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Jane Shore

Elizabeth "Jane" Shore (née Lambert; c. 1445 – c. 1527) was one of the many mistresses of King Edward IV of England. She became the best-known to history through being later accused of conspiracy by the future King Richard III, and compelled to do public penance. She was also a sometime mistress of other noblemen, including Edward's stepson, Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset, and William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings but ended her life in bourgeois respectability.

Portrait of a woman called Jane Shore, wearing a red silk non-boned bodice and a pearl hennin. 1580's details may have been added later to an existing portrait or incorporated into copy created in the 1580's, in the manner of as seen in certain portraits of Anne Boleyn and Jane Seymour. Inscribed: BAKERS WİFE AND MİSTRİS TO A KİNG. The portrait bears a remarkable resemblance to the one undisputed likeness of Jane Shore that exists, that of her parents’ memorial brass in Hinxworth, Hertfordshire.[1]

Early life and first marriage Edit

Born in London in about 1445, Elizabeth Lambert was the daughter of a prosperous merchant, John Lambert (d.1487[2][3]), and his wife Amy (d.1488[4][3]), who was the daughter of a well-off grocer named Robert Marshall. The name "Jane", which has sometimes been attached to her, was the invention of a 17th-century playwright (Heywood),[5] because during the course of the sixteenth century, her real first name was omitted, then forgotten by authors. The tradition must go further back, however, as on 28 August 1599 was licensed the History of the Life and Death of Master Shore and Jane Shore his Wife.[6]

Spending time in her father's shop at a young age may have brought the young Elizabeth into contact with ladies of high rank. C.J.S. Thompson's highly romanticised biography, The Witchery of Jane Shore, the Rose of London: The Romance of a Royal Mistress (1933) claimed that she was able to observe their behaviour and gain an understanding of the manners of those higher ranking than herself.[7] She was thought to have been highly intelligent, and as a result received an education that was not usually associated with a person of her class.[8] Thompson also claimed that her beauty earned her the title of "The Rose of London" – although this is not mentioned in contemporary sources.[7] According to Thomas More, writing when Shore was elderly, she had been fair of body though not tall; she was attractive to men more through her personality than her physical beauty, being intelligent, literate, merry and playful.[9][10]

She attracted many suitors, among them William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings, friend and confidant of Edward IV. It is likely Hastings fell in love with Elizabeth Lambert before her marriage; his affection for her is apparent later in life by his continual protection of her.[11]

Such extreme attention made John Lambert desirous of finding his daughter a suitable husband.[12] Such an opportunity presented itself with William Shore (d. 1494), a goldsmith and banker and common visitor to the Lambert home.[12] He was approximately 14 or 15 years older than Jane.[12] Though handsome and well-to-do, he never really won her affections. Their marriage was annulled in March 1476 after she petitioned for the annulment of her marriage on the grounds that her husband was impotent, which prevented her from fulfilling her desire to have children. Pope Sixtus IV commissioned three bishops to decide the case, and they granted the annulment.[13]

Royal mistress Edit

According to the Patent Rolls for 4 December 1476, it was during this same year that Shore began her liaison with Edward IV, after his return from France.[14] Edward did not discard her as he did many of his mistresses, and was completely devoted to her.[13] She had a large amount of influence over the king, but would not use it for her own personal gain.[15][9] This was exemplified by her practice of bringing those out of favour before the king to help them gain pardon.[10][9] Shore, according to the official records, was not showered with gifts, unlike many of Edward's previous mistresses.[15] Their relationship lasted until Edward's death in 1483. It is reputed that her advocacy saved Eton College, and the society for the ladies at Eton College is to this day called the Jane Shore Society in her memory.

Prison, second marriage and later life Edit

 
The Penance of Jane Shore by William Blake, c.1780.

Shore's two other lovers were Edward IV's eldest stepson, Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset, and William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings. Grey's wife was the wealthy heiress Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington, who also happened to be Hastings' stepdaughter. Shore was instrumental in bringing about the alliance between Hastings and the Woodvilles, which was formed while Richard, Duke of Gloucester, was Protector, before he took the throne as King Richard III. She was accused of carrying messages between Hastings and Edward IV's widow, Elizabeth Woodville. It was because of her role in this alliance that Shore was charged with conspiracy, along with Hastings and the Woodvilles, against the Protector's government.[16] Simon Stallworth wrote to Sir William Stonor on 21 June 1483 that:

Mastres Chore is in prisone: what schall happyne hyr I knowe nott.[17]

Shore's punishment included open penance at Paul's Cross for her promiscuous behaviour by Richard.[18] The Great Chronicle of London records that this was:

ffor the lyfe that she ledd wt þe said lord hastyngys & othir grete astatys[19]

