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  1. Ricardo Neville (1428-1471), "el Hacedor de Reyes" ( Warwick the Kingmaker ), decimosexto conde de Warwick, noble, administrador y comandante militar inglés, uno de los líderes de las Guerras de las Rosas, originalmente del lado de la Casa de York, pero que luego pasó al lado de la Casa de Lancaster. Ricardo Neville (1468-1530), segundo ...

  2. 4 de sept. de 2016 · Richard Neville, right, with his co-editors James Anderson, left, and Felix Dennis, during the Oz obscenity trial at the Old Bailey, 1971. Photograph: Popperfoto/Getty Images

    • 4 min
    • Marsha Rowe,Geoffrey Robertson
  3. Richard Neville, aka “The Kingmaker,” was a crucial player in the Wars of the Roses, first being instrumental in putting the Yorks in power, then switching sides after Edward IV's scandalous and previously secret marriage to Elizabeth Woodville was revealed. He then worked to depose Edward IV and put the Lancasters back on the throne, all ...

    • 15 min
  4. 6 de sept. de 2016 · Richard Neville, co-founder of controversial Oz magazine and spokesman for a generation By Geoffrey Robertson Updated September 6, 2016 — 11.54am first published September 5, 2016 — 12.32pm

  5. 4 de feb. de 2013 · Richard Neville – the legend and legacy of ‘Kingmaker’. In the summer of 2010 Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats, found himself in a wholly unfamiliar, vaunted position. The outcome of the 2010 election still unknown, it was said that both of the opposing parties, Labour and Conservative, without the seats to gain an overall ...

  6. Richard Neville, conde de Warwick (1428–1471), llamado el 'Hacedor de Reyes', casado con Anne de Beaucham, XVI condesa de Warwick. Padre de la reina Ana Neville e Isabel Neville, duquesa de Clarence. Alice Neville (c.1430–1503), casada con Henry FitzHugh, V barón FitzHugh.

  7. Devious Facts About Richard Neville, The Kingmaker. The Wars of the Roses witnessed several kings and the collapse of a centuries-old dynasty. The Plantagenets had ruled England for three hundred years when two factions of the family, the houses of York and Lancaster, struggled in bloody conflict over who would take the English throne.