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MARGARET OF ANJOU (1430-1482)

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 703 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARGARET OF
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ANJOU (1430-1482)
  , queen of England, daughter of Rene of
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Anjou, titular king of Naples and Jerusalem, was born on the 23rd of March 1430 . When just fourteen she was betrothed to Henry VI. king of England, and in the following
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year was brought to England and married at Titchfield Abbey, near Southampton, on the 23rd of
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April 1445 . On the 28th of May she was welcomed at
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London with a
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great
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pageant, and two days later crowned at Westminster . Margaret's
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marriage had been negotiated by William ,de la Pole, duke of Suffolk, and when she came to England, Suffolk and his wife were her only friends . Naturally she fell under Suffolk's influence, and supported his policy . This, added to her French origin and sympathies, made her from the start unpopular . Though
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clever and good-looking, she was self-willed and imperious, and without the conciliatory manners which her difficult position required . In almost everything she was the opposite of her gentle
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husband, but entered into his educational schemes, and gave her patronage to the foundation of Queen's College, Cambridge . Margaret's really active share in politics began after Suffolk's fall in 1450 . She not only supported Edmond Beaufort, duke of Somerset, in his opposition to Richard of York, but concerned herself also in the details of government, seeking not over-wisely pecuniary benefits for herself and her friends . But as a childless queen her influence was limited; and when at last her only son,
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Edward, was born on the 13th of
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October 1453, her husband was stricken with insanity . From this time she was the ardent champion of her husband's and son's rights; to her energy the cause of Lancaster owed its endurance, but her implacable spirit contributed to its failure, When York's
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protectorate was ended by Henry's recovery in
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January 1455, Margaret, not content with the restoration of Somerset and her other friends to liberty and office, pushed her politics to extremes .

The result was the defeat of the Lancastrians at St Albans, and for a year Margaret had to acquiesce in York's

power . Yet at this time one wrote of her: " The queen is a great and strong laboured woman, for she spareth no pain to sue her things to an intent and conclusion to her power " (Paston Letters, i . 378) . All the while she was organizing her party; and ultimately, in October 1456 at Coven-try, procured some change in the government . Though formally reconciled to York in March 1458, she continued to intrigue with her partisans in England, and even with friends in France, like
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Pierre de
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Breze, the seneschal of
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Normandy . After the Yorkist failure at Ludlow in 1459, it was Margaret's vindictiveness that embittered the struggle by a wholesale proscription of her opponents in the parliament at Coventry . She was not
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present with her husband at Northampton on the loth of
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July 1460 . After romantic adventures, in which she owed her safety to the
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loyalty of a boy of fourteen, her only companion, she escaped with her little son to Harlech . Thence after a while she made her way to Scotland . From Mary of Gelderland, the queen regent, she
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purchased the promise of help at the price of surrendering Berwick . Margaret was still in Scotland at the date of Wakefield, so was not, as alleged by hostile writers, responsible for the barbarous treatment of York's
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body . But she at once joined her friends, and was with the
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northern army which defeated Warwick at St Albans on the 17th of
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February 1461; for the executions which followed she must bear the blame .

After

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Towton Margaret with her husband and son once more took
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refuge in Scotland . A year later she went to France, and with help from her
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father and Louis XI. equipped an expedition under Pierre de Breze . She landed in Northumberland in October, and achieved some slight success; but when on the way to seek further help from Scotland the
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fleet was overwhelmed in a storm, and Margaret herself barely escaped in an open boat to Berwick . In the spring she was again trying to
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raid Northumberland, meeting with many hardships and adventures . Once she owed her escape from capture to the generosity of a Yorkist
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squire, who carried her off on his own horse; finally she and her son were brought to Bamburgh through the compassionate help of a robber, whom they had encountered in the
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forest .. Thence in August 1463 she crossed to Sluys in Flanders . She was almost destitute, but was courteously treated by Charles the Bold, then count of Charolais, and so made her way to her father in France . For seven years she lived at Saint-Michel-en-Barrois, educating her son with the help of
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Sir John Fortescue, who wrote at this time: " We be all in great poverty, but yet the queen sustaineth us in
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meat and drink . Her
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highness may do no more than she doth " (
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Works, ii . 72, ed . Clermont) . Margaret never lost her hopes of her son's restoration .

But when at last the

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quarrel between Warwick and Edward IV. brought her the opportunity, it was with difficulty that she could consent to be reconciled to so old and bitter an enemy . After Warwick's success and Henry's restoration Margaret still remained in France . When at last she was ready to
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sail she was delayed by contrary winds . So it was only on the very day of Warwick's defeat at
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Barnet (14th of April) that Margaret and Edward landed at
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Weymouth . Three weeks later the Lancastrians were defeated at
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Tewkesbury, and Edward was killed . Margaret was not at the
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battle; she was captured a few days after, and brought to London on the 21st of May . For five years she remained a prisoner, but was treated honourably and for
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part at least of the time was in charge of her old friend the duchess of Suffolk . Finally Louis XI. ransomed her under the Treaty of Pecquigny, and she re-turned to France on the 29th of January 1476 . Margaret lived for six years at different places in Bar and Anjou, in poverty and dependent for a pension on Louis, who made her surrender in return her claims to her father's
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inheritance . She died on the 25th of April 1482 and was buried at
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Angers
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Cathedral . Rene, whom she probably never saw after 1470, had died in the previous year . During her last years Chastellain wrote for her consolation his Temple de Bocace dealing with the misfortunes of contemporary princes .

As the courageous champion of the rights of her son andher husband, Margaret must command a certain sympathy . But she was politically unwise, and injured their cause by her readiness to

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purchase
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foreign help at the price of
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English interests . Comines wrote well of her that she would have done more prudently if she had endeavoured to adjust the disputes of the
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rival factions instead of saying " I am of this party, and will maintain it " (Memoires vi. ch . 13) . Her fierce partisanship embittered her enemies, and the Yorkists did not hesitate to allege that her son was a bastard . This, like the
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scandal concerning Margaret and Suffolk, is baseless; the tradition, however, continued and found expression in the Mirror for Magistrates and in Drayton's Heroical Epistles, as well as in Shakespeare's Henry VI .

End of Article: MARGARET OF ANJOU (1430-1482)
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