http://www.thetudorswiki.com//index.php?title=Anne_Stanhope&feed=atom&action=historyAnne Stanhope - Revision history2024-03-28T11:51:30ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.35.1http://www.thetudorswiki.com//index.php?title=Anne_Stanhope&diff=29595&oldid=prevTravis: Created page with "<div class="WPC-editableContent"><div align="center"> </div> <div align="right"> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left"> <font size="-0"><font size="-0"><font size="-0"><..."2020-11-12T22:05:39Z<p>Created page with "<div class="WPC-editableContent"><div align="center"> </div> <div align="right"> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left"> <font size="-0"><font size="-0"><font size="-0"><..."</p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div><div class="WPC-editableContent"><div align="center"> </div> <div align="right"> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left"> <font size="-0"><font size="-0"><font size="-0"><font color="#ffffff"><b>Anne Seymour nee Stanhope</b> , Lady Hertford <font color="#808080">as played by [[Emma Hamilton]]</font></font></font></font></font></div> <div align="left"> <h3> </h3></div></div> <table align="bottom" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-border-none" width="750"> <tr> <td class="WPC-edit-borderTop-double WPC-edit-borderBottom-none WPC-edit-custom-borderTop WPC-edit-custom-borderBottom" colspan="2" width="100%"> <h3> </h3></td></tr> <tr> <td class="WPC-edit-borderBottom-double WPC-edit-borderTop-none WPC-edit-custom-borderTop WPC-edit-custom-borderBottom" width="50%"> <b><font color="#ffa500" size="2">born </font><font color="#ffa500" size="2">c. 1497 - died April 16, 1587</font></b><br/><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b>Character's backstory</b>:</font> <font size="2">The Stanhope's had a distant connection with royalty and were much involved in public service which is why they obtained speedy advancement.<br/>Anne was the daughter of Sir Edward Stanhope of Rampton and Elizabeth Bourchier, sister of John Bourchier, Earl of Bath, and a descendant of King Edward III by his youngest son, Thomas of Woodstock. Born at Sudbury in Suffolk on an unknown date, she had two half-brothers from her father's first marriage to Avelina Clifford. They were Richard Stanhope, and Sir Michael Stanhope. Anne came to court in 1511 as a maid of honor to Queen Katherine of Aragon.</font><font size="2"> <br/><br/>Michael Stanhope, Anne’s half-brother was selected for the governorship of Hull, was knighted, and made Shelford Priory his residence. In 1537, Henry VIII granted by letters patent, the priory to Michael Stanhope. Two years later the King endowed him with the manor and all the lands that the monastery had owned in the county. The seat of the Stanhopes was probably one of much magnificence and importance, for Camden in 1586 says, in his reference to Shelford: <i>‘It is the seat of the famous family of Stanhope, knights, whose state and grandeur in those parts is eminent and their names renowned.’</i></font><br/><br/><font size="2">In <b>1529</b>, Sir [[Edward Seymour]] fell in love with her and repudiated his wife in order to marry her, which he did in <b>1535</b>. Anne had apartments at court and for a time her sister-in-law, [[Jane Seymour]], met [[King Henry VIII]] there. When Jane became queen, her brother was elevated in the peerage so that Anne became, in rapid succession, Viscountess Beauchamp and Countess of Hertford. [[Henry Howard, earl of Surrey]], wrote a sonnet about her called “<i>a lady who refused to dance with him,</i>” which portrayed her as haughty and cold.</font><br/><font color="#ffffff"><b><font size="2"><br/></font></b></font><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b>Gentility</b>: She became Duchess of Somerset<b> </b></font><b><font size="2">16 February 1547</font></b><font color="#ffffff" size="2"> after [[King Henry VIII]]'s death, when her husband appointed himself Duke of Somerset and Lord Protector.<br/><br/></font><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b>Position</b>: </font><font color="#ffffff" size="2">Wife of the Lord Protector, [[Edward Seymour]], and aunt to Edward VI of England.