House of York]]. The next time the princess is mentioned in the sources in connection with the death of her mother in June 1492: Anne sat at the bedside of a dying woman in [[Bermondsey Abbey]], where the Dowager Queen spent the last five years of her life. Anne led the mourners at her mother's funeral instead of Queen Elizabeth, who was expecting the birth of her fourth child and therefore delegated her powers and responsibilities to her younger sister. Anne and her younger sisters, Catherine and Bridget, departed with the Queen's body by river to [[Windsor Castle]], where on 13 June Elizabeth Woodville was buried next to her second husband Edward IV in [[St. George's Chapel]]. According to the herald's notes, "the standard-bearers walked ahead of milady Anne, who was present at the memorial mass instead of the queen; she prayed on her knees on the carpet and pillow. She was accompanied by Viscount Welles...and Dame Catherine Grey carried the train of Lady Anne...".{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=5}}

===Marriage===
[[File:Hans Holbein the Younger - Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk (Royal Collection).JPG|thumb|left|Thomas Howard, later 3rd Duke of Norfolk, by [[Hans Holbein the Younger]], ca. 1539.]]
When Anna reached the marriageable age, Queen Elizabeth began to look for her a suitable groom. The queen turned her attention to representatives of the English nobility and, first of all, to Thomas Howard, the son and heir of the 1st Earl of Surrey,{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=5}} for whom Richard III already planned to marry Anne.{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=64}} The princess was personally acquainted with her future husband since childhood, since his father served at court in the private chambers of Edward IV. In the [[Wars of the Roses]], the Howard family sided with the House of York, which is why under Henry VII, heir to the Lancasters, in 1485 the Earl of Surrey was imprisoned in the Tower for three and a half years, deprived of his rights, titles and possessions. Later, he received freedom, restoration of rights and most of the lands and was called to the court, where he received a position close to the king. At the same time, not all titles were returned: Thomas' father received back the title of Earl of Surrey but the title and honours of Duke of Norfolk,{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|pp=6–7}} which he was supposed to inherit after the death of his father at Bosworth, were granted to him only in 1514. Thomas was older than Anne by about two years.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=7}}

The queen took into account the opinion of her sister and considered that the Howard family were noble enough to qualify for a high marriage, and therefore on 4 February 1495 (according to other sources in 1494{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=139}}{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}}) the wedding of Anne and Thomas Howard was celebrated.{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=139}}{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}}{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=64}}{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=7}} The wedding took place in Westminster Abbey,{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=64}} and the marriage celebrations took place in the [[Palace of Placentia]].{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=139}}{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} The royal couple attended the wedding, and the king also attended a festive mass, but the dowry of 10,000 marks, assigned to Anne by her father, wasn't receive by the newlyweds.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=7}} By order of the queen, the couple were assigned annuity payments in the amount of 120£ per year,{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=64}} which were to be carried out throughout Anne's life or until the death of her mother-in-law{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=9}}: this amount included the maintenance of Anne herself, as well as her servants{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=8}} and seven horses.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=9}} This pension was appointed, among other things, because the queen did not want to leave Anne dependent on her husband, who, due to circumstances, could not provide the princess with a comfortable existence.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=8}} Since the groom's father received only part of the family estate and in this part there was no residence suitable for a woman of royal blood, the newlyweds received the right to use the estates located in the possessionst of the [[Henry VIII|Duke of York]] and the Marquess of Dorset, Anne's nephew and half-brother, respectively.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|pp=7–8}} In return, the queen demanded that in the event of the death of the Earl of Surrey or his wife, a wealthy heiress, Anne's interests should be taken into account on an equal basis with the interests of her husband. The king allocated for Anne another 26£ per year from the crown lands.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=9}}

After the wedding, Anne left the court and visited her sister very rarely. One of the reasons for this{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|pp=10–11}} could be her poor health{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} –both physical and mental.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=10}} Little is known about the life of the princess during this period. Queen Elizabeth's court documents report that in 1502–1503 she paid for seven yards of green silk from [[Bruges]] for Anna's dress, costing 2 shillings 8 pences a yard. In addition, in 1502, the queen added 10 marks (6 pounds 13 shillings 4 pences) to her sister's annual pocket expenses, as well as 120£ to Thomas Howard, which he had to spend on his wife's food. In 1503, the queen died and the attitude towards Anne at the court changed. She attended the funeral of of Queen Elizabeth, but not as a mourner, but as a simple spectator; Anne's grief at the loss of her sister was so great that she could not attend the entire funeral ceremony.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=10}}

