Was Jane Grey William Shakespeare? Dr Stephan Edwards responds….


Was Lady Jane Grey the “real” William Shakespeare?


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Another book to look forward to this month – The Seymours of Wolf Hall: A Tudor Family Story by David Loades


15th June – The Seymours of Wolf Hall: A Tudor Family Story by David Loades


(c) Amberley Publishing

(c) Amberley Publishing


‘Although the Seymours arrived with the Normans, it is with Jane, Henry VIII’s third queen, and her brothers – Edward, Duke of Somerset, and Thomas, Lord Seymour of Sudeley – that they became prominent. Jane bore Henry his longed-for son, Edward VI, and both her brothers achieved prominence through her. Her brother Edward was central to Henry’s activities in Scotland and became Lord Protector for the young king, his nephew, a hugely powerful position. Thomas married Henry’s sixth wife, Catherine Parr, and after her death in 1548 aimed to marry Princess Elizabeth (the future Elizabeth I), with whom he had flirted when she was in Catherine’s care, and for this he was executed for high treason. Edward fell foul of his fellow councillors and was also executed. Edward’s son was restored to the title of Lord Hertford by Elizabeth I, but was sent to the Tower when it emerged that he had secretly married Jane Grey’s sister, Catherine, who was Elizabeth’s protestant heir. Both her marriage and pregnancy were an affront to the queen. This is the epic rise and fall of the family at the heart of the Tudor court and of Henry VIII’s own heart; he described Jane as ‘my first true wife’ and left express orders to be buried next to her tomb at Windsor Castle. The family seat of Wolfhall or ‘Wolf Hall’ in Wiltshire is long gone, but it lives on as an icon of the Tudor age.’

From Amazon.co.uk


Further details – Amberley Publishing

Further details – Amazon.co.uk


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A teaser from Dr Stephan Edwards’ yet to be published biography of Lady Jane


Many thanks to Stephan Edwards for letting me post this extract from his book.


(c)  Stephan Edwards

(c) Stephan Edwards



‘There is some confusion today concerning the precise date upon which the marriage of Jane Grey and Guildford Dudley was solemnized. Modern references and authors offer a variety of dates or spans of time. The novelist-historian Richard Davey, so influential in shaping the modern narrative of Jane Grey, expressed only uncertainty, placing the ceremony “towards the end of May or the beginning of June.” (1) Amateur historian Hester Chapman supported 25 May, citing Francis Godwin’s Rerum Anglicarum of 1616 as her source, though Godwin actually situated the ceremony in June. (2) David Mathew, an English Roman Catholic Archbishop and historian, believed the wedding to have taken place on 26 April. (3) Then in 1986, the writer Mary Luke confused the issue still further when she stated that the wedding ceremony occurred on 25 May 1553 but erroneously identified the day of the week as Whitsunday itself. (4) Former scriptwriter Alison Plowden followed Chapman’s earlier lead when writing her own first book on Jane Grey and repeated 25 May. (5) But when she revised and re-published that book under a new title to coincide with the 450th anniversary in 2003 of the reign of Queen Jane, Plowden amended the date to “Whitsunday, 21 May,” seemingly conflating Chapman and Luke. (6) Finally, writing in 2009, Leanda de Lisle placed the wedding on 25 May, while Eric Ives, writing at nearly the same time as de Lisle, reiterated Davey’s uncertainty of a century earlier and simply situated the wedding “at Whitsun.” (7)

As is the case with so many other aspects of the life of Jane Grey, the issue of the date of her wedding is best resolved by setting aside the histories written over the past four and a half centuries and returning to the accounts penned by her contemporaries of 1553. Only two truly-contemporary sources (i.e., created within days of the event itself) offer a specific date. (8) Writing on 12 May 1553, the Imperial Ambassador Jehann Schefyve related only that the wedding was scheduled for Whitsuntide, a liturgical festival that might last anywhere from one to three to eight days, depending on local customs. Whitsuntide, or the festival of Pentecost, was and remains a moveable feast, so that its precise annual date is determined relative to that of Easter. In 1553, Whitsunday itself fell on 21 May. As celebrated in the sixteenth century, Whitsuntide typically also extended across Whit-Monday and Whit-Tuesday, but it could last for the entire liturgical octave, an eight-day span (Sunday to Sunday, inclusive). Schefyve stated explicitly in a follow-up letter to the Emperor dated 30 May that the wedding had actually occurred on 25 May, which fell on a Thursday in 1553. Those responsible for editing the modern printed calendar containing Schefyve’s two letters on this subject only created further confusion, however, when they included a footnote stating, “Lord Guilford Dudley and Lady Jane Grey were married on Whit Sunday, May 21st. Lady Catherine Grey’s marriage to Lord Herbert, and Lord Hastings’ to Northumberland’s daughter, Lady Catherine Dudley, took place on May 25th.” (9) Yet an order or warrant survives to support Schefyve’s original account. It was dated Saturday, 20 May 1553 and issued to the Master of the Revels concerning masques to be performed as part of the wedding celebration on “Thursday next,” i.e. 25 May. (10) The warrant explicitly identifies each of the three couples wed on that single day, leaving no room for confusion. We must therefore conclude that Jane Grey and Guildford Dudley were indeed married on Thursday, 25 May 1553.


