after a troubling eight months in which her claim to the English throne
seemed questionable at best, Jane Grey was formally crowned queen in
Westminster Abbey (pic
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icon to follow us on Facebook.tured from 1986 movie starring Helena
Bonham-Carter).
The matter had arisen as Henry VIII's son Edward VI had fallen deathly ill
while still only 15 years old. Without an heir, his crown would pass along
the lines established by the Third Succession Act of 1543, in which
Parliament had reestablished Edward's half-sisters. The later Treason Act
of 1547 declared that anyone interrupting the line of succession was to be
guilty of high treason and subject to the severe punishment that followed.
Despite this, as Edward approached his death, he hoped to circumvent
Catholic Mary's takeover of England by his "Devise for the Succession" on
June 21, 1553. In this will, he named his successor to be his Protestant
cousin Jane Grey, wife of Lord Guildford Dudley and granddaughter of Henry
VII.
Edward's will was carried by 102 signatories, including the entire Privy
Council. He planned to make the announcement formally in September, but he
would die July 6 despite the best efforts of physicians, conjurers, and an
Oxford professor. On July 10, sixteen-year-old Jane was proclaimed queen,
though she initially refused and had to be persuaded by her parents. While
things seemed in order in London for her to take the throne, there were
great rumblings as to where exactly Edward's adviser the Duke of
Northumberland, and Jane's father-in-law, stood. To some, he seemed to be
causing a coup to set his son up as king.
The rumors were exacerbated as Northumberland sent troops to capture Mary,
who had been staying in Hertfordshire. Mary, however, had gone at news of
her brother's illness to her holdings in East Anglia to gather support.
She raised a formidable army and sent a letter to London demanding her
right as queen. Northumberland was torn between maintaining Jane's
position in London or marching out to defeat Mary. Finally the issue was
decided as Jane demanded that Northumberland stay with her, and he
determined to force the Council to continue its loyalty. In major legal
concessions all that winter, Northumberland guided Jane in granting
Parliament greater powers, winning their support enough to override the
Succession Act with a new one honoring Edward's will.
Mary meanwhile took her march on London, which unified the people against
her. Her assault was repelled, and she fell back toward Cambridge to
regroup. She was a staunch Catholic and used the remaining Papists who had
survived her father's purges as strength. Protestants, however, formed up
against her. The Reformation had spread through preachers to England,
particularly in Kent where Sir Thomas Wyatt led the support for Protestant
Jane. The thought of returning to Catholicism created a schism in the
country with a short civil war.
After major defeats in January, Mary was forced to flee the country and
attempted to find asylum in Spain. While there, she fell in love with King
Philip II, who eventually married her. In London, Jane would be crowned
sole ruler while her husband served as Duke of Clarence. War erupted as
Philip attempted to seize the English throne for Mary, but Mary's death in
childbirth in 1558 cut his claim short. Jane would rely primarily on her
Council and Parliament, establishing a growing tradition of popular rule
that harkened back to the days of the Magna Carta. Parliament would be
expanded in the next century by leaders such as Sir Oliver Cromwell.
Rather than ruling overtly, Jane's seemingly greatest accomplishment on
the throne was producing strong, healthy heirs, two boys and a girl, the
eldest growing to become King Henry IX upon Jane's death in 1579. The
question of religion served as Jane's second matter of interest, stomping
out Catholic strength, though it would go underground, striking back in
such attacks as the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 in which twenty members of
Parliament were slain.