Everything about Jasper Tudor Earl Of Pembroke totally explained
Jasper Tudor (
Welsh:
Siasbar Tudur): c.
1431 –
December 21/
26,
1495,
Earl of Pembroke and 1st
Duke of Bedford, was the uncle of King
Henry VII of England and the architect of his successful conquest of
England and
Wales in
1485.
Lineage
Jasper was the third son of
Owen Tudor and the former
Queen Catherine of Valois, widow of King
Henry V. Hence he was a half-brother to King
Henry VI, who, on attaining his majority, made Jasper
Earl of Pembroke (sometime in
1452 or
1453).
Through his father, Owen Tudor, he was a direct descendant of
Ednyfed Fychan,
Llywelyn the Great's renowned Chancellor; this added greatly to his status in
Wales.
Although there was uncertainty as to whether Jasper and his two (or three) brothers were legitimate, their parents' probably secret marriage not being recognised by the authorities, he enjoyed all the privileges appropriate to his birth until
1461, when he was subject to an
attainder for supporting King Henry VI against the
Yorkists, who eventually deposed him.
Wars of the Roses
Jasper was an adventurer whose
military expertise, some of it gained in the early stages of the
Wars of the Roses, was considerable. He remained in touch with
Margaret of Anjou, Queen of Henry VI, as she struggled to regain her son's inheritance, and he held
Denbigh Castle for the
House of Lancaster. He also brought up his nephew, Henry Tudor, whose father had died before his birth, until
1461, when custody was taken over by
William Herbert. Following the return of the Yorkist king
Edward IV from temporary exile in
1471, Jasper took the teenage Henry with him into exile, this time in
Brittany. It was thanks to him that Henry acquired the tactical awareness that made it possible to defeat the far more experienced
Richard III at the
Battle of Bosworth Field. On Henry's accession in
1485, Jasper was restored to all his former titles, including
Knight of the Garter. He was made
Duke of Bedford. In
1488, he took possession of
Cardiff Castle.
Death & Burial
He died in December, 1495, and was buried at
Keynsham Abbey in
Somerset which Lady Agnes Cheyne, the incumbent of
Chenies Manor House, bequeathed to him in 1494.
Marriage and Children
Jasper was married on
November 7,
1485 to
Catherine Woodville (c.
1458 –
1509).
Catherine was the daughter of
Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers and
Jacquetta of Luxembourg, and thus was sister to (among others)
Edward IV's queen
Elizabeth Woodville,
Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers and
Richard Woodville, 3rd Earl Rivers. She was also the
widow of
Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham.
They may have had one stillborn son born c.
1490. Catherine survived Jasper and later married Sir
Richard Wingfield of
Kimbolton Castle.
Jasper reportedly had two illegitimate daughters:
Sources
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - R. S. Thomas, "Tudor, Jasper, duke of Bedford (c.1431–1495)"
Welsh Biography Online
Further Information
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