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  1. Jun 24, 2022 · Lady Jane Grey, the Nine-Day Queen, via Study. In 1537, Jane was born to Lady Frances and Henry Grey, 3rd Marquess of Dorset, and thus into a family of wealth and nobility. Jane’s grandmother was Mary Tudor, Henry VIII’s younger sister, and as a result, Jane had a strong claim to the English throne. While this was never explored as a ...

  2. Feb 12, 2021 · Jane is now officially third in line to the throne. Spring and Summer 1553 Edward VI draws up and makes several amendments to ‘My Devise for the Succession’, whereby he disinherits his half-sisters, Mary and Elizabeth, naming Jane his heir. 25 May 1553 Lady Jane Grey is married to Guildford Dudley, the fourth son of the Duke of ...

  3. When Lady Mary Jane Janet "Mair" Campbell was born in 1498, in Argyll, Scotland, her father, Archibald Campbell 2nd Earl of Argyll, was 33 and her mother, Lady Elizabeth Stewart Countess of Argyll, was 39. She married Sir John Lamont of that Ilk,10th Chief of Clan Lamont on 20 November 1522, in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, United Kingdom.

  4. Apr 2, 2014 · Birth Country: England. Gender: Female. Best Known For: Lady Jane Grey is one of the most romanticized monarchs of Tudor England. Her nine-day reign was an unsuccessful attempt to maintain ...

  5. Jun 14, 2020 · Lady Mary Grey was still in contention, but there were other women who others were supporting, most notable Mary, Queen of Scots, the Catholic descendant of Henry VIII’s estranged sister Margaret. Like Jane and Katherine before her, Mary Grey did not ever claim to want to be Queen, nor did she seem to ever take any steps toward claiming it.

  6. www.worldywca.org › about-us › historyHistory - World YWCA

    The YWCA traces its origins to the initiative and leadership of two women in England in 1855. Both women—Lady Mary Kinnaird, who founded a hostel for nurses, and Emma Robarts, who organized prayer groups for young women—established organisations to provide support for women amid the industrial revolution. After the two groups merged in 1877 ...

  7. The shortest reign in British history. Lady Jane Grey was queen for just nine days, as part of an unsuccessful bid to prevent the accession of the Catholic Mary Tudor. The great-granddaughter of Henry VII, Jane inherited the crown from her cousin Edward VI on 9 July 1553. She arrived at the Tower of London to prepare for her coronation, but ...

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