English Heritage has published new research into the picture, supporting the fact it may depict Lady Jane Grey, but its sitter was also proposed in a 2007 exhibition ...
The gallery, which is 82 feet long, is covered from floor to ceiling in more than 400 finely carved heraldic panels.
Experts believe they have uncovered enough evidence to suggest a Tudor-era portrait could be the only known image of Lady ...
Today it is an outpost of the National Portrait Gallery and houses some of the best portraits of the Tudor age, including ...
Now, English Heritage says a Tudor-era work could be a “live” painting of Jane. The portrait, along with six others, will hang at Wrest Park, a country estate west of London managed by English ...
A portrait purporting to be of a living Lady Jane Grey, best-known from a post-death painting of her execution, has gone on display.
Mary Tudor, from becoming Queen. The mysterious portrait, on loan to conservation charity English Heritage from a private collection, shows a young woman clad modestly in a white cap and shawl.
Located in the Kent countryside around an hour-and-a-half drive from London, it has landscaped grounds and a walled rose garden to explore, and a "wonderful collection of Tudor portraits" to ...
Grey’s brief reign in July 1553 was a desperate attempt to prevent her Catholic cousin, Mary Tudor, from claiming the throne. Mary I of England, 1554 Portrait by Anthonis Mor But within days ...
A fundraising campaign has been launched to restore a Tudor portrait of King Henry VIII. Warwickshire Museum Service wants to display the portrait at the Market Hall Museum in Warwick for everyone to ...
A fundraising campaign has been launched to restore a Tudor portrait of King Henry VIII. Warwickshire Museum Service wants to display the portrait at the Market Hall Museum in Warwick for everyone ...