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  1. 6 de mar. de 2023 · Richard, 3rd Duke of York was killed on December 30, 1460, at the Battle of Wakefield and his son Edward was then the leader of the House of York. After winning a decisive victory on March 2, 1461, at the Battle of Mortimer’s Cross, 19-year-old Edward proclaimed himself king. In 1464, King Edward IV married Elizabeth Woodville.

  2. Biography. I have been a member of the Department of Philosophy at York since Spring 2012, having previously worked at Liverpool (as a Lecturer, 2006-2011) and Cambridge (as a Research Fellow, 2002-2006). I completed my PhD in philosophy at the University of Toronto, Canada, in 2002, and have held visiting research positions at the University ...

  3. The birth of Mary's first child, Catherine Laura, named after Queen Catherine, on 10 January 1675 OS represented the beginning of a string of children that would die in infancy. At this time the Duchess of York was on excellent terms with Lady Mary, and visited her in The Hague after the younger Mary had married William of Orange.

  4. Mary of York (August 11, 1467 - May 23, 1482) was the second daughter of Edward IV of England and his Queen consort Elizabeth Woodville. She was a younger sister of Elizabeth of York . She was an older sister of Cecily of York , Edward V of England , Margaret of York , Richard of Shrewsbury, 1st Duke of York , Anne of York , George Plantagenet, Duke of Bedford , Catherine of York and Bridget ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mary_of_TeckMary of Teck - Wikipedia

    Mary married Prince George, Duke of York, in London on 6 July 1893 at the Chapel Royal, St James's Palace. The couple lived in York Cottage on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, and in apartments in St James's Palace. York Cottage was a modest house for royalty, but it was a favourite of George, who liked a relatively simple life.

  6. After Victoria's death in January 1901, Mary was known as Princess Mary of Cornwall and York, until her father's creation as Prince of Wales in November of that year, when she assumed the title "Princess Mary of Wales". Upon her father's accession as George V in 1910, Mary assumed the style of "Her Royal Highness The Princess Mary".

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › YorkYork - Wikipedia

    Toponymy. The name York (Old Norse: Jórvík) is derived from the Brittonic name Eburākon (Latinised as Eboracum or Eburacum), a combination of eburos "yew tree" (compare with Welsh efwr and Breton evor, both meaning "alder buckthorn", and Old Irish ibar, Irish iobhar, iubhar, and iúr, and Scottish Gaelic iubhar) and a suffix of appurtenance *-āko(n), meaning "belonging to", or "place of ...