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DESCRIPTION
While history books have favored her siblings’ legitimacy, squabbles, and eventual rule, Winter Crowns’ The Neapolitan Rose offers a fresh perspective on Beatrice Plantagenet, Queen of Naples. The only daughter of King Edward IV of England and Lianor of Portugal, Beatrice was the eldest of her siblings to survive to adulthood. After a childhood in a fractured English court, she was married to John Valois, the Duke of Burgundy. Their marriage was short-lived and produced no children. Three years after his death, in a shocking turn of events, the widowed Beatrice was married to young King Ferdinand of Naples. Their marriage produced several children and the crowning pillar of their reign was the unification of the Italian States. Letters unearthed from the historical archives in Naples reveal how the then-dowager Duchess of Burgundy pursued the young Neapolitan king and further correspondence with her son, King Ferrante II, makes it obvious just how much he depended upon her counsel.
PART I: CHILDHOOD
Birth
Family Life
Arthur’s Death
Notable visits to Portugal
Betrothal to John Valois, Duke of Burgundy
PART II: MARRIAGE AND LIFE IN BURGUNDY
Wedding Ceremony
The Duke and Duchess
Burgundian Politics
Death of Queen Lianor
Travel to England for King Edward’s Second Marriage
English Politics // Thomas Plantagenet’s Legitimization
PART III: RETURN TO ENGLAND
Death of John Valois
Queen Isabel’s Court
Family Life
The Lisbon Summit
Visit to Castile // Affair with King Alfonso
Battle of the Plantagenets // Harry vs. Thomas
PART IV: QUEEN OF NAPLES
The Parisian Sanctification
Letters between Ferdinand and Beatrice
Betrothal
Wedding and Coronation
Neapolitan Politics
Italian Unification
Children and Family Life
Ferdinand’s Death // Beatrice’s Regency
PART V: RETIREMENT FROM PUBLIC LIFE
King Ferrante II
Leaving Naples
Life in Thomas Plantagenet’s Household
Death and Burial
Legacy