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  1. Margaret Beaufort was the second and youngest daughter of John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset (c.1371 – 16 March 1410), by his wife Margaret Holland (c.1385/6 – c.1439/40), the daughter of Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent by his wife Alice Arundel.

    • 1449 (aged c. 40)
    • Beaufort
  2. Lady Margaret Beaufort (usually pronounced: / ˈ b oʊ f ər t / BOH-fərt or / ˈ b juː f ər t / BEW-fərt; 31 May 1443 – 29 June 1509) was a major figure in the Wars of the Roses of the late fifteenth century, and mother of King Henry VII of England, the first Tudor monarch.

  3. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Genealogy for Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Devon (c.1408 - 1449) family tree on Geni, with over 250 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

    • circa 1408
    • November 1449 (36-45)
    • Westminster, Middlesex, England
    • St Andrew Colyton, Colyton, Devon, England
  4. When Margaret Beaufort Countess of Devon was born in 1408, in Westminster, Middlesex, England, her father, Sir John Beaufort of Lancaster, was 37 and her mother, Lady Margaret Holland Duchess of Clarence, was 23. She married Thomas Courtenay Earl of Devon in 1431, in Haccombe, Devon, England.

    • Female
    • Thomas Courtenay Earl of Devon
  5. A day after Henry VIII’s eighteenth birthday, Countess Margaret passed away, only two months after the death of her son. A powerful and independent woman, devoted mother and astute political maneuverer, Lady Margaret Beaufort had been a force to be reckoned with.

    • Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Devon1
    • Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Devon2
    • Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Devon3
    • Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Devon4
  6. The ascendancy of this dynamic teenage king showed Margaret’s profound success in transforming her Beaufort-Tudor family from political outsiders into the established ruling dynasty. But...

  7. 29 de jun. de 2021 · Countess Margaret Beaufort died on 29 June 1509, just one day after Henry VIII’s 18th birthday and two months after her own much-loved son Henry VII had passed away. The formidable, pious and perhaps ruthless Lady Beaufort, who had endured much during her life, became one of the most powerful women at court.