The boy's father Owain ap Marededd ap Tudur’s origins are somewhat vague, he is said to have arrived at the court of Henry V in 1415, but at some point, he was under the command of the Welsh warrior Dafydd Gam, the maternal grandfather of the Vaughan's of Tretower and a staunch opponent of Owain Glyndwr. Tudor’s affair with Catherine of Valois had been conducted away from court and resulted in a number of other children. The twenty or so years that covered their adolescence under the control of the aforementioned Katherine de la Pole appear to have been unremarkable and prior to them being formally recognised as Henry VI’s legitimate uterine brothers in 1452, and their ennoblement as Earls of Richmond and Pembroke, their ‘Welshness’ can be called into question, Edmund, it seems, had no connection with the Welsh until after his marriage to the teenage Margaret Beaufort in 1452, and neither did Jasper until he moved into Pembroke Castle and took up Lancaster's cause.
- Home
-
My Family Stories
- Bustaine of Braunton: Introduction
- Hunt of Barnstaple Introduction >
- Lakeman of Mevagissey >
- Meavy Introduction >
- Mitchell of Crantock: An Introduction >
- Mohun of Dunster: Introduction >
- Purches of Hampshire and Cornwall >
- Scoboryo of St Columb Major >
-
Thomas Vaughan: An Introduction
>
- Smith of Barkby Introduction >
- Taylor Introduction >
- Tosny of Normandy >
- Toon of Leicestershire: Introduction >
- Underwood of Coleorton Introduction
- Umfreville of Devon >
- Other Families
- History Blog
- Wars of the Roses Blog
- The Ancestors
- A to E
- F to J
- K to O
- P to T
- U to Z
- Hendley of Coursehorne Kent
- Pigott Family of Whaddon Buckinghamshire
- Links
- Contact