Cecily's first marriage was to Ralph Scrope of Upsall. This marriage was arranged by her uncle, Richard III. Scrope was a supporter of the last Plantagenet king and, therefore, made a good choice of husband for one of Richard's nieces. When they were married in 1485, Scrope was twenty-years-old to Cecily's sixteen.
Little else is known of this first marriage. Had Cecily requested to marry the younger brother of a baron? Was Richard looking for a way to neutralize the threat of Cecily's royal blood? We do not know. What is known is that Henry Tudor chose to have the marriage annulled upon his accession.
Henry Tudor married Cecily's older sister, Elizabeth, and left Cecily unmarried for approximately two years. Why he had annulled her first marriage if he did not have another immediately in mind was a fun question to answer in historical fiction, but his true motives were probably more innocent. By 1488, Cecily was married again, this time to Henry's choice for her: Viscount John Welles.
Cecily in stained glass, |
When Viscount Welles died in 1499, Cecily was left alone.
Rather than wait to discover who King Henry would pair her with next, Cecily made her own love match, just as her mother and grandmother had done before her. Information on her third marriage is hazy, but it took place in 1502 and caused more dire consequences than Cecily could have imagined.
She surely knew that the king would punish her and the common husband she had chosen, but it is doubtful that Cecily foresaw that she would fall into obscurity. Or maybe she simply did not care.
Cecily's third husband was a man named Thomas Kyme (sometimes Kymbe or Keme). The revelation of this marriage as written in Plantagenet Princess, Tudor Queen appears below. Henry never forgave Cecily for choosing to marry a squire, though she did receive some much needed assistance from her sister the queen, and the king's mother, Margaret Beaufort.
It would also be Margaret who would pay Cecily's funeral expenses when she died just a few years later in 1507, though her final resting place has been lost to time. She and Kyme did not have any children, but I hope that this York princess found the love she had been searching for.
An excerpt from Plantagenet Princess, Tudor Queen:
“Bess, I am married.”
Elizabeth gasped. It was the scene
with her aunt Katherine being repeated before her eyes. It took her a moment in
her current mental state to recover enough to respond. “God’s blessings to you
and your husband. Who is he?”
“Oh, thank you, Bess! He is
wonderful, and I hope that the king will agree. His name is Thomas Kyme, and he
is . . . . well, he is a squire.”
Elizabeth smiled her first real
smile of the day. Cecily may have had poor Ralph Scrope torn away from her, but
she would have her common husband. “And you are in love?”
“Madly!” Cecily’s glowing face and
wide grin attested to the truth of it.
“I will, of course, speak to Henry
on your behalf, though he may curse the Woodville women’s habit of marrying for
love. I would suggest that we also speak to my mother-in-law that she may take
up your part. She has always been somewhat partial to you, respecting you for
your boldness.” At the mention of the lady Margaret, another thought occurred
to Elizabeth, one that made her blood run cold but she had to push it aside for
the moment.
“Thank you, Bess! And God bless
England’s most wonderful queen!”
Elizabeth waved away Cecily’s
exuberant appreciation. “Henry may not be in the mood to be overly generous,
mind you.”
“I do not care,” Cecily said
firmly. “As long as my marriage is left intact, he may take whatever he
desires.”
Henry did. Though Cecily was
allowed her Linconshire squire, he confiscated her estates.
Read more about York sisters, Elizabeth & Cecily, in Plantagenet Princess, Tudor Queen.