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George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence

George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence (21 October 1449 – 18 February 1478), was the sixth son of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, and Cecily Neville, and the brother of English kings Edward IV and Richard III. He played an important role in the dynastic struggle between rival factions of the Plantagenets now known as the Wars of the Roses.

George Plantagenet
Duke of Clarence
Born21 October 1449
Dublin Castle, Ireland
Died18 February 1478(1478-02-18) (aged 28)
Tower of London
Burial25 February 1478[1]
Spouse
(m. 1469; died 1476)
Issue
more...
HouseYork
FatherRichard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York
MotherCecily Neville

Though a member of the House of York, he switched sides to support the House of Lancaster, before reverting back to the Yorkists. He was later convicted of treason against his elder brother, Edward IV, and executed, allegedly by drowning in malmsey wine. He appears as a character in William Shakespeare's plays Henry VI, Part 3 and Richard III, in which his death is attributed to the machinations of Richard.

Life Edit

 
Arms of George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence: Royal arms differenced by a label of three points argent each charged with a canton gules.[2][3]

George was born on 21 October 1449 in Dublin at a time when his father, the Duke of York, had begun to challenge Henry VI for the crown. His godfather was James FitzGerald, 6th Earl of Desmond. He was the second of the three sons of Richard and Cecily who survived their father and became a potential claimant for the crown. His father died in 1460. In 1461 his elder brother, Edward, became King of England as Edward IV and George was made Duke of Clarence. Despite his youth, he was appointed as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in the same year.[4]

Having been mentioned as a possible husband for Mary, daughter of Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, Clarence came under the influence of his first cousin Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, and in July 1469 was married in Église Notre-Dame de Calais to the earl's elder daughter Isabel Neville.[4]

Clarence had actively supported his elder brother's claim to the throne, but when his father-in-law (known as "the Kingmaker") deserted Edward IV to ally with Margaret of Anjou, consort of the deposed King Henry, Clarence supported him and was deprived of his office as Lord Lieutenant.[5] Clarence joined Warwick in France, taking his pregnant wife. She gave birth to their first child, a girl, on 16 April 1470, in a ship off Calais. The child died shortly afterwards. Henry VI rewarded Clarence by making him next in line to the throne after his own son, justifying the exclusion of Edward IV both by attainder for his treason against the House of Lancaster as well as his alleged illegitimacy. After a short time, Clarence realized that his loyalty to his father-in-law was misplaced: Warwick had his younger daughter, Anne Neville, Clarence's sister-in-law, marry Henry VI's son in December 1470. This demonstrated that his father-in-law was less interested in making him king than in serving his own interests and, since it now seemed unlikely that Warwick would replace Edward IV with Clarence, Clarence was secretly reconciled with Edward.[5]

Warwick's efforts to keep Henry VI on the throne ultimately failed and Warwick was killed at the battle of Barnet in April 1471. The re-instated King Edward IV restored his brother Clarence to royal favour by making him Great Chamberlain of England. As his father-in-law had died, Clarence became jure uxoris Earl of Warwick, but did not inherit the entire Warwick estate as his younger brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, had married (c. 1472) Anne Neville, who had been widowed in 1471. Edward intervened and eventually divided the estates between his brothers.[4] Clarence was created, by right of his wife, first Earl of Warwick[6] on 25 March 1472,[7] and first Earl of Salisbury in a new creation.[4]

In 1475 Clarence's wife Isabel gave birth to a son, Edward, later Earl of Warwick. Isabel died on 22 December 1476, two months after giving birth to a short-lived son named Richard (5 October 1476 – 1 January 1477). George and Isabel are buried together at Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire. Their surviving children, Margaret and Edward, were cared for by their aunt, Anne Neville, until she died in 1485 when Edward was 10 years old.[citation needed]

Death Edit

Though most historians now believe Isabel's death was a result of either consumption or childbed fever, Clarence was convinced she had been poisoned by one of her ladies-in-waiting, Ankarette Twynyho, whom, as a consequence, he had judicially murdered in April 1477, by summarily arresting her and bullying a jury at Warwick into convicting her of murder by poisoning. She was hanged immediately after trial with John Thursby, a fellow defendant. She was posthumously pardoned in 1478 by King Edward. Clarence's mental state, never stable, deteriorated from that point and led to his involvement in yet another rebellion against his brother Edward.