</font><br/><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><br/></font><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b>Personality type</b>: </font><font size="2">described as being a "<i>violent woman"</i>, a <i>"devilish woman &amp; 'monstrous'</i> in her pride. Lady Hertford</font> <font size="2">constantly made scenes in public, and she was spitefully unforgiving, haughty, grasping and bad tempered</font>.<font size="2"> </font><font size="2">She was universally disliked by those in the Royal Court.</font><br/><font size="2"><br/>She has been held responsible for the fate of her husband Edward, having urged him to adopt the policies which ruined him. <br/><br/>She was known as a formidable shrew and could not stand [[Catherine Parr]] to whom she had been a lady-in-waiting while Catherine was queen. After the death of Henry, her husband had bargained to appoint himself Lord Protector and Duke of Somerset. As wife of the self-appointed Lord Protector, she felt she was the first lady of the realm, ahead of the widowed queen, and this led to quarrels of precedence to ownership and possession of certain jewels. In actuality, Anne was fifth in precedence beneath the Dowager Queen, Lady Mary, Lady Elizabeth, and Lady Anne of Cleves. Nevertheless, Anne considered that the Dowager Queen forfeited her rights of precedence when she re-married her brother-in-law, Thomas Seymour. Anne believed the queen had married so far beneath her station. Interestingly enough, after her husband was beheaded Anne re-married far beneath her station as well. Anne refused to bear Catherine's train, and even physically tried to push her out of her place at the head of their entrances and exits at court. Anne was quoted as having said of Catherine,<i> "If master admiral ([[Thomas Seymour]]) teach his wife no better manners, I am she that will".</i> Catherine, in her turn, privately referred to Anne as <i>"that Hell".</i></font><br/><br/><font size="2">A contemporary attack in print on the duchess referred to her as "<i>that imperious and insolent woman . . . whose ambitious wit and mischievous persuasions led him [[[Edward Seymour]], Duke of Somerset] and directed him also in the weighty affairs and government of the realm to the great harm and dishonor of the same."</i></font><br/><br/><font size="2">[[William Paget]], the "master of practices" under Edward VI and Mary, told the Imperial ambassador that the cause of Somerset's downfall was <i>"He has a bad wife."</i> </font><br/><br/><font size="2">[[Ambassador Chapuys]] called the "countess of Hertford" one of the stirrers of heresy at court in the 1540s.</font><br/><br/><font color="#ffffff"><font size="2">In 1549, when [[Edward Seymour]], Duke of Somerset was trying to put down rebellion, Van der Delft reported to the Emperor a number of negative remarks about Anne including the following:<br/><i>"[Somerset] then had the peasants divided into squadrons, and assigned them quarters as if he expected to fight; but about five in the afternoon he sent his wife off to her house, and she went out weeping, very badly handled in words by the courtiers and peasants, <b>who put all this trouble down to her </b>..</i>."</font></font><br/><br/><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b>Signature look</b>:<br/><br/><b>Endearing trait(s)</b>: She had Protestant leanings and sent aid to [[Anne Askew]] when she was imprisoned.<br/>She lived to be approximately 90 years old, quite a feat for a woman who bore 10 children.<br/><br/><b>Annoying trait(s)</b>: </font><font size="2">proud, well aware of the "superiority" in her own pedigree and had a big ego problem. This coupled with a strong-willed and sometimes violent temper, made her one of the least-loved women of her time. She gossiped and was very vocal to the point of being vulgar and way out of line at times.<br/></font><br/><table align="bottom" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-style-grid1 WPC-edit-border-all WPC-edit-styleData-color1=%23191919&amp;color2=%23474747" width="100%"> <tr> <td class="" width="100%"> <font size="2"><br/>In 1550 a year after the death of [[Princess Marguerite|Marguerite of Angouleme]], [[Edward Seymour]] and [[Anne Stanhope]]'s 3 young daughters, <font color="#ffa500"><b>Jane, Anne, and Margaret Seymour</b> </font>would write a tributary poem to her </font><b><i>An elegy in 104 distichs on the death of Marguerite of Navarre</i> </b><font size="2">which their Tutor would publish. England's first female-authored Encomium </font><font size="2">[a formal expression of praise; eulogy; panegyric].