John Gaunt was a year older than Edmund Langley... therefore the Lancaster and even legitimate Beaufort line were the truer lines. If we can even consider that considering the usurpation of Henry IV to begin with.
Now i know why she is a fiction writer. she should research just a bit about this statement " the house of Lancaster is probably the true one.". House of York from the 2nd son of Edward III Lancaster from the 3rd. Tuder, spawned fron Edward III illegitimate line and Edward IV illegitimate marraige, in fact he Eward was most likely illegitimate himself. The real heirs were George Plantagenat's children, but the tudors murdered them. A young teen boy and an old woman. Great folks.
Officially, yeah. Before marrying Edmund Tudor, she was married very young (some say 1 or 3 but the general consensus is in 1450 when she would have been 7) to the 2nd Duke of Suffolk and this would have been a white marriage, given how young she was. The marriage was dissolved and declared invalid after three years and Margaret never recognized it as an actual marriage. So Philippa Gregory was talking from the point of view as Beaufort (as the book was written) it would have been three times. Sorry, I don't mean to keep replying to your comments :)
John Gaunt was a year older than Edmund Langley... therefore the Lancaster and even legitimate Beaufort line were the truer lines. If we can even consider that considering the usurpation of Henry IV to begin with.
"God told her that her son should be king." Wow. How convenient for her. Sorry, but it's hard to take her seriously if this was true.
PS She says the senior boy which was the House of Lancaster, meaning the elder boy inherited the kingship
Now i know why she is a fiction writer.
she should research just a bit about this statement " the house of Lancaster is probably the true one.".
House of York from the 2nd son of Edward III
Lancaster from the 3rd.
Tuder, spawned fron Edward III
illegitimate line and Edward IV illegitimate marraige, in fact he Eward was most likely illegitimate himself.
The real heirs were George Plantagenat's children, but the tudors murdered them.
A young teen boy and an old woman. Great folks.
Tudor*
actually its historical fiction which means based on some true facts x
wasn't she married 4 times?
Officially, yeah. Before marrying Edmund Tudor, she was married very young (some say 1 or 3 but the general consensus is in 1450 when she would have been 7) to the 2nd Duke of Suffolk and this would have been a white marriage, given how young she was. The marriage was dissolved and declared invalid after three years and Margaret never recognized it as an actual marriage. So Philippa Gregory was talking from the point of view as Beaufort (as the book was written) it would have been three times. Sorry, I don't mean to keep replying to your comments :)