‘The Tragic Life of Lady Jane Grey’ Interview with Beverley Adams


‘The Tragic Life of Lady Jane Grey’ by Beverley Adams was published earlier this month by Pen and Sword.

Beverley is also the author of ‘The Forgotten Tudor Royal: Margaret Douglas, Grandmother to King James VI & I’, ‘The Rebel Suffragette: The Life of Edith Rigby’ and ‘Ada Lovelace: The World’s First Computer Programmer.’


Buy ‘The Tragic Life of Lady Jane Grey’:

Pen & Sword


(c) Beverley Adams



Follow Beverley on Social Media:

Website – Beverley Adams
Twitter/X – @WriterBeverleyA


Many thanks to Beverley for answering my questions.


(c) Pen and Sword



Why did you choose this subject for your book?

I always write about women from history. I enjoyed researching & writing my first Tudor book about Margaret Douglas and wanted to further that by focusing on another Tudor lady. Jane just seemed like a natural choice for me, I have always been interested in her but had only ever read fiction books and I knew the research into her life would be fascinating, I was also intrigued to find out just how close she, and her family, actually were to the throne.


What does your book add to previous works about Jane?

I will be honest and say that it probably does not add to anything new to what we already know of her life but what it does do, is bring together Jane’s life, and that of her family, into one place. It explores how she came to be in the position of Queen and how she lost that position. It is also my interpretation of the facts, the question I set out with at the beginning was ‘Was she really that innocent? and I hope I’ve done that.


Do you think Edward VI or John Dudley was the instigator of the ‘Devise for the Succession’?

That is such a good question and one that is very tricky to answer given we are not privy to every conversation that took place. In my opinion, I think Dudley planted the seed in Edward’s mind and then encouraged the king to develop that idea so that it became his own. At some point, Dudley formed the idea of placing Jane on the throne, that was his end goal but at what stage he formed that plan I don’t think we can say for certain.


What surprised you most writing this book?

The role her father played in her downfall. I knew he had something to do with Jane’s final demise but until I started my research, I didn’t know just how much of a foolish man he was. After being given a reprieve by Queen Mary, thanks to his wife, he couldn’t help but get involved in plots to remove the queen. It surprised me how much religion influenced people’s actions and behaviours, even if that meant impacting your own family, either that or he was stupid, I haven’t decided!

The other thing that surprised me was Jane’s resilience, her strength of character was immense and her religious fanaticism was off the scale, but in the end, it was her religion that kept her strong and gave her the power to walk to that scaffold as calmly as she did. She had been wronged and she knew it but her belief in God comforted her, many would have railed against the injustice but this 16-year-old girl remained dignified until the end.


Do you consider Jane to be Queen of England or a usurper?

That is such a tough question! On the one hand, we can argue she wasn’t Queen of England. She wasn’t crowned & Edward VI’s Devise for the Succession was not a legally binding document, history tells us she was manoeuvred into that role by John Dudley and therefore a usurper, whether willingly or not she took a crown she knew was not hers to take. But, on the other hand, Edward V & Edward VIII were not crowned yet we consider them kings each with a regnal number. Jane was proclaimed Queen across London, just as any monarch is before they are crowned so why cannot she be called a Queen of England? Regardless of the answer to this, and people will have their own views, Jane will always be known to history as Lady Jane Grey, the ‘Nine Days Queen’.

In my view, yes she was the queen of England, she just wasn’t one for very long.




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Books 2024 – Planning the Murder of Anne Boleyn by Caroline Angus – on sale now