<br/></font><font size="2"><b><font color="#ffa500"><br/>It was the </font><font color="#ffa500">only work published in any language by multiple English women authors before the 1560s</font> </b>and the only published poem in Latin of any multiple English women authors in the 16th century. It caused such a sensation that, a year after its publication, it reappeared in translations into Greek, Italian and French by many famous contemporary poets.</font></td></tr></table><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"> <br/></font></font></font><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font size="2"> </font></font></td> <td align="center" class="WPC-edit-borderBottom-double WPC-edit-borderTop-none WPC-edit-custom-borderTop WPC-edit-custom-borderBottom" width="50%"> <div align="center"> </div> <div align="center"> <div align="center"> </div> <div align="center"> </div><font color="#ffffff" face="Times"> <table align="bottom" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-style-grid1 WPC-edit-border-all WPC-edit-styleData-color1=%23191919&amp;color2=%23474747" width="320"> <tr> <td bgcolor="#18393b" class="WPC-edit-custom-bgColorWPC-edit-custom-bgColorWPC-edit-custom-bgColor" width="100%"> <div align="center"> <br/>[[File:KokB116GLs1wKMTkJiR7MA95324.jpeg|266px|Anne Stanhope as played by Emma Hamilton]]<br/><font color="#ffffff"><font color="#ffffff"><font color="#ffffff"><font color="#ffffff"><br/></font></font></font></font></div> <div align="center"> </div></td></tr></table></font> </div><i><font face="Times" size="4"><b><br/>"</b> <b>My Good Gossip Nan </b><b>"</b></font><font face="Times" size="4"> </font></i><font face="Times"><br/>- [[Princess Mary Tudor]]<br/><br/></font><table align="bottom" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-style-grid1 WPC-edit-border-all WPC-edit-styleData-color1=%23191919&amp;color2=%23474747" width="300"> <tr> <td class="" width="100%"> <div align="center"> </div><font face="Times" size="2"><font size="3"><font face="Arial"><i><font size="3">"</font></i></font><font face="Arial" size="2">Anne S</font><font size="2"><font face="Arial">tanhope's imperious disposition would become a byword when she had an opportunity to display it -- <b>'more presumptuous than Lucifer' </b>wrote Antonio de Guaras -- and she was widely believed to rule her husban</font><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial">d (</font><font color="#ffffff"><font face="Arial">although this was the kind of misogynistic comment apt to be made about <b>any vigorous woman</b>). <br/><br/>In 1536 it was more relevant that </font><b><font face="Arial">this </font><font color="#ffa500" face="Arial">combination of a calculating husband and a strong-minded wife made the Seymours a team to be reckoned with</font><font color="#FFA500">.</font></b></font></font></font></font><font face="Times"><br/></font><div align="center"> <font face="Times" size="2">~<b> Antonia Fraser</b>'s The Six Wives of Henry VIII</font></div><font face="Times" size="2"> <br/></font></td></tr></table><font color="#ffffff" face="Times"> </font><font face="Times"><br/><br/><table align="bottom" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-style-grid1 WPC-edit-border-all WPC-edit-styleData-color1=%23191919&amp;color2=%23474747" width="360"><tr><td class="" width="100%"><font face="Times"><font face="Arial" size="2"><i><font color="#ffffff">"<b>I might perceive a Wolf as white as whalèsbone</b>,<br/> <b>A fairer beast of fresher hue, beheld I never none </b>;<br/> <br/> Save that her looks were coy, and froward eke her grace :<br/> Unto the which this gentle beast gan him advance apace,<br/> <br/> And with a beck full low he bowed at her feet,<br/> In humble wise, as who would say, 'I am too far unmeet.'<br/> <br/> But such a scornful chere, wherewith she him rewarded !<br/> Was never seen </font>....