Queen Jane, née Jane Seymour (born c. 1507/1508 – d. 24 October, 1537) was the third wife of King Henry VIII of England. She gave him his only male heir, later Edward VI, but she died shortly after giving birth. There is debate over whether she was a Protestant or Catholic.
After serving as a lady-in-waiting to both Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn, Henry's first two queens, Jane caught the king's eye. His desire to marry her may have helped him to believe (or pretend to believe) the false accusations of adultery and witchcraft against Anne. Henry became betrothed to Jane on 20 May, 1536, the day after Anne was beheaded, and he married Jane on 30 May, only eleven days after Anne's execution. Jane was publicly proclaimed queen on 4 June.
As Queen, Jane was strict and formal. She was close only to her female relations, Anne Stanhope (her brother's wife) and her sister, Elizabeth Seymour. The glittering social life and extravagance of the Queen's Household, which had its zenith during the time of Anne Boleyn, was replaced by a strict enforcement of stiff social decorum in Jane's time. For example, the dress requirements for ladies of the court was detailed down to the number of pearls that were sewn into each lady's skirt, and the elegant French fashions introduced by Anne Boleyn were banned. Politically, Jane appears to have been conservative. However, her only self-insertion into national affairs in 1536, when she asked for pardons for participants in the Pilgrimage of Grace rebellion, was abandoned after the king brutally told her to remember the last queen, who had lost her head because she meddled in politics.
In Early 1537, Queen Jane became pregnant. During her pregnancy, Jane developed a craving for quail, which the King ordered for her from Calais and Flanders. This overindulgence, along with cravings for sweets and wine, was later cited as a reason for her death. Jane went into seclusion in September 1537, and gave birth to a male heir, the future King Edward VI of England on 12 October at Hampton Court Palace. After she participated in the prince's christening on October 15, it became clear that Jane was seriously ill. She had contracted puerperal fever and died on 24 October at Hampton Court. She was buried at Windsor Castle after a funeral in which her step-daughter, Princess Mary (later Queen Mary I), acted as chief mourner.
Above her grave there was for a time the following inscription:
Henry wore black and did not remarry for two years. When he died in 1547, he was buried beside her.
Jane's two ambitious brothers, Thomas and Edward, used her memory to improve their own fortunes. After Henry's death, Thomas married Henry's widow, Catherine Parr, and also had designs on the future Elizabeth I. In the reign of the young King Edward VI, Edward Seymour set himself up as protector and effective ruler of the Kingdom. Both brothers eventually fell from power, and were disgraced and executed.
It was not until 1969 that Jane Seymour appeared in the screen again, and it was this time only for a few minutes in Hal B. Wallis' Oscar-winning Anne of the Thousand Days. Jane was played by Lesley Paterson, opposite screen legend Richard Burton as Henry VIII. Towards the movie's end, Anne Boleyn (played by Canadian actress Genevieve Bujold) dismisses her as a woman with "the face of a simpering sheep and the manners - but not the morals."
A year later, a 90 minute BBC television drama, "Jane Seymour" presented Jane as a sweet, painfully shy, introvert devoted to her husband, Henry VIII. Henry was played by Australian actor Keith Michell, and Jane by British actress, Anne Stallybrass.
In 1973 this interpretation of Jane was repeated in Henry VIII and His Six Wives, in which Keith Michell reprised his role from the BBC drama but Jane Seymour was played by Jane Asher.
Jane was played by Charlotte Roach in Dr. David Starkey's documentary series on Henry's queens in 2001, and by Naomi Benson in the BBC television drama The Other Boleyn Girl opposite Jared Harris as Henry VIII and Jodhi May as Anne Boleyn. In this drama, Jane's part was minimal.
In October 2003, in the 2-part ITV drama, "Henry VIII" Ray Winstone starred as the king. Part 2 charted the king's life from his marriage to Jane Seymour (played by British beauty, Emilia Fox) until his funeral in 1547. Jane was presented as a woman of moral courage and integrity, although some historians took issue with the suggestion that Henry hit her.
In the ballad, during long labour Queen Jane repeatedly asks that her side be opened to save the baby. In most versions, she is refused repeatedly until finally someone-- usually King Henry-- succumbs to her pleas and allows the surgery that results in her death.
Most versions of the song end with the contrast between the joy of the birth of the prince and the grief of the death of the queen.
From version 170A:
Modern historians, particularly Alison Weir and Lady Antonia Fraser, paint a favourable portrait of a woman of discretion and good-sense--"a strong-minded matriarch in the making," says Weir. Others are not convinced.
Hester W. Chapman and Professor E.W. Ives resurrected Strickland's view of Jane Seymour, and believe she played a crucial and conscious role in the cold-blooded plot to bring Anne Boleyn to the executioner. Dr. David Starkey and Karen Lindsey are both relatively dismissive of Jane's importance in comparison to Henry's other queens - particularly Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn and Catherine Parr. Joanna Denny, Marie Louise Bruce and Carolly Erickson also refrain from giving overly-sympathetic accounts of Jane's life and career.
1500s births | 1537 deaths | Wives of Henry VIII
جاين سيمور | Jane Seymour | Jane Seymour | Jane Seymour | Jeanne Seymour | 제인 시무어 | Jane Seymour | Jane Seymour | ג'יין סיימור | Iana Seimora | Jane Seymour (koningin van Engeland) | ジェーン・シーモア | Jane Seymour (królowa) | Joana Seymour | Jane Seymour | Jane Seymour | Jane Seymour
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It uses material from the
"Jane Seymour".
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