Anne's marriage to Thomas Howard was not a happy one. Thomas had a relationship with Anne's lady-in-waiting [[Elizabeth Holland|Bess Holland]],{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} and all the children of the spouses predeceased them.{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=67}} The exact number and names of children born to Anne are unknown. [[Mary Anne Everett Green]] writes that the records of the Howard house indicate four children, of which only one child, a son named Thomas, lived long enough to be christened. [[Alison Weir]] dates Thomas' birth to about 1496 and death to 1508;{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=139}} Everett Green writes that the exact date of death is indicated on the boy's grave: 4 August 1508.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=11}} James Panton reports that in addition to Thomas, Anne had two sons who died in infancy and a stillborn child,{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} but Weir among the four children of Anna, in addition to Thomas, mentioned a son and two daughters –all three died before it became possible to christen them.{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=140}} Anne's son was buried at [[Lambeth]] in the Howard family crypt,{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=10}} where his grandfather's remains were later transferred.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=12}}

===Later life and legacy===
Only two records of the last years of Anna's life have survived. On 23 March 1510, her nephew King Henry VIII granted his aunt and her spouse a property with a garden in Stephenheath; on 22 November{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=11}} the king (in compensation for the lands claimed in right of her great-grandmother Anne de Mortimer, wife of [[Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge|Richard, 3rd Earl of Cambridge]]) gave Anne and her possible heirs extensive possessions, including the Castle and Manor of Wingfield and many other properties<ref>{{cite ODNB |last=Graves|year=2004|first=Michael A. R. |title=Howard, Thomas, third duke of Norfolk (1473–1554)|url=https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-13940|type=online |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/13940}}</ref> in Norfolk, Suffolk, York, Lincoln and Oxford.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=11}}

The exact date of Anne's death is unknown. Alison Weir writes that the princess died after 22 or 23 November 1511, but before 1513;{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=140}} James Panton gives 23 November 1511 as an approximate date.{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} Mary Ann Everett Green writes that Anne is no longer mentioned in the act of transferring some property to the Howard family, considered in Parliament in February 1512; in addition, the possibility of Thomas Howard's marriage to [[Elizabeth Howard, Duchess of Norfolk|Lady Elizabeth Stafford]] was discussed at the same time.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=11}}{{sfn|Creighton|1891|p=67}} All this indicates that by February 1512, Anne was undoubtedly dead.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=11}}

The princess's was originally buried at [[Thetford Priory]]. After [[the Reformation]], Anne's widower petitioned the king to keep the Priory and turn it into a parish church, since not only Anne, the king's aunt, but also Henry VIII's illegitimate son [[Henry FitzRoy, Duke of Richmond and Somerset|Henry FitzRoy]] was buried here. The petition had no effect. The same request was made to the king by other nobles, and he refused them all; at the same time, Henry VIII allowed the [[Dissolution of the monasteries]] to be suspended, so that everyone who wished had time to rebury the remains of relatives.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|pp=11–12}} Thomas Howard moved Anne's remains to the [[Church of St Michael the Archangel, Framlingham]]{{sfn|Weir|2011|p=139}}{{sfn|Panton|2011|p=51}} and ordered a rich tombstone, with the expectation that after death he would rest here, which happened in 1554. Since Anne was of royal lineage, Thomas Howard was buried to her left instead of to her right as was customary.{{sfn|Everett Green|1852|p=12}}


==Ancestry==
==Ancestry==
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== References ==
==Notes==
{{notelist}}