In 1477 Clarence was again a suitor for the hand of Mary, who had just become duchess of Burgundy. Edward objected to the match, and Clarence left the court.[4]

The arrest and committal to the Tower of London of one of Clarence's retainers, an Oxford astronomer named John Stacey, led to his confession under torture that he had "imagined and compassed" the death of the king, and used the black arts to accomplish this. He implicated one Thomas Burdett, and one Thomas Blake, a chaplain at Stacey's college (Merton College, Oxford). All three were tried for treason, convicted, and condemned to be drawn to Tyburn and hanged. Blake was saved at the eleventh hour by a plea for his life from James Goldwell, Bishop of Norwich, but the other two were put to death as ordered.

This was a clear warning to Clarence, which he chose to ignore. He appointed John Goddard to burst into Parliament and regale the House with Burdett and Stacey's declarations of innocence that they had made before their deaths. Goddard was a very unwise choice, as he was an ex-Lancastrian who had expounded Henry VI's claim to the throne. Edward summoned Clarence to Windsor, severely upbraided him, accused him of treason, and ordered his immediate arrest and confinement.

Clarence was imprisoned in the Tower of London and put on trial for treason against his brother Edward IV. Clarence was not present – Edward himself prosecuted his brother, and demanded that Parliament pass a bill of attainder against his brother, declaring that he was guilty of "unnatural, loathly treasons" which were aggravated by the fact that Clarence was his brother, who, if anyone did, owed him loyalty and love. Following his conviction and attainder, he was "privately executed" at the Tower on 18 February 1478, by tradition in the Bowyer Tower, and soon after the event, a rumour spread that he had been drowned in a butt of Malmsey wine.[4]

A reason for Edward to have his brother executed may have been that George had "threatened to question the legality of the royal marriage"[8] and he may have discovered from Bishop Robert Stillington of Bath and Wells that George "had probably let slip the secret of the precontract" for Edward's marriage with Lady Eleanor Talbot,[9] although others dispute this.[10][11]

In Shakespeare Edit

Clarence is a principal character in two of William Shakespeare's history plays: Henry VI, Part 3 and Richard III. Shakespeare portrays Clarence as weak-willed and changeable. His initial defection from Edward IV to Warwick is prompted by outrage at Edward's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville. Despite several speeches proclaiming loyalty to Warwick, and to Henry VI, Clarence defects back to Edward's side when he sees his brothers again; it takes only a few lines for his brothers to shame him into rejoining the Yorkist party. Several lines reference his penchant for wine.

Richard III opens with Gloucester having framed Clarence for treason, using a soothsayer to sow doubt in the King's mind about his brother, and in the first scene Clarence is arrested and taken to the Tower. Gloucester nimbly stage-manages Clarence's death, fast-tracking the order of execution and intercepting the King's pardon when Edward changes his mind. In Act One Scene Four, Clarence recounts a terrifying nightmare in which he has been pushed (accidentally) into the ocean by Gloucester and drowns, then finds himself in hell, accused of perjury by the ghosts of Warwick and Prince Edward. When he is attacked by assassins sent by Gloucester, he pleads eloquently and nobly but is stabbed and drowned in a butt of Malmsey wine. It is Clarence's death that sends Edward into a fatal attack of remorse. Clarence is the first character to die in the play; his ghost later appears to Gloucester, then already Richard III, and Henry Tudor, the future Henry VII of England, before the Battle of Bosworth Field, cursing his brother and encouraging Henry.

