MARGARET OF ANJOU


Meaning of MARGARET OF ANJOU in English

later Queen Margaret daughter of Reignier, duke of Anjou and titular king of Naples, later the wife of King Henry in Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part 1, Henry VI, Part 2, Henry VI, Part 3, and Richard III. Margaret is a strong-willed, ambitious woman married for political reasons to the saintly but ineffectual King Henry VI between the end of Part 1 and the opening of Part 2. She dominates much of the action in Part 2 and Part 3, as she makes expedient and sometimes unscrupulous political and personal alliances on behalf of her lover (the duke of Suffolk), the Lancastrian cause, and her son, Edward, prince of Wales. Although the widowed Queen Margaret reappears in Richard III as an aged harridan raining continuous curses on Richard for his past sins, the historic queen was ransomed by Louis (Lewis) XI of France and never returned to England. born March 23, 1430, probably Pont--Mousson, Lorraine, Fr. died Aug. 25, 1482, near Saumur queen consort of England's King Henry VI and a leader of the Lancastrians in the Wars of the Roses (145585) between the houses of York and Lancaster. Strong-willed and ambitious, she made a relentless, but ultimately unsuccessful, effort to obtain the crown for her son, Prince Edward (145371). Margaret was the daughter of Ren I of Anjou, titular king of Naples. Her marriage to the ineffectual, mentally unbalanced Henry VI in April 1445 was arranged as part of a truce in the Hundred Years' War between France and England. Soon she became a key member of the king's party, which was bitterly opposed by the powerful Richard, duke of York. In May 1455 this factional dispute erupted into armed conflict with a Yorkist victory over the Lancastrians at St. Albans; Richard of York then controlled the government until the indomitable Margaret ousted him from power in 1456. When hostilities again broke out in 1459, Margaret embittered the struggle by outlawing the Yorkist leaders. After the king was captured by the Yorkists at Northampton in July 1460, she upheld her son's claim to the royal succession and refused to accept the compromise by which York was declared Henry's heir. Her partisans killed York near Wakefield, Yorkshire, in December 1460 and freed the king from captivity at the second Battle of St. Albans in February 1461. But Edward of York, Richard's son, seized the throne as Edward IV on March 4 and crushed Margaret's army at the Battle of Towton, Yorkshire, on March 29. She fled to Scotland with her husband and son. In 1470 Margaret, then in France, became reconciled with her former Yorkist enemy, Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, who was plotting to overthrow Edward IV and restore Henry VI to the throne. Warwick successfully carried out his plan in October 1470, but Margaret did not return to England until April 14, 1471, the very day that Warwick was killed in battle against Edward IV. At Tewkesbury on May 4, 1471, Margaret was defeated by Edward IV, and her son was killed. Soon afterward her husband was murdered in the Tower of London. Margaret remained in custody in England until the French king Louis XI ransomed her in 1475. She returned to France, where she died in poverty. Additional reading J.J. Bagley, Margaret of Anjou: Queen of England (1948).

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