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Edward IV, Elizabeth Woodville and family visit Caxton's workshop |
What really happened to Princess Bridget of York, the youngest daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville?
Author Nancy Bilyeau explores the question. To quote:
Rather
suddenly, Elizabeth Woodville retired from public life to a suite of
rooms in
Bermondsey Abbey, a Benedictine order in the London borough of
Southwark. Some
believe her son-in-law forced the duplicitous queen dowager into
monastic life
because he thought she was plotting against him, though there is no
evidence of
it. Said one biographer, "Nineteen years as queen had cost her three
sons, a father, and two brothers sacrificed to the court's bloody
politics. Elizabeth Woodville now sought solace and peace in service to
her God."
But
what about Bridget? Did she go with her mother to the abbey--or find a place
with her sister the queen or another sibling? No one knows. The next time
Bridget appears in historical record is in 1490, when she, too, left the public
arena for religious life. But the youngest child of Edward IV was sent to live not
at Bermondsey but at Dartford Priory, a Dominican order in Kent. No one knows
if this was because of her own piety, her mother’s wish to devote a child to
God or the sad fact that Bridget had become an inconvenience to her family. (Read entire post.)
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