‘A Queen of a New Invention’ – Interview with Stephan Edwards


Stephan Edwards is the author of ‘A Queen of a New Invention: Portraits of Lady Jane Grey Dudley, England’s ‘Nine Days Queen.’


You can order it from:

Some Grey Matter

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk


(c)  Stephan Edwards

(c) Stephan Edwards


Stephan’s website is Some Grey Matter.

Many thanks to Stephan for answering my questions.



(c) Stephan Edwards

(c) Stephan Edwards



Why did you decide to concentrate on Jane portraiture?

The project emerged out of my PhD thesis, which was itself a biographical study of Jane Grey. It became apparent while writing the thesis that a significant number of portraits bore Jane’s name, yet the sitters in the majority of them all appeared quite different from each other. They could not all be genuine depictions of Jane. “New” portraits were still emerging periodically, as well. Since no comprehensive study had ever been undertaken to determine which, if any, of the more than two dozens portraits might be authentic, I decided to take on the project myself.


Do you have a favourite portrait?

There are a couple of portraits in the group that have greater appeal to me on purely aesthetic and artistic grounds. But I do not have a favorite, as such.


Which portrait surprised you the most, results wise?

I think perhaps the Soule Portrait surprised me the most, in that I was actually able to track it down. It had virtually disappeared from the historical record after Sir Roy Strong wrote about it 50 years ago. I actively searched for it for over 5 years and had begun to assume it was lost forever. Then a chance discovery through Ancestry.com, of all places, led me to my first real clue and eventually to the painting’s current owner. I was quite surprised that it still existed and could be located.


Were the results of any portraits disappointing and if so, why?

Disappointment can occur only if one has an advance expectation of a particular outcome. As a researcher, I do try to remain objective and to let the evidence lead where it may, without hope or expectation. But I confess I was a little disappointed that the Syon Portrait dates to such a late period. It would have been far more interesting if it had dated to the 1580s or 1590s.


In 1996, the ‘Master John’ portrait at the National Portrait Gallery in London was re-identified as Katherine Parr. Your research includes this and several other portraits which have been thought to be Lady Jane or Katherine Parr. Why have so many portraits been linked to the two women?

I think the better question may be “Why have so many portraits of Katherine Parr been misidentified as portraits of Jane Grey?” And the answer lies, in my opinion, in the relative presence of each in popular culture throughout the century after their deaths. Parr was well known as Henry VIII’s last queen, but was not particularly ‘famous’ for any other reason. As a result, she was never the subject of pamphlets, plays, poems, and ballads, leaving less reason for her to be remembered visually. Jane, on the other hand, was celebrated and remembered consistently for political, religious, and socio-cultural reasons. There was thus a greater impetus to ‘see’ her. In the absence of an authentic portrait, it was all too easy to co-opt portraits of her co-religionist and former guardian Katherine Parr.


You suggest Katherine Grey (Jane’s sister) has the potential subject of a couple of portraits, which have been previously labelled as Elizabeth I or Jane grey. Is this the first time that Katherine Grey has been put forward as a possible sitter for these?

The short answer is, “Yes, this is the first time.” My research indicates that virtually no historian having examined the portraits of the Berry-Hill Type over the course of the past 125 years has ever expanded their list of candidates beyond just Elizabeth Tudor and Jane Grey. But as I discuss in the book, none of those historians ever gave the portraits serious, objective study. Instead, the first is well documented to have reacted very subjectively and reflexively, without any careful study whatsoever, and his ‘off-the-cuff’ opinion has been uncritically accepted and repeated by others ever since. To my knowledge, the possibility that the portraits of the Berry-Hill Type might depict someone other than Elizabeth Tudor or Jane Grey has simply never before been considered.


Do you think that any of the portraits are actually of Jane?

I do not believe that any of the 29 principal portraits should be relied upon as an accurate depiction of the true physical appearance of Jane Grey. For reasons discussed at length in the book, I do believe that the Syon Portrait is perhaps the closest we shall ever come, but it too has its limitations.


Are there any other ‘Jane’ portraits that you would like to analyse?

I worked hard to make my study a comprehensive one covering virtually all of the portraits said to depict Jane Grey and which can still be located today. One of the appendices to the book even discusses a number of portraits documented in the historical record but which are now lost. Certainly I would be keenly interested to locate and analyze any one of the ‘lost’ portraits (among them, the Berry-Hill Portrait has the greatest likelihood of actually turning up some day). But I am not aware at present of any other portraits originating before 1650 that are said to depict Jane Grey. I think (hope!) I covered them all.