==Citations==
{{reflist}}
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==References==
{{refbegin|40em}}
* {{cite book|last=Creighton|first=Mandell |title=Howard, Thomas II (1473-1554) |url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Howard,_Thomas_II_(1473-1554)_(DNB00) |work=Dictionary of National Biography |editor=Sidney Lee|location=London |publisher=Smith, Elder & Co. |year=1891 |volume=28 |pages=64–67}}
* {{cite book|last=Everett Green|first=Mary Anne|authorlink=Mary Anne Everett Green |title=Lives of the Princesses of England |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2xEZAAAAYAAJ |location=London |publisher=Longman, Brown, Green, Longman and Robers |year=1851 |volume=3|pages=404–436}}
* {{cite book|last=Everett Green|first=Mary Anne|authorlink=Mary Anne Everett Green |title=Lives of the Princesses of England |location=London |publisher=Longman, Brown, Green, Longman and Robers |year=1852|volume=3|pages=1–14}}
* {{cite book |last=Norwich|first=John Julius|authorlink=John Julius Norwich|title=Shakespeare's Kings: The Great Plays and the History of England in the Middle Ages: 1337-1485|location=Moscow|publisher=Astrel|year=2012|isbn=978-5-271-43630-7}}
* {{cite book| last= Okerlund|first=Garland A.| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=sauDDAAAQBAJ | title = Elizabeth of York | year = 2009 |publisher= Springer |pages = 6–13, 94–96| isbn = 978-0-230-10065-7}}
* {{cite book| last= Panton |first=James | url = https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=BiyyueBTpaMC | title = Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy | year = 2011 |publisher= Scarecrow Press | isbn = 978-0-810-87497-8}}
* {{cite book|title=Vetusta Monumenta|author=Society of Antiquaries of London|volume=3|year=1789|page=4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=keukjwEACAAJ}}
* {{cite book |last=Ustinov|first=Vadim Georgievich|title=War of the Roses: Yorks vs. Lancasters|url=https://books.google.com.pe/books?id=sqGXkgEACAAJ&redir_esc=y|location=Moscow|publisher=Veche|year=2012|isbn=978-5-9533-5294-9}}
* {{cite book |last=Ustinov|first=Vadim Georgievich|title=Richard III |location=Moscow|publisher=Young Guard|year=2015|isbn=978-5-235-03852-3}}
* {{cite book| last=Weir |first=Alison | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=7nZ90l1_IzAC | title = Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy | year = 2011 |publisher= Random House | isbn = 978-1-446-44911-0}}
* {{cite book| last=Weir |first=Alison | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=o4G84HNEd3wC | title = The Princes in the Tower |year = 2011b |publisher= Random House| pages = 222–223| isbn = 978-1-446-44919-6}}
{{refend}}


{{authority control}}
{{authority control}}

Revision as of 10:43, 3 October 2022

Anne of York
Lady Howard
Born2 November 1475
Westminster Palace, London, England
Died23 November 1511(1511-11-23) (aged 36)
Burial
SpouseThomas Howard
(m. 1494/95; her death)
IssueThomas Howard
HouseYork
FatherEdward IV of England
MotherElizabeth Woodville

Anne of York (2 November 1475 – 23 November 1511), was the fifth daughter of King Edward IV of England and his queen consort Elizabeth Woodville.

Soon after the death of her father and the usurpation of the throne by he uncle Richard III, Anne, who was about eight years old, was declared illegitimate among the other children of Edward IV by Elizabeth Woodville. The princess' mother, fearing for the children's lives, moved them to Westminster Abbey, where the late king's family received asylum and spent about a year. After the king promised not to harm his brother's family, Anne and her older sisters went to the court.

When Richard III was killed, and Henry Tudor took the throne under the name of Henry VII, the act recognizing the children of Edward IV as bastards was canceled. Henry VII married the eldest Edward IV's daughters, Elizabeth, and Anne became a valuable diplomatic asset. Her marriage to a Scottish prince was planned, but in 1488 the prince's father, King James III, was killed, and marriage negotiations were interrupted and never resumed. In 1495, Anne was married to Thomas Howard, who had claimed marriage to her since the time of Richard III. The union with Howard was not happy and overshadowed by the death of their all children. Anne herself, who had poor health, died at the age of about 36 years.

Birth and early years

Anne was born on 2 November 1475 at the Palace of Westminster as the fifth daughter[1] and seventh of ten children of of ten children of King Edward IV of England and Elizabeth Woodville.[2][3] Anne had six sisters, of whom only four reached adulthood –two eldests (Elizabeth and Cecily) and two younger (Catherine and Bridget); Mary, who was eight years older than Anne, died at the age of 14 from some illness,[4][5] and Margaret, who was about three years older than Anne, died in infancy. Anne also had five brothers: three full-blooded (the future Edward V, Richard and George) and two half-brothers from her mother's first marriage to John Grey of Groby: Thomas and Richard Grey. Neither of Anne's three full-brothers survive adulthood: George died at about two years of age, while the other two brothers, Edward V and Richard, disappeared from the Tower in 1483 during the reign of their uncle King Richard III.[6]

