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  1. 3. “Edward III’s Gold-Digging Mistress”: Alice Perrers, Gender, and Financial Power at the English Royal Court, 1360– 1377 was published in Women and Economic Power in Premodern Royal Courts on page 59.

  2. Alice Perrers, who was the mistress of the English king Edward III, probably belonged to the Hertfordshire family of Perrerses, though there was some talk that she was of more humble origins, possibly the daughter of a tiler from Essex. She entered royal service as a woman of the bedchamber to Queen Philippa of Hainault sometime before 1366.

  3. 15 de oct. de 2023 · Alice Perrers had one very powerful friend: King Edward III (King of England 1327–77). But that led to her acquiring a lot of enemies, who made things very difficult for her after Edward died.

  4. 3 de jul. de 2019 · John was the illegitimate son of the king and his notorious mistress, Alice Perrers, while Mary was Alice's ward. The marriage was not to last long, however. Within just a few months Edward III had died and Alice, no longer protected by the king, was put on trial for corruption in the opening parliament of Richard II's reign.

  5. PERRERS or de WINDSOR, ALICE ( d. 1400), mistress of Edward III, was, according to the hostile St. Albans chronicler ( Chron. Angliæ, p. 95), a woman of low birth, the daughter of a tiler at Henney, Essex, and had been a domestic drudge. Another account makes her the daughter of a weaver from Devonshire (see Duchetiana, p. 300).

  6. 4 de abr. de 2024 · Alice Perrers (1348 – 1400) was a royal mistress whose lover and patron was King Edward III of England. She met him originally in her capacity as a lady-in-waiting to Edward's consort, Philippa of Hainault. As a result of her liaison, she acquired significant land holdings. Life and Family.

  7. The correlation between female power, sexual wantonness, and avarice is also a prominent theme in the life of Isabeau's near contemporary, Alice Perrers. Alice was the mistress of the chivalric hero Edward III of England during the less glorious “final” years of his reign, from approximately 1361 to his death in 1377.