Experts believe they have uncovered enough evidence to suggest a Tudor-era portrait could be the only known image of Lady ...
The only portrait of England's ill-fated Protestant queen may have been discovered after years of controversy over who it ...
The findings also show that, after Grey’s death, her eyes, mouth, and ears were scratched out, suggesting a deliberate iconoclastic attack on her legacy as a Protestant martyr. The rare artwork ...
Silicon Valley, it seems, is coming to Jesus. There are no bad conversions, in my book; I was born and raised a Christian and ...
Researchers believe they may have identified the only known portrait of Lady Jane Grey, the so-called “Nine Days Queen,” ...
The tolerant atmosphere is being felt locally — as in Oxford, where Catholic and Protestant martyrs are now at last gaining equal acknowledgement. It is also being expressed in arts and media, such as ...
Executed aged just 17, if the image is of her, it was changed over the centuries to depict her as a "subdued, Protestant" martyr. The painting is on loan to Wrest Park, Silsoe, Bedfordshire ...
Here's Thomas Cromwell at New York's Frick Collection, trapped in canvas by the Tudor court painter Hans Holbein: thick ...
Art historians determined that the image was likely originally that of the doomed queen and that it had been considerably altered after her death, perhaps to portray her as a Protestant martyr.
It’s believed the changes made to the portrait in later years were made to depict the sitter as a protestant martyr. Researchers noted a major change to the portrait’s eyes. Currently looking ...
The alterations could have been made to depict Lady Jane - who was beheaded on the orders of her cousin Queen Mary aged just 17 in 1554 - as a Protestant martyr. The portrait, on loan from a ...