Anne's paternal grandparents were Richard of York, 3rd Duke of York (who claimed the rights of the House of York to the English throne) and Cecily Neville, and her maternal grandparents were Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers, and Jacquetta of Luxembourg, Dowager Duchess of Bedford. She was baptized at Westminster Abbey shortly after birth, being named both after her paternal aunt Anne of York, Duchess of Exeter and her paternal great-grandmother Anne de Mortimer; the very name "Anne" was relatively new to the English royal family, and Anne became the first daughter of a king with that name.[1] In addition, the choice of the king was probably influenced by the superstitious reverence with which Edward IV was rumored to have held Saint Anne; the king turned to the patronage of the saint at critical moments in his life in the early stages of coming to power, and therefore felt indebted to her.[7]

Daughters of King Edward IV. Stained glass window of the northwest transept of Canterbury Cathedral, 16th century. Anne is depicted fourth in the left.[a]

In 1479, when Anne was not yet four years old, Edward IV began negotiations on the marriage of his daughter with Philip, son of the Archduke Maximilian of Austria; the initiative of the union came from the Archduke and was enthusiastically received in England,[9] since the marriage was supposed to bring political benefits. Philip's mother, Mary of Burgundy, was the heiress of vast lands and had influence on European affairs;[10] besides, her stepmother was Edward IV's sister Margaret of York. The following year, the agreement took on a more formal form: as a financial security for the princess, she was allocated an amount of 100,000 crowns; Archduke Maximilian agreed to pay Anne 6,000 crowns per year from the moment she reaches the age of 12 years –the age of marriage consent, and from the moment she arrived at the court of the future father-in-law and the engagement was ratified, Anne was to receive land in Artois worth 8,000 livres for her use. In the event that Anne refused the marriage, Edward IV or his successor had to pay 60,000 livres. In return, the archduke undertook to provide the English king with military and political support against France.[9] On 5 August 1480, negotiations were completed.[11]

The court records of 1479 report that at the time when negotiations were underway for the marriage of Anne and Philip of Austria, the princess's nurse, "Agnes, wife of Thomas Butler", was dismissed with the appointment of a pension. The records show that Anne, who had not even reached the age of four, was considered old enough to be separated from her nurse.[9] Earlier, at the same time as Anne, Agnes Butler was engaged in raising the princess's younger brother George,[12] who died in March 1479 at the age of about two years.[13]

Under Richard III

The project of Anne's marriage to Philip of Austria remained in force until the death of the princess's father[9][10] in 1483. The death of Edward IV was followed by a political crisis that dramatically changed the position of the former queen and her children. Anne's older brother, Edward V, who succeeded to the throne, was captured by his uncle Lord Protector Richard of Gloucester on his way from Wales to the capital; at the same time, Anthony Woodville and Richard Gray, Anne's maternal uncle and half-brother, who accompanied the young king, were arrested.[14] Edward V was moved to the Tower of London to await his coronation, where he was later joined by his only brother, Richard; along with the rest of the children, including Anne, the Dowager Queen took refuge in Westminster Abbey.[15]

On 22 June 1483 the marriage of Edward IV with Elizabeth Woodville was declared illegal;[15] all the children of the late king were declared illegitimate by the Act of Titulus Regius and were deprived of their rights to the throne and all titles. A few days later, Anthony Woodville and Richard Grey were beheaded. On 6 July, Richard of Gloucester was proclaimed king under the name of Richard III; shortly thereafter Anne's brothers, who remained locked up in the Tower, disappeared.[16][17][18][19] After Richard III took the throne and following his orders, his squire John Nesfield sent guards to Westminster, who, day and night, inspected everyone who entered and left the Dowager Queen's sanctuary, since there were fears that one of Anne's older sisters would be able to escape abroad and find an ally there for overthrow of Richard III.[20] On Christmas Day 1483, Henry Tudor, whose mother was in a plot with Elizabeth Woodville against Richard III, swore in Rennes Cathedral that he would marry Anne's older sister Elizabeth or the next one Cecily (if the marriage to Elizabeth for any reason will be impossible[21]) after taking the English throne. But the uprising of the Tudor party, led by the Duke of Buckingham, failed even before Henry's oath in Rennes.[22]

