I attended a lecture on Tudor-era women in England, and the lecturer mentioned--briefly--that there was one lady-in-waiting who served all 6 of Henry VIII's wives. Her name was not given. I have researched this with no success. Does anyone know if this is factual, and if so, who the lady in question was?
I brought this up to a fellow history buff who thought that the lecturer might be referring to Jane the Fool, but I can find no evidence of Jane in Katherine of Aragon's service, and she looks quite young in the famous "family portrait" painting; she appears to be of roughly the same age as Mary I.
Which brings me to my second question: why were the fools in that portrait at all, and was that commonplace? Are there other such paintings?
3 comments:
To answer your question about fools, see:
http://tudorfaces.blogspot.com/2013/06/clowning-around-portraits-of-will.html
Thanks! I will enjoy reading that.
Thanks! I will enjoy reading that...and finding another Tudor blog to devour!
Post a Comment