Elizabeth Woodville, Queen of Edward IV of England. Elizabeth Woodville lived in the red, white and wars of the roses period in England at that time.
When I was a child, my family was a middle-class aristocrat in England. The first marriage was with Sir John Gray of Grube, one of house of lancaster's small supporters, who died in the Second Battle of Saint Abbas, leaving Elizabeth a widow with two sons. Elizabeth, with her beauty, later married Edward IV of England of England, which caused an uproar at that time.
Even though she lacked a prominent family background and British identity, Elizabeth still became a queen, which meant that civilians gradually rose in the war of the Rose Period, which was also a cousin war.
Edward was the second king of England to be crowned at the aristocratic meeting, and Elizabeth was the first queen to be crowned. Although marriage promoted the status of relatives, it attracted the hatred of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick. "King-making" and many alliances hold an extremely important lifeline in this increasingly divided royal family.
This marriage was regarded as the critical point of disagreement between Edward and Neville, the 6th Earl of Warwick, who defected to Lancaster in an emotional way. Elizabeth still has a certain degree of political influence, even though Edward V of England's eldest son was short-lived and deposed by Richard III.
She also played an important role in the coronation ceremony of henry vii in 1485, which represented the end of wars of the roses. However, in the years after 1485, she was forced to retreat to the position of Margaret beaufort, Henry's mother, and her influence gradually declined. Even though he was expelled from the palace permanently, he lived in seclusion.