Richard Neville, the powerful Earl of Warwick, …

Years: 1468 - 1468

Richard Neville, the powerful Earl of Warwick, known as "the Kingmaker,” has become the greatest landowner in England.

Already a great magnate through his wife's property, he had also inherited his father's estates and has been granted much forfeited Lancastrian property.

He also holds many of the offices of state.

Convinced of the need for an alliance with pro-Lancastrian France, he had been negotiating a match between Edward and a French bride.

Warwick had told Louis XI that Edward would be delighted to marry the French princess.

However, Edward had married Elizabeth Woodville, the widow of a Lancastrian knight, in secret in 1464.

He later announced the news of his marriage as fait accompli, to Warwick's considerable embarrassment.

This embarrassment had turned to bitterness when the Woodvilles came to be favored over the Nevilles at court.

Many of Queen Elizabeth's relatives have married into noble families and others have been granted peerages or royal offices.

Other factors compound Warwick's disillusionment: Edward's preference for an alliance with Burgundy rather than France and reluctance to allow his brothers George, Duke of Clarence and Richard, Duke of Gloucester, to marry Warwick's daughters Isabel and Anne.

Furthermore, Edward's general popularity is on the wane in this period with higher taxes and persistent disruptions of law and order.

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