Lady Jane Grey was born in October 1537 in Bradgate, Leicestershire. She was the eldest of three (Greaves par 2). Her parents, Lady Frances Grey and Lord Henry Grey, were wonderful people, but not the best of parents. Jane was not very close to them and her parents and she did not spend much time together (“Lady Jane Grey” par 2).
In Jane’s birth to nine years old not much is known. We do know she lived in Bradgate with her two sisters for that amount of time though. When she was nine or ten years old she moved to live at Henry VII’s household to be an attendant to Queen Catherine Parr, Henry’s sixth and last wife (Greaves par 2-3). Lady Jane Grey adored Catherine and over time they developed a mother-daughter relationship. In 1548, Catherine gave birth to a baby girl, but sadly she died one week later (Hone par 2-3).
One of the first accomplishments of Lady Jane Grey was getting married. Jane was married to Lord John Guildford Dudley on May 25th, 1553. When she got married Jane was only fifteen years old. Unfortunately Lady Jane Grey was forced to marry, and she also hated and distrusted her new father-in-law. Supposedly the Duke of Northumberland had persuaded Edward VI to have Jane married and succeed him as queen. He thought having her married would help her if she became queen (Greaves par 1-2).
Another accomplishment of Lady Jane Grey was becoming queen. On July 6th King Edward died, but his death was kept secret for a couple of days (Greaves par 1-2). This meant Mary, Elizabeth, Mary of Scotland or Lady Jane Grey could become queen. For the first time England had no choice, but to have a women as ruler (“Lady Jane Grey” par 5-7). Edward VI actually wanted Lady Jane as queen because she was protestant and Mary was Rom...
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February 12, 1554 Lady Jane Grey was beheaded at the tower of London right after her husband. Lady Jane Grey was only sixteen years old when she died. Some believe Mary would have forgiven her if her father hadn’t participated in Wyatt’s rebellion that January (Loach par 3).
Even today Lady Jane Grey remains to be one of the most tragic figures in the Renaissance and Tudor history (Fraser 1). She is also thought to have taken her death with great dignity and courage. Lady Jane Grey’s death will always be known as a tragedy because later it was found out that her maternal grandmother had secretly wed Charles Brandon. Making Jane Grey the rightful heir to the throne (“Lady Jane Grey” par 2). Lady Jane Grey will always be thought of a as a smart, courageous, brave, young women and also one of the saddest stories in the Renaissance.
At the age of 2 Mary was engaged for the first time to the dauphin of France, who was son of Francis I. Three years later that proposal was broken off. Shortly after that Mary was affianced to her cousin emperor Charles V. Charles later abandoned Mary to marry Isabella of Portugal. Henry VIII tried to betroth Mary to the most prestigious men in Europe. (Encyclopedia Britannica)
When Jane was a child her parents died and she was sent to Mr Reed,
On Sept. 7th 1533, Elizabeth, the daughter of King Henry was born. The King of England wasn’t as thrilled since she wasn’t a boy, who would mean an heir to the throne, but it was still okay. Due to the fact that after 2 more births that resulted in death, Anne Boleyn was beheaded in 1936 when Elizabeth was only 3 years old. As her father continued to remarry, divorce, and execute his wives, one more child would be born, resulting to Elizabeth having one sister, Mary, and a new born brother named Edward. After Edward was born, his mother Jane died. She was known for being the one wife that Henry actually loved. Elizabeth grew into a very smart girl. She was known as Bess as times spoke Latin, French, German, and Henry gave her a tutor to study with. Along with everything else, she developed a temper that would help her later on as being a Queen.
Jane Addams was a Victorian woman born into a male-dominated society on September 6, 1860 in Cedarville, Illinois. Her father was a wealthy landowner and an Illinois senator who did not object to his daughter’s choice to further her education, but who wanted her to have a traditional life. For years after his death, Addams tried to reconcile the family role she was expected to play with her need to achieve personal fulfillment.
Katherine was married to Edward Borough at seventeen, but widowed two years later.6 Her second husband, Lord John Latimer of Yorkshire, was nearly twenty years older than Katherine. Latimer was widowed twice h...
She witnessed her first hardship when she had been only three years old. Her father, King Henry VIII, had ongoing suspicions about her mother’s strange behaviors, for he had suspected his second wife, Anne, to be performing the dishonorable act of adultery with more than five men of the palace’s chambers, one of the suspects being her own brother, stirring out a crime of incest and linking it to Anne. He then ordered the execution of Anne on the false charges of adultery which then stripped Princess Elizabeth of her title and left her going by Lady Elizabeth instead. Since Elizabeth had been declared illegitimate, many believed that she would never obtain the title queen. Fortunately for her, fate had it differently planned it out, and she grew to be the famous Virgin Queen of England.