Children Edit

 
The Duke and Duchess of Clarence, Cardiff Castle.

Clarence married Isabel Neville in Calais, at that time controlled by England, on 11 July 1469. Together they had four children:[12]

Genealogy Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Visser-Fuchs, Livia (2021). "The King's Hat: Two Anecdotes about Louis XI and Edward IV's Embassy to France in 1477-1478". The Ricardian. XXXI: 102, note 32.
  2. ^ Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family. Heraldica.org. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  3. ^ Pinches, John Harvey; Pinches, Rosemary (1974), The Royal Heraldry of England, Heraldry Today, Slough, Buckinghamshire: Hollen Street Press, ISBN 0-900455-25-X
  4. ^ a b c d e f   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Clarence, Dukes of s.v. George, duke of Clarence". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 428.
  5. ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
  6. ^ a b Hicks, Michael. "George, duke of Clarence", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 23 September 2004. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  7. ^ Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), p. 136.
  8. ^ Baldwin, David (2012). Richard III : a life. Stroud: Amberley. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-4456-0182-3. OCLC 759584703 – via Internet Archive.
  9. ^ Kendall 2002, pp. 258–60.
  10. ^ Levine, Mortimer (1959). "Richard III – Usurper or Lawful King?". Speculum. University of Chicago Press. 34 (3): 391–401. doi:10.2307/2850815. ISSN 0038-7134. JSTOR 2850815. S2CID 162398938.
  11. ^ Ross, Charles Derek (1975) [1974]. "Edward IV". London: Book Club Associates. p. 244. OCLC 1033597891 – via Internet Archive.
  12. ^ Ashdown-Hill 2014, p. 193.
  13. ^ Hicks, Michael (1998). Warwick the Kingmaker, p. 287. Blackwell, Oxford. ISBN 978-0-631-23593-4.