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Final week of ‘The Real Tudors: Kings and Queens Rediscovered’ at NPG


This week is your last chance to see the ‘The Real Tudors: Kings and Queens Rediscovered’ exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery. The exhibition, which closes on 1st March includes: Elizabeth I’s locket ring, Queen Mary Book of prayers, a page from Edward VI’s chronicle, rosary belonging to Henry VIII and Henry VII’s Book of Hours, plus some wonderful portraits, including a rare chance to see the Streatham portrait of Lady Jane.

Henry VIII Unknown Artist Oil on panel, c.1520 (c) National Portrait Gallery

Henry VIII
Unknown Artist
Oil on panel, c.1520
(c) National Portrait Gallery



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Books 2015 – on sale now – Joan of Kent: The First Princess of Wales by Penny Lawne


February – Joan of Kent: The First Princess of Wales by Penny Lawne

(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


‘Immortalised by the chronicler Froissart as the most beautiful woman in England and the most loved, Joan was the wife of the Black Prince and the mother of Richard II, the first Princess of Wales and the only woman ever to be Princess of Aquitaine. The contemporary consensus was that she admirably fulfilled their expectations for a royal consort and king’s mother. Who was this ‘perfect princess’? In this first major biography, Joan’s background and career are examined to reveal a remarkable story. Brought up at court following her father’s shocking execution, Joan defied convention by marrying secretly aged just twelve, and refused to deny her first love despite coercion, imprisonment and a forced bigamous marriage. Wooed by the Black Prince when she was widowed, theirs was a love match, yet the questionable legality of their marriage threatened their son’s succession to the throne. Intelligent and independent, Joan constructed her role as Princess of Wales. Deliberately self-effacing, she created and managed her reputation, using her considerable intercessory skills to protect and support Richard. A loyal wife and devoted mother, Joan was much more than just a famous beauty.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Amazon.co.uk


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Books 2015 – on sale today – A Queen of a New Invention by Stephan Edwards


12 February – A Queen of a New Invention by Stephan Edwards


(c) Stephan Edwards

(c) Stephan Edwards


‘Lady Jane Grey Dudley was proclaimed Queen of England on 10 July 1553 following the untimely death of Henry VIII’s only son and successor, King Edward VI. But sixteen-year-old Jane did not have the support of the majority of her would-be subjects. They rallied instead to Henry VIII’s eldest daughter, Mary Tudor. Jane was deposed just nine days after her reign began, earning for her the sobriquet ‘The Nine Days Queen.’ She was imprisoned in the Tower for six months before finally being executed on 12 February 1554.

Queen Jane remains the only English monarch of the past five centuries for whom no genuine portrait is known to have survived. Dozens of images have been put forward over those five centuries, but none has yet been conclusively authenticated. Neither has any comprehensive academic study of the iconography of Jane Grey Dudley ever been previously undertaken or published.

Now, through almost a decade of research leading up to this volume, twenty-nine surviving portrait-images said to depict Jane have been carefully and systematically sought out, analysed, and contextualized in an effort to determine whether any of them may be a reliable likeness. A handful of additional paintings all now lost are also discussed in detail. Finally, the single written account of Jane’s physical appearance, an account upon which historians have relied over the past century, is analysed for its own authenticity.’

From ‘Some Grey Matter’


12 February (the 461st anniversary of Jane’s execution) was the original publication date for this book. It has been available since the end of January and can be ordered from:

Some Grey Matter

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk


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Lady Jane in her own words – 12th February 1554 – Scaffold speech


Professor Eric Ives writes the following about the authenticity of Jane’s speech from the scaffold.

‘Seven other pieces attributed to Jane are known only in printed copies. They come from her months of imprisonment in the Tower and cannot automatically be taken as genuine…The others are…reports of the speech she made from the scaffold.’ (p.17-18, Ives)

‘In a letter smuggled out to Bullinger and dated 15 March, a John Banks (part of the Grey circle) sent news of Jane’s death and Latin translations of the Feckenham dialogue and the letter to Harding and also the scaffold speech and the letter to Katherine Grey. Clearly he had publication in mind but Bullinger vetoed the idea for fear of exasperating Mary’s government still further. However, James Haddon, once a chaplain to Jane’s father, did assure Bullinger that although parts of Bank’s account were suspect because ‘he has gathered them from the common report and being himself too in some measure biased by his zeal’, when it came to ‘what regards the Lady Jane herself, and what is said in her name, (as for instance, her exhortations to a certain apostate, and her discourse with Feckenham), I believe and partly know, that it is true, and did really proceed from herself’. Thanks to Banks and this comment by Haddon, the authenticity of the Feckenham and Harding pieces and, by association, the Katherine Grey letter and the scaffold speech is beyond question.’ (p.21, Ives)

Ives describes how these letters appeared in print in England.

