In the summer of 1553, a girl of around 16 was proclaimed the queen of England. Her name was Lady Jane Grey, and she ruled for just nine days before being executed at the Tower of London. Her reign ...
A portrait purporting to be of a living Lady Jane Grey, best-known from a post-death painting of her execution, has gone on display.
English Heritage has published new research into the picture, supporting the fact it may depict Lady Jane Grey, but its sitter was also proposed in a 2007 exhibition ...
the ultimate innocent victim of the chicanery of the Tudor court in the chaotic aftermath of Henry VIII’s reign. She is perhaps best-known from Paul Delaroche’s painting, “The Execution of Lady Jane ...
Experts believe they have uncovered enough evidence to suggest a Tudor-era portrait could be the only known image of Lady ...
Mystery Solved? Is this the only portrait of tragic teen Queen Lady Jane Grey? - Compelling evidence that a 16th-century painting depicts Lady Jane Grey – the monarch executed in 1554 – in a stunning ...
Lady Jane Grey, a teenage pawn in the power struggles that plagued the Tudor court ... s shortest reigning monarch until 21st-century art historians questioned its attribution and rejected ...
Lady Jane Grey was executed on Tower Green at the Tower of London on 12 February 1554, at the age of just 17. | ITV News Anglia ...
Now, English Heritage says a Tudor-era work could be a “live” painting of Jane ... “Could this mysterious portrait be Lady Jane Grey?” Among the evidence presented, English Heritage ...