The Children of Adam and Eve

WHOSYERDAD-E Who's Your Daddy?
Wikigenealogy

George Plantagenet Duke of Clarence, 14491478 (aged 29 years)

Name
George /Plantagenet/ Duke of Clarence
Surname
Plantagenet
Given names
George
Name suffix
Duke of Clarence
Family with parents
father
mother
sister
brother
elder brother
brother
sister
elder sister
brother
brother
himself
14491478
Birth: 1449 38 Dublin, Leinster, Ireland
Death: 1478London Borough of Tower Hamlets, London, England
brother
younger brother
14521485
Birth: 2 October 1452 41 Fotheringhay, Northamptonshire, England
Death: 1485Market Bosworth, Leicestershire, England
sister
Family with Isabella Neville
himself
14491478
Birth: 1449 38 Dublin, Leinster, Ireland
Death: 1478London Borough of Tower Hamlets, London, England
wife
Marriage Marriage1469
daughter
son
son
Birth
Birth of a brother
Address: Fotheringhay Castle, Fotheringhay, Northamptonshire, England.
Death of a brother
Death of a father
Marriage
1469 (aged 20 years)
Birth of a son
Death of a sister
Death of a wife
Death of a son
Death
Address: Tower of London, London Borough of Tower Hamlets, London, England.
Last change
24 October 202214:09:03
Author of last change: Danny
Note

Clarence, George Plantagenet, Duke of (1449-78), son of Richard, duke of
York, and Brother of Edward IV, King of England, born in Dublin. The title
duke of Clarence was revived for him in 1461 by Edward, and the following
year he became Lord lieutenant of Ireland. In 1469, in defiance of his
Brother, he married a daughter of Richard Neville, earl of Warwick. During
the Wars of the Roses, Clarence first supported Warwick and the deposed
Lancastrian King, Henry VI, against his Brother Edward IV, but he later
turned to aid Edward and the Yorkist faction. After the Death of his
father-in-law in 1471, Clarence shared the Warwick estates with his
Brother Richard, duke of Gloucester (later King Richard III), but retained
the title earl of Warwick. Suspected of seeKing the crown, Clarence was
imprisoned, convicted by Parliament, and murdered in the Tower of London.
His only son, Edward, earl of Warwick (1475-99), was imprisoned in the
tower at the age of ten and was beheaded on the order of the Tudor King
Henry VII. Shakespeare recounted the story of Clarence in Henry VI, Part
III and Richard III.