After the failure of Buckingham's rebellion, Richard III began negotiations with his brother's widow. On 1 March 1484, the king publicly swore that the daughters of Edward IV would not be harmed or molested; in addition, Richard III promised that they would not be imprisoned in the Tower or any other prison, that they would be placed "in respectable places of good name and reputation", and later be married to "men of noble birth" and given dowry lands with an annual income of 200 marks each.[23][24] On the same day, the memorandum was delivered to the Dowager Queen, along with provisions. The princesses with great joy agreed to leave their gloomy abode and go under the care of their "gracious uncle", who allocated them chambers in his palace. Tudor historian Edward Hall wrote that Richard III "made all the daughters of his brother solemnly arrive at his palace; as if with new familiar and loving entertainment they were supposed to forget...the trauma inflicted on them and the tyranny that preceded this".[25]

Soon after the daughters of Edward IV arrived at court, the king began to look for suitable suitors for his nieces: for Anne, he chose Thomas Howard, the son and heir of the 1st Earl of Surrey and second-in-line to the Dukedom of Norfolk, to show his favor to his family.[11] The betrothal was signed in 1484,[11] but the king didn't have time to formalize the marriage.

Under Henry VII and Henry VIII

In August 1485, Richard III died at the Battle of Bosworth, and Henry Tudor became the new king by right of conquest under the name of Henry VII, who had previously sworn to marry Anne's older sister. Upon ascending the throne, Henry VII repealed the Titulus Regius act, which deprived the children of Edward IV of titles and rights to the throne; the act itself and all its copies were removed from the archives, as well as all the documents associated with them.[26][27]

When Elizabeth of York married the new king, Anne was only twelve years old, and she, along with her other sisters, were at court under the tutelage of the queen, their eldest sister and only patroness. The princess began to participate in court ceremonies. She attended the christening of her first nephew, Arthur, Prince of Wales on 24 September 1486; Anne carried the baptismal veil, which, after the ceremony, covered the head of the prince, and she herself was accompanied on the right hand by the knight-constable Richard Guildford and on the left the by knight-marshal John Turbeville. Anne performed the same role at the christening of her eldest niece Margaret in 1489. The princess took part in the Easter celebrations, Pentecost and Christmas, as well as other events at the court of Henry VII.[28]

Shortly after his accession to the throne, Henry VII began to make matrimonial plans for his wife's relatives and seek an alliance with Scotland. The king planned to marry his mother-in-law Elizabeth Woodville to the widowed King James III, and his heir James, Duke of Rothesay was to marry one of the daughters of the late king.[29] Since Cecily, the former bride of James, was already engaged to the king's uncle John Welles, and Catherine was to become the wife of the prince's younger brother, it was necessary to choose between Anne and the youngest of her sisters, Bridget. Bridget planned to enter a monastery, and thus Anne remained the only candidate, but with the death of James III in 1488, all negotiations were terminated and never resumed.[30]

In 1488, on St. George's Day, Anne, among twenty other ladies, was present in the retinue of her sister the queen; she was dressed in a robe of scarlet velvet and sat on a snow-white palfrey, whose saddle was draped in a golden cloth embroidered with white roses, the symbol of the House of York. The next time the princess is mentioned in the sources in connection with the death of her mother in June 1492: Anne sat at the bedside of a dying woman in Bermondsey Abbey, where the Dowager Queen spent the last five years of her life. Anne led the mourners at her mother's funeral instead of Queen Elizabeth, who was expecting the birth of her fourth child and therefore delegated her powers and responsibilities to her younger sister. Anne and her younger sisters, Catherine and Bridget, departed with the Queen's body by river to Windsor Castle, where on 13 June Elizabeth Woodville was buried next to her second husband Edward IV in St. George's Chapel. According to the herald's notes, "the standard-bearers walked ahead of milady Anne, who was present at the memorial mass instead of the queen; she prayed on her knees on the carpet and pillow. She was accompanied by Viscount Welles...and Dame Catherine Grey carried the train of Lady Anne...".[30]

Marriage

Thomas Howard, later 3rd Duke of Norfolk, by Hans Holbein the Younger, ca. 1539.