<br/> <font color="#ffffff">Sith that a Lion's heart is for a <b>Wolf </b>no prey,<br/> With bloody mouth go slake your thirst on simple sheep, I say,</font>" </i></font><br/> <br/> <font face="Arial">~ </font></font><font face="Arial" size="2"><b>[[Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey]] </b>(the lion) <br/>from a poem 'A lady that refused to dance with him"<br/>about Anne Stanhope (the wolf). <br/>For more of the poem see : [[Henry Howard's Poetry page]]</font><font face="Times"><br/> </font></td></tr></table></font><font face="Arial" size="2"><br/></font><font color="#ffffff" face="Times"><br/><table align="bottom" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-style-grid1 WPC-edit-border-all WPC-edit-styleData-color1=%23191919&amp;color2=%23474747" width="350"> <tr> <td class="" width="100%"> <font face="Arial" size="2"><font size="3"><b>After story:</b></font><br/>"Upon King Henry’s death in 1547, Ann’s husband became Lord Protector for his nephew, Edward VI, and was elevated in the peerage to duke of Somerset. Anne quarreled with the Dowager Queen [[Catherine Parr]] and after her death claimed Catherine's manor of Hanworth for herself. As early as 1547, Anne was urging her husband to arrest his brother, [[Thomas Seymour]], on charges of treason. Meanwhile, Anne herself was scheming to marry her son Edward to <b>Lady Jane Grey</b> and her daughter Jane to <b>King Edward</b>. In October 1549, Somerset was removed from power and held in the [[Tower of London]]. In an effort at reconciliation, Anne and the earl of Warwick’s wife, Jane Guildford, arranged a marriage between Anne’s daughter, <b>Anne Seymour</b> and Warwick’s eldest son, <b>John Dudley,</b> who became earl of Warwick when his father was elevated in the peerage to Duke of Northumberland. Somerset was arrested again on October 16, 1551, accused of plotting against Northumberland. This time he was executed. Anne was also arrested and remained a prisoner in the [[Tower of London]] until May 30,1553, even though she was never charged with any crime. Under Queen Mary Tudor, three of Anne's daughters became maids-of-honor. Her oldest son, Edward, was restored in blood. Anne was granted a number of Northumberland’s confiscated properties and Hanworth, Middlesex, where she chose to live. It was at Hanworth that a romance secretly blossomed between Anne’s son <b>Edward</b> and <b>Lady Catherine Grey,</b> younger sister of Lady Jane Grey. When the young couple eloped in 1560 and were subsequently confined in the [[Tower of London]] by Elizabeth I, Anne was careful to distance herself from them. The next year, Anne married Francis Newdigate (c.1500-January 26,1581/2), who had been Somerset’s steward. When her son was released from the Tower, Anne was given custody of him and also of the older of the two sons he had with Lady Catherine Grey. Anne tried to advance Lady Catherine’s claim to the throne by backing John Hales’s <i>Discourse on the Succession</i> but met with little success. She was buried in [[Westminster Abbey]]. " <br/>~ Excerpt from <a class="external" href="http://www.kateemersonhistoricals.com/TudorWomen7.htm" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" title="Who's who of Tudor Women">Who's who of Tudor Women</a><br/><br/></font></td></tr></table><br/></font></td></tr></table> <table align="bottom" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-border-none" width="750"> <tr> <td width="50%"> <h3> <font color="#ffffff">CHARACTER CONNECTIONS</font></h3><font color="#ffffff"> <br/></font><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b>Family members</b>:</font><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"> <br/></font></font></font><font size="2"><b>Father</b>: Sir Edward Stanhope (1462 - 6 Jun 1511) <br/><b>Mother</b>: Elizabeth Bourchier (1474 - 1557) (great-granddaughter of Anne of Woodstock, daughter of Edward III's youngest son, Thomas of Woodstock)</font><br/><font size="2"><b>Paternal Grandfather:</b> Sir Thomas Stanhope<br/><b>Paternal Grandmother:</b> Mary Jerningham <br/><b>Maternal Grandfather:</b> Fulke Bourchier, 2nd Baron Fitzwaryn (25 Oct 1445 - 18 Sep 1497) <br/><b>Maternal Grandmother:</b> Elizabeth Dynham</font> <font size="2">(1449 - 19 Oct 1519);</font> <font size="2">m.2 Sir Thomas Brandon (brother of [[Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk|Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk]])</font><br/><font size="2">Half Siblings from <b>Sir Edward Stanhope's</b> 1st marriage to <b>Avelina Clifton</b>:<br/><b>Half-Brother:</b> Richard Stanhope (1502 - 1583); married Anne Strelly. Had issue.