Sources Edit

george, plantagenet, duke, clarence, october, 1449, february, 1478, sixth, richard, plantagenet, duke, york, cecily, neville, brother, english, kings, edward, richard, played, important, role, dynastic, struggle, between, rival, factions, plantagenets, known, . George Plantagenet Duke of Clarence 21 October 1449 18 February 1478 was the sixth son of Richard Plantagenet 3rd Duke of York and Cecily Neville and the brother of English kings Edward IV and Richard III He played an important role in the dynastic struggle between rival factions of the Plantagenets now known as the Wars of the Roses George PlantagenetDuke of ClarenceBorn21 October 1449Dublin Castle IrelandDied18 February 1478 1478 02 18 aged 28 Tower of LondonBurial25 February 1478 1 Tewkesbury AbbeySpouseIsabel Neville m 1469 died 1476 wbr Issuemore Margaret Pole Countess of SalisburyEdward Plantagenet 17th Earl of WarwickHouseYorkFatherRichard Plantagenet 3rd Duke of YorkMotherCecily NevilleThough a member of the House of York he switched sides to support the House of Lancaster before reverting back to the Yorkists He was later convicted of treason against his elder brother Edward IV and executed allegedly by drowning in malmsey wine He appears as a character in William Shakespeare s plays Henry VI Part 3 and Richard III in which his death is attributed to the machinations of Richard Contents 1 Life 2 Death 3 In Shakespeare 4 Children 5 Genealogy 6 References 7 SourcesLife Edit nbsp Arms of George Plantagenet Duke of Clarence Royal arms differenced by a label of three points argent each charged with a canton gules 2 3 George was born on 21 October 1449 in Dublin at a time when his father the Duke of York had begun to challenge Henry VI for the crown His godfather was James FitzGerald 6th Earl of Desmond He was the second of the three sons of Richard and Cecily who survived their father and became a potential claimant for the crown His father died in 1460 In 1461 his elder brother Edward became King of England as Edward IV and George was made Duke of Clarence Despite his youth he was appointed as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in the same year 4 Having been mentioned as a possible husband for Mary daughter of Charles the Bold Duke of Burgundy Clarence came under the influence of his first cousin Richard Neville Earl of Warwick and in July 1469 was married in Eglise Notre Dame de Calais to the earl s elder daughter Isabel Neville 4 Clarence had actively supported his elder brother s claim to the throne but when his father in law known as the Kingmaker deserted Edward IV to ally with Margaret of Anjou consort of the deposed King Henry Clarence supported him and was deprived of his office as Lord Lieutenant 5 Clarence joined Warwick in France taking his pregnant wife She gave birth to their first child a girl on 16 April 1470 in a ship off Calais The child died shortly afterwards Henry VI rewarded Clarence by making him next in line to the throne after his own son justifying the exclusion of Edward IV both by attainder for his treason against the House of Lancaster as well as his alleged illegitimacy After a short time Clarence realized that his loyalty to his father in law was misplaced Warwick had his younger daughter Anne Neville Clarence s sister in law marry Henry VI s son in December 1470 This demonstrated that his father in law was less interested in making him king than in serving his own interests and since it now seemed unlikely that Warwick would replace Edward IV with Clarence Clarence was secretly reconciled with Edward 5 Warwick s efforts to keep Henry VI on the throne ultimately failed and Warwick was killed at the battle of Barnet in April 1471 The re instated King Edward IV restored his brother Clarence to royal favour by making him Great Chamberlain of England As his father in law had died Clarence became jure uxoris Earl of Warwick but did not inherit the entire Warwick estate as his younger brother Richard Duke of Gloucester had married c 1472 Anne Neville who had been widowed in 1471 Edward intervened and eventually divided the estates between his brothers 4 Clarence was created by right of his wife first Earl of Warwick 6 on 25 March 1472 7 and first Earl of Salisbury in a new creation 4 In 1475 Clarence s wife Isabel gave birth to a son Edward later Earl of Warwick Isabel died on 22 December 1476 two months after giving birth to a short lived son named Richard 5 October 1476 1 January 1477 George and Isabel are buried together at Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire Their surviving children Margaret and Edward were cared for by their aunt Anne Neville until she died in 1485 when Edward was 10 years old citation needed Death EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources George Plantagenet Duke of Clarence news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Though most historians now