1. Davey, Nine Days Queen, 232.

2. Chapman, Lady Jane Grey, 81 and n.19; Francis Godwin, Rerum Anglicarum … Annnales (1616), 103: “Hae nuptiae mense Junii Reger graviter aegrotante Londini celebrater sunt” [sic].

3. David Mathew, Lady Jane Grey: The Setting of the Reign (London: Eyre Metheun, 1972), 138.

4. Mary Luke, The Nine Days Queen: A Portrait of Lady Jane Grey (New York: William Morrow and Company, 1986), 229. Though sold as scholarly history, Luke’s work is replete with imagined dialogue and personal emotions expressed by all of the characters, rendering it historical fiction. It is nonetheless still generally accepted as factual.

5. Plowden, Lady Jane Grey and the House of Suffolk (New York: Franklin Watts, 1986), 87. Plowden use of source citations is erratic at best. In this instance, she does not offer a source.

6. Plowden, Lady Jane Grey: Nine Days Queen (Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 2003), 88. Plowden again failed to cite any primary source for the changed date.

7. de Lisle, Sisters, 102. De Lisle states in a footnote that the date is “almost always given as the 21st” ; Ives, Lady Jane Grey, 185.

8.All other available sixteenth-century sources that mention the marriage of Jane Grey were written many months, years, or even decades after the event and offer a wide variety of dates or no date at all.
The French ambassadors, Antoine and Francois de Noailles, do not explicitly mention the marriage, though other sources indicate that the Noailles brothers attended the wedding and were accorded extreme favor during the celebrations that followed. (Ambassades, Book II)
An anonymous Italian eye-witness, probably a member of the Venetian ambassadorial delegation, made note on 24 July 1553 of the wedding but did not give the date on which it had occurred. Lettere di Principi, le quali si scrivono o da principi, o ragionano di principi. Libro Terzo, compiled and edited by Giordano Ziletti (Venice: Appresso Giordano Ziletti, 1577), 221v-225v.
The 1577 edition of Ralph Holinshed’s The Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland (London: John Hunne, 1577), sets the wedding “about the beginning of the month of May.”(“The Holinshed Project”, Accessed 25 May 2015.
Giulio Raviglio Rosso states it occurred on the day of the Feast of the Holy Spirit, another name for Whitsunday. This appears to be chronologically the first source to place the wedding on Whitsunday, 21 May 1553. Historia delle cose occorse nel regno d’Inghilterra, in materia del Duca di Notomberlan dopo la morte di Odoardo VI (Venice, 1558), f.10b.
Girolamo Pollini does not give a date. Historia ecclesiastica delle rivoluzione d’Inghilterra (Rome, 1594), 250.
The earliest writer to attempt a biography of Jane Grey, her former Italian tutor Michelangelo Florio, likewise specified no timing whatsoever for the marriage. Historia de la vita e de la morte de l’Illustrissima Signora Giovanna Graia, gia regina eletta a publicata d’Inghilterra, 1561/2 (Middelburgh, Zeeland: Johan Radermacher, 1607), 35.
English chroniclers writing near or after the end of the sixteenth century sometimes place the wedding in June . See, for example, Francis Godwin, Rerum Anglicarum … Annnales (1616), 103.

9. Jehan Schefyve to the Emperor, 30 May 1553, Calendar of Letters, Despatches, and State Papers … Edward VI and Mary, 45–47.