(c) Pen and Sword


Almost 500 years have passed since the death of Anne Boleyn, and yet, there has never been a suggestion she was guilty of the crimes which saw her executed. Attempts to muddy Anne’s reputation throughout history have not lessened her popularity nor convinced anyone she was an adulterer. But many myths surrounding Anne’s conviction for sleeping with George Boleyn, Henry Norris, Francis Weston, William Brereton, and Mark Smeaton have cropped up due to centuries of lies, slander, and misinformation from detractors. One month after Anne was executed, the Convocation of Canterbury ratified the paperwork detailing her arrest, conviction, execution, and the annulment of the marriage between King Henry VIII and his second wife. As parliament had already ruled Anne’s only child, Princess Elizabeth, was no longer heir to the throne, all the paperwork surrounding the trial was destroyed. No trace of her charges, witness statements, evidence, or even Archbishop Thomas Cranmer’s reasoning for annulling the royal marriage survived the mass destruction. Everyone was supposed to forget Anne Boleyn and accept Queen Jane. But why did Anne Boleyn ever need to die? King Henry had started little more than an infatuation with Jane Seymour in December 1535\. Yet, many saw the opportunity to pounce, not to reduce Anne’s influence but to increase Princess Mary’s standing. As Vicegerent Thomas Cromwell and Ambassador Eustace Chapuys whispered of alliances in secret meetings, the Catholic nobility and the White Roses began to hatch their plan to restore the king’s daughter, Princess Mary, to her rightful place at court. Just as Katharine of Aragon died, Anne Boleyn felt secure as England’s queen, only to find that her adversary’s death would soon bring on her own. Why did political and religious enemies of Thomas Cromwell seek him in the months leading to Anne’s death, expecting his co-operation to restore Princess Mary? Did Jane Seymour have any significance and why did King Henry and Thomas Cromwell get into a public shouting match at a dinner party? The answers lie not in what evidence remains of court life in early 1536 but in the gaps left behind. None of the characters that played a role in Anne Boleyn’s death were strangers; all had connections, alliances and opportunities, and when their pasts and futures are laid together, we can see how a haphazard plan to end a queen’s life had almost nothing to do with her at all.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Pen and Sword

Further details Amazon.co.uk




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New identity for the Lady Jayne/Streatham portrait?


In 1996 when the ‘Master John’ portrait of Lady Jane was re-identified by Dr Susan James as Katherine Parr, Nigel Richards wrote in The Daily Telegraph, ‘The lady vanishes as portrait of Jane Grey is proved wrong.’

Is history repeating itself with Dr James’ new research about the Streatham Portrait of Jane?



The ‘Lady Jayne/Streatham portrait’ was discovered at a house in Streatham in January 2006 and was purchased by the National Portrait Gallery later that year. It has been on display as part of Tudor exhibitions around the world and is currently on display in the NPG’s Tudor Gallery.

(c) NPG 6804; Lady Jane Dudley (nee Grey) by Unknown artist


‘Which sixteenth-century queen of England is represented in the National Portrait Gallery painting NPG 6804? Is it the tragic nine-day queen Lady Jane Grey or Queen Kateryn Parr, the sixth and surviving wife of the notorious Henry VIII? This article seeks not only to identify the lady in the portrait but to suggest the circumstances that surrounded its commission. Although labeled “Lady Jane”, the painting is a copy of an earlier work and evidence provided by new research indicates that the original work is more likely to be a portrait of Kateryn Parr created in the seminal year 1544 when Parr was acting as Regent-General of England. NPG 6804 is not only a statement of Parr’s political power but presents evidence of her commitment to the English Renaissance, to English Church and to the new literature that supported it.’

You can read the full article:

Lady jane grey or queen kateryn parr? National portrait gallery painting 6804: Analysis and historical context



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‘Tudor Executions’ Interview with Helene Harrison


‘Tudor Executions: From Nobility to the Block’ by Helene Harrison was published by Pen and Sword on 9th July.

Helene is also the author of ‘Elizabethan Rebellions: Conspiracy, Intrigue and Treason’ and runs the Tudor Blogger website.


Buy ‘Tudor Executions’:

Pen & Sword




Follow Helene on Social Media:

Website – Tudor Blogger
Facebook – Tudor Blogger
Instagram – Tudor Blogger
Twitter/X – @tudorblogger
Threads – @tudorblogger
Blue Sky – @tudorblogger


Many thanks to Helene for answering my questions.


(c) Pen and Sword



Why did you choose this subject for your book?

I’d been researching Tudor executions for a while – I’d begun with Anne Boleyn, then Katherine Howard, then just became interested in them more generally. I find the psychology of people who are facing death in such a violent manner interesting, and the psychology of a person who can order the executions as fascinating. But what really pushed me to write the book is when I discovered that there were no dukes left in England by the end of the Tudor period. The last English duke was Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk, who was executed in 1572. There wasn’t enough duke in England until 1623 when James I created his favourite George Villiers the Duke of Buckingham. I hadn’t realised this until I looked more deeply into the Tudor nobility and writing my first book on Elizabethan Rebellions which covered the execution of the Duke of Norfolk.