believe Isabel s death was a result of either consumption or childbed fever Clarence was convinced she had been poisoned by one of her ladies in waiting Ankarette Twynyho whom as a consequence he had judicially murdered in April 1477 by summarily arresting her and bullying a jury at Warwick into convicting her of murder by poisoning She was hanged immediately after trial with John Thursby a fellow defendant She was posthumously pardoned in 1478 by King Edward Clarence s mental state never stable deteriorated from that point and led to his involvement in yet another rebellion against his brother Edward In 1477 Clarence was again a suitor for the hand of Mary who had just become duchess of Burgundy Edward objected to the match and Clarence left the court 4 The arrest and committal to the Tower of London of one of Clarence s retainers an Oxford astronomer named John Stacey led to his confession under torture that he had imagined and compassed the death of the king and used the black arts to accomplish this He implicated one Thomas Burdett and one Thomas Blake a chaplain at Stacey s college Merton College Oxford All three were tried for treason convicted and condemned to be drawn to Tyburn and hanged Blake was saved at the eleventh hour by a plea for his life from James Goldwell Bishop of Norwich but the other two were put to death as ordered This was a clear warning to Clarence which he chose to ignore He appointed John Goddard to burst into Parliament and regale the House with Burdett and Stacey s declarations of innocence that they had made before their deaths Goddard was a very unwise choice as he was an ex Lancastrian who had expounded Henry VI s claim to the throne Edward summoned Clarence to Windsor severely upbraided him accused him of treason and ordered his immediate arrest and confinement Clarence was imprisoned in the Tower of London and put on trial for treason against his brother Edward IV Clarence was not present Edward himself prosecuted his brother and demanded that Parliament pass a bill of attainder against his brother declaring that he was guilty of unnatural loathly treasons which were aggravated by the fact that Clarence was his brother who if anyone did owed him loyalty and love Following his conviction and attainder he was privately executed at the Tower on 18 February 1478 by tradition in the Bowyer Tower and soon after the event a rumour spread that he had been drowned in a butt of Malmsey wine 4 A reason for Edward to have his brother executed may have been that George had threatened to question the legality of the royal marriage 8 and he may have discovered from Bishop Robert Stillington of Bath and Wells that George had probably let slip the secret of the precontract for Edward s marriage with Lady Eleanor Talbot 9 although others dispute this 10 11 In Shakespeare EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Clarence is a principal character in two of William Shakespeare s history plays Henry VI Part 3 and Richard III Shakespeare portrays Clarence as weak willed and changeable His initial defection from Edward IV to Warwick is prompted by outrage at Edward s marriage to Elizabeth Woodville Despite several speeches proclaiming loyalty to Warwick and to Henry VI Clarence defects back to Edward s side when he sees his brothers again it takes only a few lines for his brothers to shame him into rejoining the Yorkist party Several lines reference his penchant for wine Richard III opens with Gloucester having framed Clarence for treason using a soothsayer to sow doubt in the King s mind about his brother and in the first scene Clarence is arrested and taken to the Tower Gloucester nimbly stage manages Clarence s death fast tracking the order of execution and intercepting the King s pardon when Edward changes his mind In Act One Scene Four Clarence recounts a terrifying nightmare in which he has been pushed accidentally into the ocean by Gloucester and drowns then finds himself in hell accused of perjury by the ghosts of Warwick and Prince Edward When he is attacked by assassins sent by Gloucester he pleads eloquently and nobly but is stabbed and drowned in a butt of Malmsey wine It is Clarence s death that sends Edward into a fatal attack of remorse Clarence is the first character to die in the play his ghost later appears to Gloucester then already Richard III and Henry Tudor the future Henry VII of England before the Battle of Bosworth Field cursing his brother and encouraging Henry Children Edit nbsp The Duke and Duchess of Clarence Cardiff Castle Clarence married Isabel Neville in Calais at that time controlled by England on 11 July 1469 Together they had four children 12 Anne of Clarence 16 April 1470 c 17 April 1470 who was born and died in a ship off Calais Identified by some sources as a girl but by others as an unnamed boy 6 13 Margaret Pole Countess of Salisbury 14 August 1473 28 May 1541 married