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'George, Duke of Clarence' (
21 October 1449 –
18 February 1478) was the third son of
Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, and
Cecily Neville, and the brother of kings
Edward IV and
Richard III of
England.
He played an important role in the dynastic struggle known as the
Wars of the Roses, but is better remembered as the character in
William Shakespeare's play ''
Richard III'' who was drowned in a
vat of
Malmsey wine.
Life
George was born on
21 October 1449 in
Dublin, at a time when his father was beginning to challenge
King Henry VI for the crown. He was the third of the four sons of Richard and Cecily who survived to adulthood. Following his father's death and the accession of his elder brother, Edward, to the throne, George was created
Duke of Clarence in
1461. (He was not actually the first Duke of Clarence. The first one,
Lionel of Antwerp, Duke of Clarence (1338-1368), was a brother of the Black Prince, and the second, Thomas, a brother of Henry V.)
On
11 July 1469, George married
Isabel Neville, elder daughter of
Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick ("Warwick the Kingmaker"). Following her father's death, Clarence was ''jure uxoris'' Earl of Warwick.
Clarence had actively supported his elder brother's claim to the throne, but, following his marriage, he began to play a dangerous game. When his father-in-law, the Earl of Warwick, became discontented and jealous, and deserted Edward to ally himself with
Margaret of Anjou, consort of the deposed King Henry, Clarence joined him in
France, taking his pregnant wife, Isabel. She gave birth to their first child, Anne, (who died shortly afterwards) on
16 April 1470, in a ship off
Calais. After a short time, Clarence realised that his loyalty to his father-in-law was misplaced, for Warwick proceeded to marry his younger daughter, Anne, to
Edward of Westminster, King Henry's heir, and it became evident that he was placing his own interests before those of Clarence and Isabel. There now seemed little chance that he intended to place Clarence on the throne instead of his elder brother; so Clarence changed sides. Henry VI rewarded Clarence by making him next in line to the throne after Henry's son Edward (justifying the exclusion of Edward IV either by
attainder for his treason against Henry or on the grounds of his
alleged illegitimacy).
Warwick's efforts to return Henry VI to the throne having failed, and Warwick himself having been killed in battle, George was restored to royal favour, but now saw his main rival as his younger brother,
Richard Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Gloucester, who had married the widowed
Anne Neville. In 1475, his wife Isabel, Anne's sister, finally gave birth to a son, Edward, later
Earl of Warwick.
Like the first lords of
Richmond,
Peter II of Savoy and
Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland before him, George was endowed with the lordship of
Richmondshire but without the
peerage.
Death
The Neville sisters were heiresses to their mother's considerable estates, and their husbands vied with one another for pride of place, with Richard eventually winning out. Clarence, who had made the mistake of plotting against his brother Edward IV, was imprisoned in the
Tower of London and put on trial for treason. Following his conviction, he was "privately executed" at the Tower on
18 February 1478, and the tradition grew up that he had been drowned in a
butt of
Malmsey wine.
[1] The tradition may have originated in a joke, based on his reputation as a heavy drinker. However, a
butt was equal to two
hogsheads—105
imperial gallons—easily enough to
drown in. The fumes from an open butt alone would be sufficient to render a man
unconscious. A body, believed to be that of Clarence, which was later exhumed, showed no indications of
beheading, the normal method of execution for those of noble birth at that time.
Clarence's wife, Isabel, had died in
1476, two months after giving birth to a short-lived son, Richard (
6 October 1476 -
1 January 1477), and they 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.
References
★
The Peerage.com
★
Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy, Weir, Alison, , , Bodley Head, 2002, ISBN 0-7126-4286-2 pages 136 & 137