<br/><b>Half-Brother:</b> Sir Michael Stanhope (bet 1502/1512 - 25 Feb 1552); married Ann Rawson. Had issue, including the 1st and last Lord Stanhope of Harrington.<br/></font><br/><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b>Romance(s)</b>:</font><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"> <font color="#ffa500"><br/><b>*fictional romance with Sir [[Francis Bryan]] and [[Thomas Seymour]] in the series (no historical backing for this, although the series may have been trying to portray Edward's first wife along with Anne Stanhope.)<br/><br/>[[Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey]] wrote a poem about her and seemed to have an attraction but there is no historical evidence that it was anything more than "courtly love".</b> <br/><br/></font></font></font></font><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b><b>Friends</b></b>:</font><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"> <br/>[[Jane Seymour]]<br/>[[Princess Mary Tudor]]<br/><br/></font></font></font><font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b><b>Enemies</b></b>:</font><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"><br/>She was disliked by many.<br/></font></font></font></td> <td width="50%"> <font color="#ffffff" size="2"><b><br/></b></font><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"><font color="#ffa500"> </font><br/><br/></font></font></font><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"><b>Marriage (s):<br/></b>2nd wife to 1st husband: [[Edward Seymour]] who was executed </font></font></font><font size="2">22 January, 1552</font><br/><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2">2nd husband : Francis Newdigate </font></font></font><font size="2">of Hansworth (Steward to her late husband) died on 26 January 1581.</font><br/><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"><br/><br/><u><b>Children:</b></u></font></font></font><font size="2"><u><font color="#ffffff"><font face="Arial"><b> </b></font></font></u>by [[Edward Seymour|Edward Seymour:]]<br/></font><font size="2"><b>1. Edward Seymour</b>, Baron Beauchamp (Feb 1537 - 1539)</font> <br/><b><font size="2">2</font>.</b><font size="2"><b> *Edward Seymour </b>2nd Earl of Hertford (22 May 1539 - 6 Apr 1621); married 1) Catherine Grey (abt Aug 1540 - 27 Jan 1568), sister of Queen Jane Grey and had issue. 2) </font><font size="2">Frances Howard (1554 - 14 May 1598), no issue. 3) Frances Howard, Countess of Lennox (27 Jul 1578 - 8 Oct 1639), no issue.<br/><b>3. Anne Seymour</b>, Countess of Warwick (1540 - 1588); married Edward Unton. Had issue. <br/><b>4</b>.</font><font size="2"><b> Jane Seymour</b>, Maid of Honour to Elizabeth I and named after her aunt [[Jane Seymour]]) (1540 - 20 Mar 1561)</font><font size="2">; never married.<br/><b>5. Henry Seymour</b> - born 1552</font>; <font size="2">married 1) Jane Dudley,<br/>2) Joan Percy</font>. <font size="2">No issue.</font><br/><font size="2"><b>6. Mary Seymour </b>(1547</font><font size="2"> - bet 1570/1620); married 1) Andrew Rogers, 2) Henry Peyton, 3) Francis Cosbie. Had issue with Francis.<br/><b>7. Elizabeth Seymour</b> (abt 1552 - 3 Jun 1602); married Richard Knightley. No issue.</font><font size="2"><br/><b>8. Catherine Seymour</b></font><br/><b><font size="2">9. Margaret Seymour</font></b> - <font size="2">born 1540</font>.<br/><font size="2"><b>10. Edward Seymour </b>(1547 - 1574).</font><br/><br/><font color="#ffffff" face="Arial" size="4"><font size="3"><font size="2"> <br/></font></font></font></td></tr></table><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font size="2"> <br/></font>UNFORGETTABLE CHARACTER QUOTES</font><font color="#ffffff"><b><br/></b><br/><table align="bottom" cellpadding="6" class="WPC-edit-border-all" width="750"> <tr> <td width="100%"> <ul> <li> <font size="2"><br/>"You're not quite as good as you think you are" - <i>to Sir [[Francis Bryan]] when he makes a joke that she will tell him about [[Edward Seymour]] for 'services rendered'</i></font> </li><li> <font size="2">"He believes in himself, in his destiny. [[Prince Edward Tudor|Prince Edward]] is the key to his destiny and nothing will stand in his way" - <i>about [[Edward Seymour]], her husband</i></font> </li><li> <font size="2">"Hello, I've just been f***** by the pope"</font></li></ul><font size="2"> <br/></font></td></tr></table><b><font size="2"> <br/></font></b></font><font color="#ffffff" size="4">DEFINING EPISODES | MEMORABLE SCENES</font><font color="#ffffff"><br/><table align="bottom" cellpadding="6" class="WPC-edit-border-all" width="750"> <tr> <td width="100%"> <font size="2"><br/></font> <ul> <li> <font size="2">In bed with Sir [[Francis Bryan]] and then revealing his lost eye under his eye patch.