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  2. House of Tudor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Tudor

    Tudor Place; Tudor History; The Tudors at the Royal Family website; Tudor History "The Tudor delusion": an article in The Times Literary Supplement by Clifford S. L. Davies, arguing that we are wrong even to talk about "the Tudors", 11 June 2008. The Family Tree of the Tudors and the Stuarts in Pictures

  3. Tudor period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tudor_period

    The Tudor myth is a particular tradition in English history, historiography, and literature that presents the period of the 15th century, including the Wars of the Roses, as a dark age of anarchy and bloodshed, and sees the Tudor period of the 16th century as a golden age of peace, law, order, and prosperity.

  4. Tudors of Penmynydd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tudors_of_Penmynydd

    The family is best known due to the descendants of a younger son. Owain Tudur (anglicised to Owen Tudor), the son of rebel Maredudd ap Tudor, became a courtier, and secretly married Catherine of Valois, widowed Queen Consort of the Lancastrian King Henry V.

  5. Owen Tudor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Owen_Tudor

    Sir Owen Tudor (Welsh: Owain ap Maredudd ap Tudur, [a] c. 1400 – 2 February 1461) was a Welsh courtier and the second husband of Queen Catherine of Valois (1401–1437), widow of King Henry V of England.

  6. Jasper Tudor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasper_Tudor

    Jasper Tudor, Duke of Bedford (c. November 1431 – 21 December 1495) was the uncle of King Henry VII of England and a leading architect of his nephew's successful accession to the throne in 1485. He was a member of the Tudor family of Penmynydd .

  7. Henry VII of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_VII_of_England

    Henry VII was born on 28 January 1457 at Pembroke Castle, in the English-speaking portion of Pembrokeshire known as Little England beyond Wales.He was the only child of Lady Margaret Beaufort, who was 13 years old at the time, and Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond who, at 26, died three months before his birth. [1]

  8. Courtship and marriage in Tudor England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courtship_and_marriage_in...

    Courtship and marriage in Tudor England (1485–1603) marked the legal rite of passage [1] for individuals as it was considered the transition from youth to adulthood. It was an affair that often involved not only the man and woman in courtship but their parents and families as well.

  9. House of Plantagenet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Plantagenet

    The family held the English throne from 1154, with the accession of Henry II, until 1485, when Richard III died. England was transformed under the Plantagenets, although only partly intentionally. The Plantagenet kings were often forced to negotiate compromises such as Magna Carta , which constrained royal power in return for financial and ...