10. Seventh Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, Part I (London: HMSO, 1879), 608.


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Leanda de Lisle at Market Bosworth Festival


Historian and author, Leanda de Lisle will be discussing the Grey sisters at the Market Bosworth Festival. On Monday 15th June, Leanda along with Jeff Hawksworth will take part in ‘A literary evening with two local authors.’


(c) Harper Collins

(c) Harper Collins


Monday 15th June
7.30pm-9.45pm
Bosworth Hall Hotel


For more information and to book tickets:

Market Bosworth Festival


(c) Haper Press

(c) Haper Press


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30th May 1553 – Spanish Ambassador reports on Jane’s marriage


On 30th May 1553, Jehan Scheyfe reported to Charles V that King Edward VI was wasting away and was unlikely to recover. He also mentioned the three marriages (including Jane’s) that had taken place on 25th May. Scheyfe believes that Northumberland will not allow Princess Mary to succeed to the throne and could find some way of also excluding Princess Elizabeth. He repeats the rumour that Northumberland may make his eldest son divorce his wife, so the Earl of Warwick could marry Elizabeth. Or that Northumberland may get divorced to marry Elizabeth himself and claim the crown as a descendant of the House of Lancaster.


‘Sire: The King of England is wasting away daily, and there is no sign or likelihood of any improvement. Some are of opinion that he may last two months more, but he cannot possibly live beyond that time. He cannot rest except by means of medicines and external applications; and his body has begun to swell, especially his head and feet. His hair is to be shaved off and plasters are going to be put on his head. The illness is judged to be the same as that which killed the late Earl of Richmond.

On the 25th of this month were celebrated the weddings of my Lord Guilford, son of the Duke of Northumberland, to the eldest daughter of the Duke of Suffolk; of the Earl of Pembroke’s son to the second daughter; and of the Earl of Huntingdon’s son to the daughter of the Duke of Northumberland. The weddings were celebrated with great magnificence and feasting at the Duke of Northumberland’s house in town. The Order of the Garter was not called together on Whit Sunday; the meeting has only been postponed.

During the Whitsuntide holidays, M. de L’Aubespine, First Secretary to the King of France, who, as I hear, besides occupying this high position, enjoys the full confidence of the King and Constable, arrived here in a coach drawn by four horses. He went to Court with M. de Boisdauphin on the 28th. They were very honourably received and entertained; almost all the members of the Council were present, even to the Duke of Northumberland, who had been absent from Court for a few days. L’Aubespine’s mission is surrounded with the greatest mystery; so much so that the English ambassadors in France have written to say that he was believed to have gone towards Italy. All I can find out here is a report that the Queen of France has given birth to a daughter and that the commission was sent to ask the Lady Elizabeth to hold her at the font. Some say that M. de L’Aubespine has been sent to visit the King and take the same opportunity to offer the King of France’s services to the Duke of Northumberland in the event of the King’s death; so that the French may know what to look for and how to conduct themselves, and whether it would not be possible to make some close alliance with England by means of a marriage with the said Elizabeth. The Duke’s and his party’s designs to deprive the Lady Mary of the succession to the crown are only too plain. They are evidently resolved to resort to arms against her, with the excuse of religion, among others; it is believed that they would rather give up Ireland to the French, or at least hold out hopes of it, than allow the Princess to mount the throne. As to the said Elizabeth, they are not too particular about her, and reasons for excluding her from the succession might easily be found. It is said that if the Duke of Northumberland felt himself well supported, he would find means to marry his eldest son, the Earl of Warwick, to the Lady Elizabeth, after causing him to divorce his wife, daughter of the late Duke of Somerset; or else that he might find it expedient to get rid of his own wife and marry the said Elizabeth himself, and claim the crown for the house of Warwick as descendants of the House of Lancaster.

The said gentlemen, Boisdauphin and L’Aubespine, took their leave of the King and Council on the date mentioned, the 28th, and they are to go away in a day or two. They will cross, it is said, from Dover to Calais, under escort of four English pinnaces. Boisdauphin has received a present of 1,000l. and gold plate to a higher value. Courtpennick’s (fn. 37) son, twenty to twenty-two years old, arrived here recently. He is a gentleman of the Duke of Northumberland’s suite. It is affirmed here that the King of France is collecting men in great numbers to go to the assistance of Thérouanne.

London, 30 May, 1553.’

‘Spain: May 1553’, in Calendar of State Papers, Spain, Volume 11, 1553, ed. Royall Tyler (London, 1916), pp. 37-48 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/spain/vol11/pp37-48 [accessed 29 May 2015].


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