When Anna reached the marriageable age, Queen Elizabeth began to look for her a suitable groom. The queen turned her attention to representatives of the English nobility and, first of all, to Thomas Howard, the son and heir of the 1st Earl of Surrey,[30] for whom Richard III already planned to marry Anne.[11] The princess was personally acquainted with her future husband since childhood, since his father served at court in the private chambers of Edward IV. In the Wars of the Roses, the Howard family sided with the House of York, which is why under Henry VII, heir to the Lancasters, in 1485 the Earl of Surrey was imprisoned in the Tower for three and a half years, deprived of his rights, titles and possessions. Later, he received freedom, restoration of rights and most of the lands and was called to the court, where he received a position close to the king. At the same time, not all titles were returned: Thomas' father received back the title of Earl of Surrey but the title and honours of Duke of Norfolk,[31] which he was supposed to inherit after the death of his father at Bosworth, were granted to him only in 1514. Thomas was older than Anne by about two years.[32]

The queen took into account the opinion of her sister and considered that the Howard family were noble enough to qualify for a high marriage, and therefore on 4 February 1495 (according to other sources in 1494[2][10]) the wedding of Anne and Thomas Howard was celebrated.[2][10][11][32] The wedding took place in Westminster Abbey,[11] and the marriage celebrations took place in the Palace of Placentia.[2][10] The royal couple attended the wedding, and the king also attended a festive mass, but the dowry of 10,000 marks, assigned to Anne by her father, wasn't receive by the newlyweds.[32] By order of the queen, the couple were assigned annuity payments in the amount of 120£ per year,[11] which were to be carried out throughout Anne's life or until the death of her mother-in-law[33]: this amount included the maintenance of Anne herself, as well as her servants[34] and seven horses.[33] This pension was appointed, among other things, because the queen did not want to leave Anne dependent on her husband, who, due to circumstances, could not provide the princess with a comfortable existence.[34] Since the groom's father received only part of the family estate and in this part there was no residence suitable for a woman of royal blood, the newlyweds received the right to use the estates located in the possessionst of the Duke of York and the Marquess of Dorset, Anne's nephew and half-brother, respectively.[35] In return, the queen demanded that in the event of the death of the Earl of Surrey or his wife, a wealthy heiress, Anne's interests should be taken into account on an equal basis with the interests of her husband. The king allocated for Anne another 26£ per year from the crown lands.[33]

After the wedding, Anne left the court and visited her sister very rarely. One of the reasons for this[36] could be her poor health[10] –both physical and mental.[37] Little is known about the life of the princess during this period. Queen Elizabeth's court documents report that in 1502–1503 she paid for seven yards of green silk from Bruges for Anna's dress, costing 2 shillings 8 pences a yard. In addition, in 1502, the queen added 10 marks (6 pounds 13 shillings 4 pences) to her sister's annual pocket expenses, as well as 120£ to Thomas Howard, which he had to spend on his wife's food. In 1503, the queen died and the attitude towards Anne at the court changed. She attended the funeral of of Queen Elizabeth, but not as a mourner, but as a simple spectator; Anne's grief at the loss of her sister was so great that she could not attend the entire funeral ceremony.[37]

Anne's marriage to Thomas Howard was not a happy one. Thomas had a relationship with Anne's lady-in-waiting Bess Holland,[10] and all the children of the spouses predeceased them.[38] The exact number and names of children born to Anne are unknown. Mary Anne Everett Green writes that the records of the Howard house indicate four children, of which only one child, a son named Thomas, lived long enough to be christened. Alison Weir dates Thomas' birth to about 1496 and death to 1508;[2] Everett Green writes that the exact date of death is indicated on the boy's grave: 4 August 1508.[39] James Panton reports that in addition to Thomas, Anne had two sons who died in infancy and a stillborn child,[10] but Weir among the four children of Anna, in addition to Thomas, mentioned a son and two daughters –all three died before it became possible to christen them.[13] Anne's son was buried at Lambeth in the Howard family crypt,[37] where his grandfather's remains were later transferred.[40]

Later life and legacy

Only two records of the last years of Anna's life have survived. On 23 March 1510, her nephew King Henry VIII granted his aunt and her spouse a property with a garden in Stephenheath; on 22 November[39] the king (in compensation for the lands claimed in right of her great-grandmother Anne de Mortimer, wife of Richard, 3rd Earl of Cambridge) gave Anne and her possible heirs extensive possessions, including the Castle and Manor of Wingfield and many other properties[41] in Norfolk, Suffolk, York, Lincoln and Oxford.[39]

