His elder brother was Edmund Tudor, father of King Henry VII.He was the second son of Owen Tudor and Catherine of Valois, widow of King Henry V, and so was the half-brother of Henry VI.Jasper was born in around 1431, probably at Hatfield.Let me share a few Jasper Tudor facts in memory of this Tudor man… However, it IS possible to visit St Mary the Virgin’s Church, Thornbury, where his entrails were buried. The abbey and Jasper’s tomb were not spared by Henry VIII and did not survive the dissolution of the monasteries in 1539”, so it is impossible to visit Jasper’s tomb. And the said Maire (Mayor) and his brethren met with the said duke in Kingswood with 2,000 men on horseback, all in black gowns, and so brought his body to Keynsham, for the which the said Maire and his brethren had great thanks of the King.”Īs Jasper’s biographer, Debra Bayani, notes, “only part of the foundations of the twelfth-century Augustine abbey now survive. “And this year, the Duke of Bedford, the king’s uncle, deceased at Thornbury, on whose soul God have mercy, and was buried at Keynsham. In the contemporary work “The Maire of Bristowe is Kalendar (Ricart’s Calendar)”, a book compiled by Bristol town clerk, Robert Ricart, Ricart gives an account of Jasper’s death and the burial arrangements: His nephew, King Henry VII, and his queen consort, Elizabeth of York, attended the funeral. His entrails were buried at the parish church at Thornbury, in south Gloucestershire, and the rest of his remains were laid to rest at Keynsham Abbey, Somerset, according to the instructions he left in his will of 15th December. On this day in Tudor history, 21st December 1495, Jasper Tudor, 1st Duke of Bedford and 1st Earl of Pembroke, died at his manor at Thornbury at the age of around sixty-four. Jasper Tudor, Duke of Bedford and Earl of Pembroke
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