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  1. After the outbreak of the Wars of the Roses in 1455, Cecily remained at their home, Ludlow Castle, even after Richard fled to Ireland and Continental Europe. At the same time, she surreptitiously worked for the cause of the House of York.

  2. She died at Berkhamsted on 31 May 1495 and is buried at Fotheringhay with her husband. See the first page of Cecily’s copy of Christine de Pizan’s Book of the City of Ladies here.

  3. Jul 20, 2023 · After the death of her husband, Cecily established her residence at Baynard’s Castle in London, which, with Cecily’s sanction, would come to serve as the principal stronghold of the House of York during the Wars of the Roses.

  4. Apr 30, 2023 · Her life and how she was treated by the various monarchs as the wars of the roses ebbed and flowed provide an insight into how women of noble birth were viewed at court. When her husband was killed at Wakefield and posthumously attained, she was awarded an income of 1000 marks a year.

  5. Jul 10, 2015 · Her husband was forced to abandon his troops and fled with their two older boys Edward and Edmund to Ireland, leaving Cecily stranded. It’s possible her home was sacked and looted by the troops. Whatever happened, Cecily surrendered to King Henry.

  6. Although the York women were survivors, weathering the Wars of the Roses even as the bloody conflict felled many men, they were not very long-lived in the end. In 1503, Cecily’s older sister Queen Elizabeth of York died of a post-partum infection on her 37th birthday.

  7. Jul 10, 2021 · T he real Cecily was an energetic dynastic schemer and a political mover and shaker of the first rank. A strategist, politician, and administrator par excellence. What’s more, and quite simply, she was there; not just in the Wars of the Roses but at the very heart of them.

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