Edward IV had many mistresses, the most notorious being
Jane Shore, but Elizabeth insisted on marriage, which took place secretly (with only the bride's mother and two ladies in attendance) on
May 1, 1464, at her family home in
Northamptonshire.
Edward was the sort of man who was content with just enjoying life and the real ruler of England was his advisor,
Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick (aka Warwick the Kingmaker), who had placed him on the throne.
At the time Warwick was negotiating an alliance with
France in an effort to thwart a similar arrangement being made by his sworn enemy
Margaret of Anjou, wife of the deposed Henry VI. The plan was that Edward should marry a French princess. When the marriage to Elizabeth Woodville became common knowledge, it was the cause of considerable rancour on Warwick's part. Later, when Elizabeth's relatives, especially her brother,
Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers, began to be favoured over him, he turned against Edward and eventually changed sides. In fact, he and Margaret of Anjou formed an alliance of their own to restore Henry to the throne and Warwick's daughter Anne married Margaret's son
Edward.
Elizabeth was crowned Queen on
Ascension Day, 26 May 1465. There was an infamous incident at her coronation which was not attended by Edward IV (kings traditionally did not attend their consorts' coronations) in which her mother's Luxembourg kinsmen landed in a ship at Ship's Green and arrived at Westminster Abbey carrying shields painted with the figure of Melusine, a "water-witch" (actually a medieval version of the old pagan goddess) described variously as a mermaid or possibly as a female figure depicted as a snake from the waist down, but with the face clearly that of the young queen. This immediately caused whispers of witchcraft to circulate throughout the Abbey, as it was indeed the intention of the Luxembourgers to suggest an accusation of witchcraft thereby. Elizabeth's brother Anthony came to her rescue, driving the Luxembourg kinsmen forth from the Abbey all the way to Ship's Green where he would not allow them to embark and depart until he had answered this charge of witchcraft in single combat with every one of them and scratched every Melusine shield. This incident was remembered later by Richard III who ordered Parliament in 1483 to attaint the widowed queen for witchcraft.
Nor was Warwick the only one who resented the way the queen's relatives scooped up favours and lucrative opportunities; in
1480, for example, when Elizabeth's obscure brother-in-law Sir Anthony Grey died, he was interred in
St Albans Cathedral with a brass marker to rival the one for the abbey's greatest archbishop.
That was nothing compared to the marriages the queen arranged for her family, the most outrageous being when her 20-year-old brother
John Woodville married
Lady Katherine Neville, daughter of
Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland by
Joan Beaufort, widow of
John Mowbray, 2nd Duke of Norfolk and
dowager Duchess of Norfolk. The wealthy Katherine had been widowed three times and was probably in her sixties.
The queen also married her sister,
Catherine Woodville, to her 11-year-old ward Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham. Another sister,
Mary Woodville, married
William Herbert, 2nd Earl of Pembroke.