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  1. 15 de ene. de 2021 · Now known as Jane Dudley, Jane was charged with high treason and just under two months after The Duke's execution on November 13th, it was the time for Jane to be tried. Her trial took place at the Guildhall in London alongside her husband Guildford, two of his brothers and Archbishop Thomas Cranmer.

  2. The bride, Lady Jane Grey, was the sixteen-year-old daughter of Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, and his wife, Lady Frances Brandon. A highly precocious and intelligent girl, Jane had been raised in the Protestant faith, and it was a faith about which she was becoming increasingly fervent. Jane’s groom, Guildford Dudley, was probably only a ...

  3. 1 de may. de 2020 · Perhaps most significantly, of all, Lady Jane became the daughter-in-law of John Dudley, the most powerful man in the kingdom, when she married his son Lord Guildford Dudley on 21 May 1553 CE. To further extend his tentacles of power, Dudley had Jane's two younger sisters, Catherine and Mary, marry two of his supporters.

  4. 2 de abr. de 2014 · Lady Jane Grey is one of the most romanticized monarchs of Tudor England. Her nine-day reign was an unsuccessful attempt to maintain Protestant rule. This challenge cost her the throne and her head.

  5. Jane Dudley stepped into the centre ground of politics once, taking a hand in arranging the Seymour-Dudley marriage alliance of 1550. In doing so she called upon the bonds among the circle of reformist court ladies of the 1540s of which she, Anne Stanhope, Duchess of Somerset , and perhaps also Anne Preston, Lady Paget formed part.

  6. Jane Dudley (1916–2001) led a choreographic collective at the New Dance Group and created Strike, which described the triumph of the worker over the factory owner and financier. Her political beliefs led her to join the Communist Party in its celebration of Lenin and support of Soviet youth movements.

  7. Jane Dudley, Duchess of Northumberland, was born Jane Guildford around 1509. By the time she was sixteen or so, she had married her father’s ward, John Dudley (born 1504), whose father, Edmund Dudley, had had the dubious distinction of being one of the first people executed by Henry VIII.