Elizabeth [was born on September 7, 1533 in Greenwich England. Elizabeth was born to King Henry VIII and his second wife Anne Boleyn. When Elizabeth was turned two Anne Boleyn got beheaded] because of rumors that she committed adultery. This left Elizabeth without a mom (Neale).
Elizabeth's half-brother, Edward died in 1553. Her half-sister and cousin, Lady Jane Grey, both wanted to take the crown. Edward had appointed Grey to be his successor. Her reign was very short-lived. It only lasted nine days, because Mary had gained the support of the English people and unseated Grey.
Resentment against Elizabeth and her Woodville family steadily grew during the course of her nineteen-year marriage to Edward IV. All in the House of York distrusted her for her previous Lancaster connections. Her father has risen through Lancaster ranks; she had been a maid-of-honor for Lancaster Queen Margaret of Anjou; her first husband, Sir John Grey, died in cavalry service for Henry VI. All
It was the death of Edward VI, in 1553, that brought about the realization of Henry VIII’s nightmare of having no male heirs. Although Edward attempted to keep his sister’s out of the will (he did not want his Catholic oldest sister, Mary, to have control of the Protestant country he had inherited from his father) and appoint Jane Grey as heir. However Mary quickly declared herself queen at her manor Kenninghall on July 9, 15531. Jane’s feeble claim,passing over Mary, Elizabeth, Mary Stuart, and her mother, could have been declared Edward’s desire, however his council’s authority died along with him. Northumberland, the man behind Jane’s campaign, also did an about face at Cambridge, supporting Mary’s claim to the throne. This was due to his forces being wreaked by deserters. However Mary showed no mercy and he was executed in August as a traitor, along with Sir John Gates and Sir Thomas Palmer.
Given the background of Victorian motherhood, the nourishment, teachings, and support from the mother are never really present in Jane’s life. Placing other women in her life are able to fill the void where her mother would have been, but never fill the void as a mother really would.
...he gave birth to her only son James VI. After Henry died, she married the Earl of Bothwell, even after he was accused for the death of Henry (“Mary, Queen of Scots” par 6-12). They ran away together and formed an army to protect them and fight with them (“Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots” par 7-8). Mary had confusing and specified accomplishments in her life, many of which were marriage and her being a queen of many countries.
Queen Elizabeth I was born on September 7, 1533, in Greenwich, England. Elizabeth reigned queen of England and Ireland from November 17, 1558 until her death. Elizabeth never married, and died a virgin, sometimes called “The Virgin Queen” (Gale 2). Elizabeth was born to King Henry Tudor VIII and Anne Boleyn; she was the fifth and last monarch of the Tudor dynasty. This paper will prove Queen Elizabeth I was a woman wholly devoted to her country and brought it much prosperity and growth; these qualities made her the most respected leader of the entire history of England.
The reader first learns of Jane when she is an inhabitant of Gateshead. At Gateshead, Jane was excluded from the rest of the family. She was merely an outsider looking in on a nuclear family, excluding the father, who had died. We know that Jane’s Uncle Reed, the father and dominant figure of Gateshead, when alive, was a kind man. He was the guardian for Jane and when dying made his wife promise to always care for Jane. After his death, his wife resented the little girl and did not want to care for her. Knowing what we know of family life in the nineteenth century, we know that Jane’s life would have been much different if her uncle Reed had not died. Being the master of the home one can assume that he would have made sure that everyone in the household would have treated Jane well and with love and respect. A father’s authority was unquestioned. Once Mr. Reed had died, the masculine dominance was somewhat given to his son who did not care for Jane and made her life miserable by all of his cruelty and abuse. Although he did not rule the home, due to his young age, his authority as seen by Jane was unquestioned.
In the novel Jane Eyre, written by Charlotte Bronte, one reoccurring motif is the idea of Jane, the protagonist, needing a motherly figure to guide her. From the very beginning it is obvious that Jane is an orphan without any real motherly figure, so she finds a few people to fill this void in every environment she is placed in. The major substitute mother is a woman named Miss Temple in which Jane meets at the Lowood Institution. Miss Temple dramatically helps Jane along her journey and comforts her in a way that only a mother could.