</font></li></ul> <ul> <li> <font size="2"><br/>When Sir [[Francis Bryan]] pulls Anne behind a curtain at court, with her husband in the room, to have her</font></li></ul><font size="2"> <br/></font></td></tr></table><br/></font><div align="center"><table align="center" cellpadding="3" class="WPC-edit-style-grid1 WPC-edit-border-all WPC-edit-styleData-color1=%23191919&amp;color2=%23474747" width="400"><tr><td class="" width="100%"><embed flashvars="transition=Fade&amp;site=http://www.thetudorswiki.com&amp;imageServer=http://image.wikifoundry.com&amp;albumId=97849" height="400" src="http://widget.wetpaintserv.us/wiki/thetudorswiki/widget/unknown/51aae9b4a3260dbb342a14aaf8ea0f3b51e88753" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="400" wmode="transparent"/></td></tr></table></div><font color="#ffffff" size="4">PHOTOS<br/></font><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><br/><table align="bottom" cellpadding="6" class="WPC-edit-border-all" width="750"> <tr> <td align="center" width="50%"> [[File:VyvbY20jNIhXKBfoqSii8g63115.jpeg|330px|Anne Stanhope as played by Emma Hamilton]]<br/><br/><b><font size="2">[[Emma Hamilton|Emma Hamilton]]</font></b></td> <td align="center" width="50%"> <font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font size="2"><b>[[File:EQ64tWRq5Rznr6cPidaJhw130394.jpeg|354px|Anne Stanhope]]</b></font></font></font><br/><font size="3"><br/></font></td></tr> <tr> <td align="center" width="50%"> <font color="#ffffff" size="4">[[File:WpUG-maBe47i8FOsQZG-Yw37907.jpeg|305px|Anne Stanhope as played by Emma Hamilton]]<br/></font></td> <td align="center" width="50%"> <font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font size="2"><b>[[File:B2u1IiSKRKh7RjZeZ4r9SQ28409.jpeg|296px|Anne Stanhope, 2nd wife of Edward Seymour]]</b></font><br/><font size="2">Engraving of Anne as widow of [[Edward Seymour]]<br/>from a portrait in the 1540's</font></font></td></tr> <tr> <td align="center" width="50%"> <font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font color="#ffffff" size="4">[[File:AN5uIHr5OEe t1SSOQ1gfQ49734.jpeg|332px|Anne Stanhope as played by Emma Hamilton]]<br/><br/></font></font></font></font></font></td> <td align="center" width="50%"> [[File:5LDfnF5d4i-MdCv5R65NBg40047.jpeg|333px|Anne Stanhope as played by Emma Hamilton]]<br/><br/>[[Westminster Abbey|Westminster Abbey]]</td></tr> <tr><td align="center" width="50%"><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font color="#ffffff" size="4">[[File:CCV23WOaqqFIBqdnP4VtIA134167.jpeg|218px|Anne Stanhope's Tomb in Westminster Abbey]]<br/><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font size="2">The Tomb Of Anne Seymour at [[Westminster Abbey|Westminster Abbey]]</font></font></font><br/><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font color="#ffffff" size="4"><font size="2">[[Westminster Abbey|Westminster Abbey]]</font></font></font></font></td><td align="center" width="50%"><br/><br/><br/><br/>[[File:SGKJgnrk-C4PjTo0gK6rWw412846.jpeg|339px|Anne Stanhope's effigy]]<br/><br/>Close up of Anne Stanhope's effigy in Westminster Abbey</td></tr><tr> <td align="center" width="50%"> <embed allowfullscreen="true" height="269" src="http://widget.wetpaintserv.us/wiki/thetudorswiki/widget/youtubevideo/ab04861920c943c246542a6a1b819d490cd5ea8e" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="339" wmode="transparent"/></td> <td align="center" width="50%"> <embed allowfullscreen="true" height="269" src="http://widget.wetpaintserv.us/wiki/thetudorswiki/widget/youtubevideo/74257ad0f26798894b6e5c69810fdcc0a5c87f68" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="339" wmode="transparent"/></td></tr></table></font><br/><div></div><br/></div></div>Travis