What does your book add to previous work covering this topic?

There are books on Tudor victims of the Reformation and the like, but I wasn’t able to find any books specifically covering Tudor executions, let alone exclusively the Tudor nobility. The nobility were hugely depleted during the Tudor period, with the rise of the ‘new men’ who were promoted because of their abilities rather than their nobility or connections. People like Thomas Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell reached the top of government despite having no noble connections, and this was unusual. So, I was interested in how the depletion of the Tudor nobility came about, and why.


How did you decide which executions to include?

It was difficult to narrow down the list of executions to cover in the book actually. I cover fourteen people across eleven chapters in the book – five women and nine men. Three chapters cover double executions hence the larger number of people than chapters. I also wanted each chapter to be able to be read as a standalone, as I outline in the preface, hence there is some repetition across chapters which was a very deliberate choice. I would have liked to have included the execution of Edmund de la Pole, 3rd Duke of Suffolk, in 1513, Thomas, 1st Baron Darcy, in 1537, and Thomas Percy, 7th Earl of Northumberland, in 1572, in particular. But also, to be able to go further into the executions of Henry Courtenay, 1st Marquess of Exeter, in 1538, and Henry Pole, 1st Baron Montagu, in 1539, who are both briefly covered in my chapter on Margaret Pole.


What surprised you most researching this book?

What surprised me about a lot of these executions was that there was actually very little evidence against them, or that the evidence is questionable. At least what we seem to have surviving today looks questionable. For example, a banner of the Five Wounds of Christ which was used as part of the evidence against Margaret Pole was found in a second search of her house, but not in a search six months earlier, which seems inexplicable. A lot of the dates given for when Anne Boleyn is supposed to have committed adultery can easily be proven to be wrong as she wasn’t where alleged. The Earl of Warwick seems to have been condemned alleged of plotting to escape the Tower with Perkin Warbeck but there are a lots of questions over whether that was made up. There are just quite a few instances where guilt is not cut and dried, and it just surprised me how many of those instances there actually were.


Do you think that Jane’s execution was a forerunner to that of Mary Queen of Scots? Even though Jane was never crowned or anointed Queen.

Jane Grey’s execution is the first of a queen regnant, even though she was only nominally queen for thirteen days (6th to 19th July). However, we know that a precedent had been set for executing English queens, with the executions of Anne Boleyn in 1536 and Katherine Howard in 1542. However, they were queens consort rather than queens regnant. There are similarities between the executions of Jane Grey and Mary Queen of Scots in that I think neither Mary I nor Elizabeth I wanted to go through with the executions and kept putting them off. They were polar opposites in terms of the religious divide with Jane determined to die a devout Protestant, and Mary as a martyred Catholic. But that also almost makes Jane’s a forerunner to Mary’s – both regnant queens booted from their thrones, pious, devout and ready to die for their beliefs, but Mary had been crowned and anointed where Jane was not. Mary was also a dowager queen of France as well as a former queen of Scotland. So, although Jane Grey’s execution can be seen as a forerunner to Mary’s, I think Mary’s broke new ground in terms of regicide and paved the way for the execution of her grandson, Charles I, sixty years later..




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Books 2024 – on sale today – The Tragic Life of Lady Jane Grey by Beverley Adams


(c) Pen and Sword


‘Lady Jane Grey, the nine-day queen is considered to be one of the most tragic characters in English history. In July 1553 when King Edward VI died at the age of just 15 years old, the Tudor dynasty fell into chaos. The king had no legitimate male heirs and was determined his half-sisters Mary and Elizabeth would not inherit his throne, despite his father Henry VIII stating in his will that they should. We are led to believe that on Edward’s instructions his cousin Lady Jane Grey was to be proclaimed queen. But who was she? Was she the innocent young girl that our history books tell us she was, or a religious fanatic with the aim of keeping Mary off the throne and England Protestant? Or was she nothing but a pawn to men in the game of power and politics, abused by her parents to marry against her will all for a crown she did not want? This book looks into her life from her early years in relative seclusion at the family home at Bradgate through to her tragic end on the scaffold at the Tower of London, executed on the orders of her cousin Queen Mary. What was her place within the Tudor royal family, was she ever entitled to claim the throne of England, and do we even recognise her as a true queen today.’

From – Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Amazon.co.uk



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