‘…In 1554 there appeared An Epistle of the Ladye Jane, a righte virtuous woman to a leaned man of late falne from the truth, conjecturally from the press of John Day…In the same year or the next came Here is this booke ye have a godly Epistle made by a faithful Christian.’ (p.21, Ives)…’Each pamphlet contains an English text of the Feckenham discussion, and the letter to the ‘apostate’ which Haddon had warranted, plus the letter to Katherine and the speech from the scaffold which Banks had translated for Bullinger.’ (p.21, Ives)

He also comments on the differences between accounts of Jane’s speech.

‘Everything suggests that she spoke extempore, so it is clearly important to identify a reliable account of what she said. Despite minor differences, Here in this Booke gives essentially the version published by Foxe in 1563, and both texts take the story beyond Jane’s speech and describe the actual execution. A version in an Epistle of the Ladye Jane ends more abruptly and clearly comes from a different source. Nevertheless the sentiments put in Jane’s mouth are the same, though in a different order. This suggests two observers coming away with independent but essentially congruent recollections.’ (p.23, Ives)


Two versions of Jane’s scaffold speech

‘Good people, I am come hether to die, and by a lawe I am condemned to the same. The facte, in dede, against the quenes highnesse was unlawfull, and the consenting thereunto by me: but touching the procurement and desire therof by me or on my halfe, I doo wash my hands thereof in innocencie, before God, and the face of you, good Christian people, this day.

I pray you all, good Christian people, to beare me witnesses that I dye a true Christian women , and that I looke to be saved by none other meane, but only by the mercy of God in the merites of the blood of his only sonne Jesus Christ: and I confesse, when I dyd know the word of God I neglected the same, loved my selfe and the world, and therefore this plague or punishment is happily and wothely happened unto me for my sins; and yet I thank God of his goddnesse that he hath thus geven me a tyme and respet to repent. And now, good people, while I am alive, I pray you to assyst me with your prayers.’ (p.56-57, Nichols)



‘My lords, and you good christian people, which come to see me die, I am under a law, and by that law, as a never erring judge, I am condemned to die, not for any thing I have offended the Queen’s Majesty, for I will wash my hands guiltless thereof, and deliver to my God a soul as pure from such trespass, as innocence from injustice; but only for that I consented to the thing which I was enforced unto, constraint making the law believe I did that which I never understood. Notwithstanding, I have offended Almighty God in that I have followed over-much the lust of mine own flesh, and the pleasures of this wretched world, neither have I lived according to the knowledge that God hath given me, for which cause God hath appointed unto me this kind of death, and that most worthily, according to my deserts; how be it, I thank him heartily that he hath given me time to repent my sins here in this world, and to reconcile myself to my redeemer, whom my former vanities have in a great measure displeased. Wherefore, my lords, and all you good Christian people, I must earnestly desire you all to pray with and for me whilst I am yet alive, that God of his infinite goodness and mercy will forgive me my sins, how numberless and grievous soever against him: and I beseech you all to bear me witness that I here die a true christian woman, professing and avouching from my soul that I trust to be saved by the blood, passion, and merits of Jesus Christ my Saviour only, and by none other means; casting far behind me all the works and merits of mine own actions, as things so far short of the true duty I owe, that I quake to think how much they may stand up against me. And now, I pray you all pray for me, and with me.’ (p.52-53, Nicolas)


Sources

Ives, E. (2009) Lady Jane Grey: A Tudor Mystery, Wiley-Blackwell.

Nicolas, N.H Harding, The Literary Remains of Lady Jane Grey: With a Memoir of Her Life, Triphook & Lepard.

Nichols, J.G (ed) (1850 reprint), The Chronicle of Queen Jane and of Two Years of Queen Mary and Especially of the Rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyatt, Written by a Resident in the Tower of London, Llanerch Publishers


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