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Daughter of Lord Henry and Lady Frances Grey, duke and duchess of Suffolk,was crowned as queen of England in the Tower of London 10 July 1553 as the successor of King [[Edward VI]] who had died four days earlier. | |||
was crowned as queen of England in the Tower of London | |||
She claimed the crown because of her maternal grandmother Princess Mary Tudor who had married her brother Henry VIII’s best friend Charles Brandon after the death of her first husband King [[Louis XII]] of France. Brandon became duke of Suffolk in 1514 and had a son with Mary whose name was Henry. That son Henry died as teenager. Frances was their next oldest child. | She claimed the crown because of her maternal grandmother Princess Mary Tudor who had married her brother Henry VIII’s best friend Charles Brandon after the death of her first husband King [[Louis XII]] of France. Brandon became duke of Suffolk in 1514 and had a son with Mary whose name was Henry. That son Henry died as teenager. Frances was their next oldest child. | ||
The Third Act of Succession from the year 1544 brought [[Henry VIII]]’s daughters [[Mary I|Mary]] and [[Elizabeth I|Elizabeth]] back into the line of heirs of the crown if Henry himself and his son Edward should die without male descendants. | The Third Act of Succession from the year 1544 brought [[Henry VIII]]’s daughters [[Mary I|Mary]] and [[Elizabeth I|Elizabeth]] back into the line of heirs of the crown if Henry himself and his son Edward should die without male descendants. | ||
As Edward was a devout Protestant and did not want Roman Catholicism to be restored in England, he removed Mary from the succession. She was declared illegitimate by parliament in 1532. However, if he removed Mary, he also had to do so with Elizabeth. Despite the Third Act of Succession he declared Frances’ daughter Jane as his successor on | As Edward was a devout Protestant and did not want Roman Catholicism to be restored in England, he removed Mary from the succession. She was declared illegitimate by parliament in 1532. However, if he removed Mary, he also had to do so with Elizabeth. Despite the Third Act of Succession he declared Frances’ daughter Jane as his successor on 21 June 1553. | ||
Jane was married to Guildford Dudley who she did not crown king. Meanwhile Mary was proclaimed queen in Norfolk. She tried to force Jane to convert to Catholicism. On | |||
Jane was married to Guildford Dudley who she did not crown king. Meanwhile Mary was proclaimed queen in Norfolk. She tried to force Jane to convert to Catholicism. On 14 November 1553 Jane was convicted because of high treason together with her husband. But the death sentence was not carried out. Yet. During the rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyatt Jane was decapitated 12 February 1554 in the Tower of London after Mary accused her of treason. | |||
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http://englishhistory.net/tudor/relative/janegrey.html#Biography, 30.04.2010, 12:35. | http://englishhistory.net/tudor/relative/janegrey.html#Biography, 30.04.2010, 12:35. | ||
Given-Wilson, Chris / Curteis, Alice. ''The Royal Bastards of Medieval England''. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,1984 | Given-Wilson, Chris / Curteis, Alice. ''The Royal Bastards of Medieval England''. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,1984. | ||
''The Chronicle of Queen Jane and of Two Years of Queen Mary, and especially of the Rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyat''. ed. by John Gough Nichols 1850, first reprinting: USA 1986 | ''The Chronicle of Queen Jane and of Two Years of Queen Mary, and especially of the Rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyat''. ed. by John Gough Nichols 1850, first reprinting: USA 1986. | ||
Revision as of 07:41, 7 May 2015
Daughter of Lord Henry and Lady Frances Grey, duke and duchess of Suffolk,was crowned as queen of England in the Tower of London 10 July 1553 as the successor of King Edward VI who had died four days earlier.
She claimed the crown because of her maternal grandmother Princess Mary Tudor who had married her brother Henry VIII’s best friend Charles Brandon after the death of her first husband King Louis XII of France. Brandon became duke of Suffolk in 1514 and had a son with Mary whose name was Henry. That son Henry died as teenager. Frances was their next oldest child.
The Third Act of Succession from the year 1544 brought Henry VIII’s daughters Mary and Elizabeth back into the line of heirs of the crown if Henry himself and his son Edward should die without male descendants. As Edward was a devout Protestant and did not want Roman Catholicism to be restored in England, he removed Mary from the succession. She was declared illegitimate by parliament in 1532. However, if he removed Mary, he also had to do so with Elizabeth. Despite the Third Act of Succession he declared Frances’ daughter Jane as his successor on 21 June 1553.
Jane was married to Guildford Dudley who she did not crown king. Meanwhile Mary was proclaimed queen in Norfolk. She tried to force Jane to convert to Catholicism. On 14 November 1553 Jane was convicted because of high treason together with her husband. But the death sentence was not carried out. Yet. During the rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyatt Jane was decapitated 12 February 1554 in the Tower of London after Mary accused her of treason.
Sources:
http://englishhistory.net/tudor/relative/janegrey.html#Biography, 30.04.2010, 12:35.
Given-Wilson, Chris / Curteis, Alice. The Royal Bastards of Medieval England. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,1984.
The Chronicle of Queen Jane and of Two Years of Queen Mary, and especially of the Rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyat. ed. by John Gough Nichols 1850, first reprinting: USA 1986.