Sir Richard Pole executed by Henry VIII Edward Plantagenet 17th Earl of Warwick 25 February 1475 28 November 1499 the last legitimate Plantagenet heir of the direct male line executed by Henry VII on grounds of attempting to escape from the Tower of London Richard of Clarence 5 October 1476 1 January 1477 born at Tewkesbury Abbey Gloucestershire died at Warwick Castle and buried in Warwick Genealogy EditvteEnglish royal families in the Wars of the RosesDukes except Aquitaine and Princes of Wales are noted as are the monarchs reigns Individuals with red dashed borders are Lancastrians and blue dotted borders are Yorkists Some changed sides and are represented with a solid thin purple border Monarchs have a rounded corner border See also Family tree of English monarchs Henry of GrosmontDuke of LancasterEdward IIIKing of Englandr 1327 1377Edward of Woodstock The Black Prince Prince of WalesLionel of AntwerpDuke of ClarenceBlanche of LancasterJohn of GauntDuke of LancasterKatherine SwynfordEdmund of LangleyDuke of YorkThomas of WoodstockDuke of GloucesterRichard IIPrince of Wales King of Englandr 1377 1399Philippa of ClarenceHenry IVDuke of Lancaster King of Englandr 1399 1413John BeaufortThomas BeaufortDuke of ExeterJoan BeaufortRalph NevilleHenry Percy Hotspur Elizabeth MortimerRoger MortimerOwen TudorCatherine of ValoisHenry VDuke of Lancaster Prince of Wales King of Englandr 1413 1422HumphreyDuke of GloucesterEdward of NorwichDuke of YorkRichard of ConisburghAnne de MortimerJohn Beaufort1st Duke of SomersetMargaret of AnjouHenry VIKing of Englandr 1422 1461 r 1470 1471Edmund Beaufort2nd Duke of Somerset 1st St AlbansWilliam NevilleEleanor NevilleHenry Percy 1st St AlbansAnne NevilleDuchess of BuckinghamRichard Neville nbsp WakefieldCecily NevilleRichard of YorkDuke of York Prince of Wales WakefieldHenry Beaufort3rd Duke of Somerset nbsp HexhamRichard Woodville nbsp EdgecoteMargaret BeaufortEdmund Beaufort4th Duke of Somerset nbsp TewkesburyHenry Percy TowtonHumphrey StaffordJohn Neville BarnetRichard Neville Kingmaker BarnetMargaret BeaufortEdmund TudorJasper TudorDuke of BedfordCatherine WoodvilleHenry StaffordDuke of Buckingham nbsp Elizabeth WoodvilleEdward IVDuke of York King of Englandr 1461 1470 r 1471 1483George PlantagenetDuke of Clarence nbsp TowerEdward of WestminsterPrince of Wales TewkesburyAnne NevilleRichard IIIDuke of Gloucester King of Englandr 1483 1485 Bosworth FieldHenry VIIKing of Englandr 1485 1509Elizabeth of YorkEdward VPrince of Wales King of Englandr 1483 nbsp TowerRichard of ShrewsburyDuke of York nbsp TowerReferences Edit Visser Fuchs Livia 2021 The King s Hat Two Anecdotes about Louis XI and Edward IV s Embassy to France in 1477 1478 The Ricardian XXXI 102 note 32 Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family Heraldica org Retrieved 2012 07 09 Pinches John Harvey Pinches Rosemary 1974 The Royal Heraldry of England Heraldry Today Slough Buckinghamshire Hollen Street Press ISBN 0 900455 25 X a b c d e f nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Clarence Dukes of s v George duke of Clarence Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 428 a b Chisholm 1911 a b Hicks Michael George duke of Clarence Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 23 September 2004 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Alison Weir Britain s Royal Family A Complete Genealogy London U K The Bodley Head 1999 p 136 Baldwin David 2012 Richard III a life Stroud Amberley p 80 ISBN 978 1 4456 0182 3 OCLC 759584703 via Internet Archive Kendall 2002 pp 258 60 Levine Mortimer 1959 Richard III Usurper or Lawful King Speculum University of Chicago Press 34 3 391 401 doi 10 2307 2850815 ISSN 0038 7134 JSTOR 2850815 S2CID 162398938 Ross Charles Derek 1975 1974 Edward IV London Book Club Associates p 244 OCLC 1033597891 via Internet Archive Ashdown Hill 2014 p 193 Hicks Michael 1998 Warwick the Kingmaker p 287 Blackwell Oxford ISBN 978 0 631 23593 4 Sources EditAshdown Hill John 2014 The Third Plantagenet George Duke of Clarence Richard III s Brother Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 9949 9 OCLC 873815303 Hicks Michael 1992 False Fleeting Perjur d Clarence George Duke of Clarence 1449 78 rev ed Bangor Headstart History ISBN 1 873041 08 X OCLC 463748217 Kendall Paul Murray 2002 Richard the Third New York amp London W W Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0 393 34838 5 OCLC 1036805089 via Internet Archive Pollard A J 1991 Richard III and the Princes in the Tower Bramley Books p 65 ISBN 978 1 85833 772 2 OCLC 1036783280 via Internet Archive Weir Alison 2002 Britain s Royal Family A Complete Genealogy Bodley Head pp 136 7 ISBN 0 7126 4286 2 OCLC 555656395 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Plantagenet Duke of Clarence amp oldid 1170548471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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