with portrait of King Edward III, York mint
First years In October 1327, Philippa married Edward
by proxy through the
Bishop of Coventry in Valenciennes. The official marriage was at
York Minster on 24 January 1328, eleven months after Edward's accession to the English throne; although the de facto rulers were Queen Mother Isabella and her lover,
Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March, who jointly acted as his
regents. Soon after their marriage, the couple retired to live at
Woodstock Palace in Oxfordshire. Unlike many of her predecessors, Philippa did not alienate the English people by retaining her foreign retinue or bringing large numbers of foreigners to the English court. In August, her
dower was fixed. She gave birth to her first son,
Edward, the following June. In October 1330, King Edward commenced his personal rule by staging a coup and ordering the arrest of the regents. Shortly afterward, Mortimer was executed for
treason and the Queen Mother was sent to
Castle Rising in Norfolk, where she spent a number of years under house arrest but with her privileges and freedom of movement eventually restored. She was invested as a
Lady of the Order of the Garter (LG) in 1358.
Political influence by
J. Doyle Penrose Philippa worked tirelessly for the crown, maintaining balance between royal and familial duties. She was loved and respected even in tumultuous times as the queen who managed to have a successful marriage with Edward. As the financial demands of the recent
Hundred Years' War were enormous, Philippa wisely advised the King to take interest in the nation's
commercial expansion as a different method of covering the
expenses. She established the
textile industry in
Norwich by encouraging Flemish weavers to settle there and promoted
coal mining in
Tynedale.
Military campaigns from
Froissart's Chronicles Philippa served as regent of England during the absence of her spouse in 1346. Facing a Scottish invasion, she gathered the English army, fought the Scots at the
Battle of Neville's Cross near
Durham, and rallied the English soldiers on horse before them prior to the battle. This event resulted in an English victory and the
Scottish King David II being taken prisoner and held captive for eleven years. Philippa accompanied her husband on expeditions to
Scotland and the rest of Europe in the early campaigns of the
Hundred Years War, where she won acclaim for her gentle nature and compassion. She was also remembered for persuading her husband to spare the lives of the
Burghers of Calais, whom he had planned to execute as an example to the townspeople following his
successful siege of that port. ==Death and burial==