The exact date of Anne's death is unknown. Alison Weir writes that the princess died after 22 or 23 November 1511, but before 1513;[13] James Panton gives 23 November 1511 as an approximate date.[10] Mary Ann Everett Green writes that Anne is no longer mentioned in the act of transferring some property to the Howard family, considered in Parliament in February 1512; in addition, the possibility of Thomas Howard's marriage to Lady Elizabeth Stafford was discussed at the same time.[39][38] All this indicates that by February 1512, Anne was undoubtedly dead.[39]

The princess's was originally buried at Thetford Priory. After the Reformation, Anne's widower petitioned the king to keep the Priory and turn it into a parish church, since not only Anne, the king's aunt, but also Henry VIII's illegitimate son Henry FitzRoy was buried here. The petition had no effect. The same request was made to the king by other nobles, and he refused them all; at the same time, Henry VIII allowed the Dissolution of the monasteries to be suspended, so that everyone who wished had time to rebury the remains of relatives.[42] Thomas Howard moved Anne's remains to the Church of St Michael the Archangel, Framlingham[2][10] and ordered a rich tombstone, with the expectation that after death he would rest here, which happened in 1554. Since Anne was of royal lineage, Thomas Howard was buried to her left instead of to her right as was customary.[40]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ The stained glass window was made by order of Edward IV by the royal master William Neuve after the birth of his sixth (but fifth surviving) daughter Catherine in August 1479, but before November 1480 – when was born his youngest daughter Bridget. More recent research has determined the order of the sisters in the stained glass window as Elizabeth, Cecily, Anne, Catherine and Mary, however it is more likely that the York princesses are arranged in seniority on the stained glass window and Anne is depicted fourth from the left.[8]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Everett Green 1852, p. 1.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Weir 2011, p. 139.
  3. ^ Panton 2011, p. 50.
  4. ^ Weir 2011, p. 138.
  5. ^ Everett Green 1851, p. 401.
  6. ^ Weir 2011, pp. 2–3.
  7. ^ Everett Green 1852, pp. 1–2.
  8. ^ Weir, Alison (2013). Elizabeth of York: The First Tudor Queen. Random House. ISBN 978-1-448-19138-3.
  9. ^ a b c d Everett Green 1852, p. 3.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Panton 2011, p. 51.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Creighton 1891, p. 64.
  12. ^ Everett Green 1852, p. 3 (note 4).
  13. ^ a b c Weir 2011, p. 140.
  14. ^ Chalmers, Alexander (1817). J. Nichols (ed.). The General Biographical Dictionary: Containing an Historical and Critical Account of the Lives and Writings of the Most Eminent Persons in Every Nation. Vol. 32. p. 353.
  15. ^ a b Weir 2011b, p. 222.
  16. ^ Weir 2011b, pp. 222–223.
  17. ^ Norwich 2012, pp. 355–365.
  18. ^ Ustinov 2012, pp. 284–295.
  19. ^ Everett Green 1851, pp. 413–414.
  20. ^ Everett Green 1851, p. 413.
  21. ^ Okerlund 2009, p. 94.
  22. ^ Everett Green 1851, p. 414.
  23. ^ Ustinov 2015, pp. 214–215.
  24. ^ Horrox, Rosemary (2004). "Cecily, Viscountess Welles (1469–1507)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online) (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4984. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  25. ^ Everett Green 1851, p. 416.
  26. ^ Ustinov 2012, p. 296.
  27. ^ Ustinov 2012, pp. 310–311.
  28. ^ Everett Green 1852, p. 4.
  29. ^ Everett Green 1852, pp. 4–5.
  30. ^ a b c Everett Green 1852, p. 5.
  31. ^ Everett Green 1852, pp. 6–7.
  32. ^ a b c Everett Green 1852, p. 7.
  33. ^ a b c Everett Green 1852, p. 9.
  34. ^ a b Everett Green 1852, p. 8.
  35. ^ Everett Green 1852, pp. 7–8.
  36. ^ Everett Green 1852, pp. 10–11.
  37. ^ a b c Everett Green 1852, p. 10.
  38. ^ a b Creighton 1891, p. 67.
  39. ^ a b c d e Everett Green 1852, p. 11.
  40. ^ a b Everett Green 1852, p. 12.
  41. ^ Graves, Michael A. R. (2004). "Howard, Thomas, third duke of Norfolk (1473–1554)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online) (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13940. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  42. ^ Everett Green 1852, pp. 11–12.

References