Royal Descents and Pedigrees of Founders' KinHarrison, 1864 - 400 pages |
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Page v
... JOAN PLANTAGENET , THE FAIR MAID OF KENT LIONEL PLANTAGENET , DUKE of Clarence EDMUND PLANTAGENET , surnamed of Langley , Duke of York THOMAS PLANTAGENET , surnamed of Woodstock , Duke of Gloucester MARGARET OF CLARENCE , COUNTESS OF ...
... JOAN PLANTAGENET , THE FAIR MAID OF KENT LIONEL PLANTAGENET , DUKE of Clarence EDMUND PLANTAGENET , surnamed of Langley , Duke of York THOMAS PLANTAGENET , surnamed of Woodstock , Duke of Gloucester MARGARET OF CLARENCE , COUNTESS OF ...
Page 45
... Joan became of marriageable age , Sir Thomas Holland stepped forward to show a prior contract ; and upon a petition to Pope Clement the Sixth , alleging the same , his Holiness gave her to Sir Thomas , who in her right became Earl of ...
... Joan became of marriageable age , Sir Thomas Holland stepped forward to show a prior contract ; and upon a petition to Pope Clement the Sixth , alleging the same , his Holiness gave her to Sir Thomas , who in her right became Earl of ...
Page 46
... nuptial harmony and felicity , which flows from a well - placed affection . " The fruit of this union was the unfortunate King Richard the Second , whom the ambitious Bolingbroke despoiled of his crown 46 JOAN PLANTAGENET .
... nuptial harmony and felicity , which flows from a well - placed affection . " The fruit of this union was the unfortunate King Richard the Second , whom the ambitious Bolingbroke despoiled of his crown 46 JOAN PLANTAGENET .
Page 47
... Joan was in her thirty - third year , and Edward in his thirty - first , when he undertook to woo her , not for himself , but for a valued friend , whose name has been lost to us , escaping through the sieve in which fame shuffles so ...
... Joan was in her thirty - third year , and Edward in his thirty - first , when he undertook to woo her , not for himself , but for a valued friend , whose name has been lost to us , escaping through the sieve in which fame shuffles so ...
Page 48
... Joan , Princess of Wales , Duchess of Cornwall , Countess of Chester , and Lady Wake . My body to be buried in my chapel at Stamford , near the monument of our late lord and husband , the Earl of Kent . To my dear son , the king , my ...
... Joan , Princess of Wales , Duchess of Cornwall , Countess of Chester , and Lady Wake . My body to be buried in my chapel at Stamford , near the monument of our late lord and husband , the Earl of Kent . To my dear son , the king , my ...
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Common terms and phrases
1st Earl 1st wife 2nd dau 2nd Earl 2nd wife 3rd Earl 4th Earl Alice Baron Bart Beaufort beth buried Catherine Charles Chichele Clifford coheir Count of Flanders Count of Provence descent from King direct descent Earl of Arundel Earl of Hereford Earl of Kent Earl of March Earl of Ormonde Edmund EDWARD III eldest dau Eleanor Eliza Ferrers Fitzalan ford George Grey Hall Hamilton heir of Sir heiress HENRY III Holland Hugh Isabel Isabella James Jane Joan John of Gaunt King EDWARD King of Castile King of England King of France King of Scot King of Scotland Lady Elizabeth Lady Margaret Lancaster land liam Marquess Mary Maud Mortimer Neville PEDIGREE Philip Philippa Planta Plantagenet Prince Princess Ralph Sept Sir John Sir Richard Sir Robert Sir Thomas Sir William sister slain Somerset Stafford Stewart Viscount Wykeham
Popular passages
Page 75 - Then the fore-mentioned gentleman returned, and conducted him back to his school. Some time after, the same gentleman came to him again, with a horse and proper accoutrements, and told him he must take a journey with him into the country. They went into Leicestershire, and came to Bosworth field; and he was carried to King Richard III.'s tent. The king embraced him, and told him he was his son. " But, child," says he, " to-morrow I must fight for my crown.
Page 2 - Stimulated by these words, or rather by the Divine inspiration, and allured by the beautifully illuminated letter at the beginning of the volume, he spoke before all his brothers, who, though his seniors in age, were not so in grace, and answered, " Will you really give that book to...
Page 75 - Sir, you have a numerous family ; I have been used to live retired ; give me leave to build a house of one room for myself, in such a field, and there, with your good leave, I will live and die.
Page 90 - ... mercy, In Westminster as he did stand, On a certain day in a study, A book of reason he had in his hand, And so sore his study he did apply, That his tender tears fell on the ground, All men might see that stood him by : There were both earls and lords of land, But none of them durst speak but I. I came before my father the king...
Page 81 - I saw one of them, who was Duke of Exeter* (but he concealed his name), following the Duke of Burgundy's train bare-foot and bare-legged, begging his bread from door to door. This person was the next of the house of Lancaster ; he had married King Edward's sister, and being afterwards known, had a small pension allowed him for his subsistence.
Page 89 - Heare is no more but you and I ; King Edward that was my father dear, On whose estate God had mercy, In Westminster as he did stand, On a certain day in a study, A book of reason he had in his hand, And so sore his study he did apply, That his tender tears fell on the ground, All men might see that stood him by : There were both earls and lords of land, But none of them durst speak but I.
Page 93 - ... dissension. When the commons presented to the king the usual grant of tonnage and poundage for life, they coupled with it a petition, that he would be pleased to " take to wife and consort the princess Elizabeth, which | " marriage they hoped God would bless with a progeny
Page 28 - England," again to quote the judicious Camden, "certain it is, that as the better sort, even from the Conquest, by little and little took surnames, so they were not settled among the common people fully until about the time of Edward the Second.
Page 5 - Why, man ! do you sit thinking there, and are too proud to turn the bread ? Whatever be your family, with such manners and sloth, what trust can be put in you hereafter ? If you were even a nobleman, you will be glad to eat the bread which you neglect to attend to.
Page 66 - And all men of this our realm, as well spiritual as temporal (as much as in them is), shall observe the same against all persons in like wise.