Skip to content

June 4, 1536 – Jane Seymour Proclaimed Queen

A sketch of Greenwich Palace published in the Gentlemen's Magazine in 1840
A sketch of Greenwich Palace published in the Gentlemen’s Magazine in 1840

So most of you reading this will be expecting me to focus on how Jane was proclaimed Queen quite formally at Greenwich Palace. I hate to say it, but that’s not much more to say about this day…oh, there was a procession. They were still taking things slowly, so most of the celebrations occurred in the week afterwards. Today’s announcement was the first of a set of measured steps on Jane’s path out of obscurity. On Monday, Jane presided with the King as her brother Edward was elevated to Viscount Beauchamp of Hache (Thomas Seymour was not left out, he was made a gentleman of the Privy Chamber). On Tuesday, Jane was presented to court at a formal dinner. For a few days after that there were pageants and masques that she presided over from a raised dais. The weekend after the spectacle moved to the river and culminated in Henry’s riding to open Parliament in a full procession from Greenwich to Westminster. Cheering Londoners lined the banks and littered the Thames, and then more than a thousand courtiers and foreign dignitaries crowded Westminster’s Great Hall.

But back to today, and  the heart of this post: the way the rest of the country would have heard the news. This was Whitsunday, and every man, woman and child in the land would be expected attend mass to celebrate the descent  of the Holy Spirit. What better way to communicate news like this but through the Mass? Indeed, three years earlier, in 1533, this was the way the King announced that Anne Boleyn had replaced Catherine of Aragon. During the Eucharistic prayers, parishioners were asked to pray for “King Henry and Queen Anne,” rather than “King Henry and Queen Catherine.” Many people grumbled, some walked out in protest. That didn’t happen this time around, when they were asked to pray for “King Henry and Queen Jane.” Of course, this time people had a couple of weeks to prepare, the weeks after Anne’s execution during which they prayed for King Henry alone…but still. It reminds us how much people of the time hated Anne – her redemption began at her death but didn’t really gain any steam until her daughter Elizabeth took the throne and Gloriana’s reign allowed history to be reinterpreted. I know there are many of you out there who hate Jane Seymour, but without the son she provided, Elizabeth might never  have come to the throne. That alone should get people raising their glasses to the woman who provided England with the heir it needed.

***

If you like my posts, you’ll love my books! My Seymour Saga trilogy tells the gripping story of the short-lived dynasty that shaped the Tudor Era. Jane the Quene skews romantic, The Path to Somerset is pure Game of Thrones (without the dragons), and The Boy King is a noir coming-of-age. Get them now through AmazonBarnes & NobleKobo, and Apple, or even your local independent bookstore!

The cell in the Tower of London where Raleigh was imprisoned

(PS Already read them? Did you love them? Then please review them – even just a stars rating! It makes a huge difference in helping new readers find them and would mean the world to me!)

June 4, 1536 - Jane Seymour Proclaimed Queen
Published inOn This Day

5 Comments

  1. I don’t hate Jane Seymour. Just don’t like. I think she was a lot more cunning than the demure little innocent she was presented as being.

    • Charlotte Graham Charlotte Graham

      Jane was cunning. But comparing Jane Seymour to her predecessor Anne Boleyn is like comparing a kitten to a lioness.

  2. Gail Marie Gail Marie

    Just a footnote in history, although if she had lived perhaps she would have made more of a name for herself. The twists and turns of fate…

  3. Charlotte Graham Charlotte Graham

    Jane’s my favorite queen. I don’t understand why anyone would hate her.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.