![]() ![]() ![]() Then comes the Battle of Bosworth and another change of monarch Richard is dead and Henry Tudor – Henry VII – has taken the throne. ![]() With marriage to the Dauphin now out of the question, Elizabeth discovers that Richard III is thinking of marrying her himself – something she is prepared to consider, despite the possibility that he may have been responsible for the disappearance of her brothers. Along with Elizabeth’s other brother, Richard of York, Edward soon disappears from public view completely. Her younger brother, now Edward V, succeeds him, but before he can be crowned he is deposed by their uncle, the Duke of Gloucester, who reigns in his place as Richard III. ![]() With plans for a marriage to the Dauphin of France, Elizabeth’s future looks bright – until her father’s sudden death in 1483 sends everything into turmoil. Elizabeth lived through – and played a role in – one of my favourite periods of history, the Wars of the Roses, so of course I wanted to read this one!īorn in 1466, Elizabeth of York is the eldest child of King Edward IV and his wife, Elizabeth Woodville. When Alison Weir’s Six Tudor Queens series came to an end last year with Katharine Parr: the Sixth Wife, I discovered that she would be moving further back in time for her next novel, The Last White Rose, which would tell the story of Elizabeth of York. ![]()
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