Read The Last Days of Richard III and the Fate of His DNA Online
Authors: John Ashdown-Hill
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Unpublished Theses
Ashdown-Hill, J., âThe client network, connections and patronage of Sir John Howard (Lord Howard, first Duke of Norfolk) in north-east Essex and south Suffolk', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Essex, 2008.
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1. The royal family in 1484: Queen Anne Neville, King Richard III, and Edward of Middleham, Prince of Wales. Engraving of 1844, after the Rous Roll.
2. Queen Anne Neville's grave was originally marked by a brass memorial in the Abbey Church at Westminster. This lost monument â the only brass memorial to a queen in England â may once have carried a figure similar to that shown in one version of the contemporary Rous Roll.
3. Nowadays Anne's place of burial is marked only by a plaque with this modern brass shield displaying her coat of arms.
4. The Gatehouse of the Priory of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem (Knights Hospitaller), Clerkenwell. Richard III came here on Wednesday 30 March 1485, possibly to perform the royal ritual of touching for the âKing's Evil', and issued a public denial of rumours that he planned to marry his illegitimate niece, Elizabeth of York.