But it may have been motivated by the suspicion that she had harboured Grey when he was a fugitive or as a result of Richard's antagonism towards any person who represented his older brother's court.[18] A clash of personalities between the lighthearted Shore and stern Richard also generated a mutual dislike between the two.[14] Shore accordingly went in her chemise through the streets one Sunday with a taper (thin candle) in her hand, attracting a lot of male attention along the way.[5] After her public penitence, Shore resided in Ludgate prison.[20] While there, she captivated the King's Solicitor General, Thomas Lynom. After he expressed an interest in Shore to Richard, the king tried to dissuade him for his own good. This is evinced by a letter to John Russell from Richard, where the King asked the chancellor to try to prevent the marriage,[21] but if Lynom were determined on the marriage, to release Shore from prison and put her in the charge of her father until Richard's next arrival in London when the marriage could take place.[22] They were married and had one daughter. It is believed that Shore lived the remainder of her life in bourgeois respectability. Lynom lost his position as King's Solicitor when Henry VII defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth in August 1485, but he was able to stay on as a mid-level bureaucrat in the new reign,[5] becoming a gentleman who sat on the commissions in the Welsh Marches and clerk controller to Arthur, Prince of Wales, at Ludlow Castle.[22] Thomas More attested that even in old age an attentive observer might discern in her shriveled countenance traces of her former beauty.[9]

 
Portrait type called Jane Shore, based on an earlier portrait of Lady Jane Grey[1][23][24]

Descriptions Edit

 
Publicity cover for Jane Shore printed 1915

Thomas More description remains to this day the most famous:

This woman was born in London, worshipfully frended, honestly brought vp, & very wel maryed, sauing somewhat to sone, her husbande an honest citezen, yonge & goodly & of good substance. But forasmuche as they were coupled ere she wer wel ripe, she not very feruently loued, for whom she neuer longed. Which was happely the thinge, that the more easily made her encline vnto the kings appetite when he required her. Howbeit the respect of his royaltie, the hope of gay apparel, ease, plesure & other wanton welth, was hable soone to perse a softe tender hearte. But when the king had abused her, anon her husband (as he was an honest man & one that could his good, not presuming to touch a kinges concubine) left her vp to him al togither. When the king died, the lord Chamberlen toke her. Which in the kinges daise, albeit he was sore ennamored vpon her, yet he forbare her, either for reuerence, or for a certain frendly faithfulnes. Proper she was & faire: nothing in her body that you would haue changed, but if you would haue wished her somewhat higher. Thus say thei that knew her in her youthe. Albeit some that now se her (for yet she liueth) deme her neuer to haue ben wel visaged. Whose iugement semeth me somwhat like, as though men should gesse the bewty of one longe before departed, by her scalpe taken out of the charnel house: for now is she old lene, withered & dried vp, nothing left but ryuilde skin & hard bone. An yet being euen such: whoso wel aduise her visage, might gesse & deuise which partes how filled, wold make it a faire face. Yet she delited not men so much in her bewty, as in her plesant behauiour. For a proper wit had she, & could both rede wel & write, mery in company, redy & quick of aunswer, neither mute nor ful of bable, sometime taunting without displeasure not without disport. The king would say that he had .iii. concubines, which in three diuers properties diuersly exceled. One the meriest, an other the wiliest, the thirde the holiest harlot in his realme, as one whom no man could get out of the church lightly to any place, but it wer to his bed. The other two were somwhat greter parsonages, & Natheles of their humilitie content to be nameles, & to forbere the praise of those properties. But the meriest was this Shoris wife, in whom the king therfore toke speciall pleasure. For many he had, but her he loued, whose fauour to saithe trouth (for sinne it wer to belie the deuil) she neuer abused to any mans hurt, but to many a mans comfort & relief: where the king toke displeasure, she wolud mitigate & appease his mind: where men were out of fauour, she wold bring them in his grace. For many that had highly offended, shee obtained pardon. Of great forfetures she gate men remission. And finally in many weighty sutes, she stode many men in gret stede, either for none, or very smal rewardes, & those rather gay then rich: either for that she was content with the dede selfe well done, or for that she delited to be suid vnto, & to show what she was able to do wyth the king, or for that wanton women and welthy be not alway couetouse. I doubt not some shal think this woman to sleight a thing, to be written of & set amonge the remembraunces of great matters: which thei shal specially think, that happely shal esteme her only by that thei now see her. But me semeth the chaunce so much the more worthy to be remembred, in how much she is now in the more beggerly condicion, vnfrended & worne out of acquantance, after good substance, after as gret fauour with the prince, after as gret sute & seking to with al those that those days had busynes to spede, as many other men were in their times, which be now famouse, only by the infamy of their il dedes. Her doinges were not much lesse, albeit thei be muche lesse remembered, because thei were not so euil. For men vse if they haue an euil turne, to write it in marble: & whoso doth vs a good tourne, we write it in duste which is not worst proued by her: for at this daye shee beggeth of many at this daye liuing, that at this day had begged if she had not bene.[25]

Children Edit

 
Blue plaque erected in March 2017 at 30 Priestgate, Peterborough, PE1 1WG by Peterborough Civic Society. Replaced an earlier stainless steel rectangular plaque at the same address.

‘Julyan Lyneham’ is given 40 shillings in John Lambert's will of 1487.[26][2]

It was recently discovered, 2021[27][unreliable source?] a quoted inscription in an old book which may throw some further light on the matter. On the north wall of the chancel of St. Mary's, Whittlesea, is a marble mural monument to Thomas Hake, 1590. Its two panels are now blank, but it is probable that they had figures.[28] The text, however, is still extant and perfectly readable:[27]

Celastia seqvor terrestria sperno | Here Lyeth Bvried the Bodye of Thomas Hake, Esqvier | sonne and heire of Symon Hake of Depinge in | the countie of Lyncolne Esqvier and of Alice | his wife dovghter of Thomas Lynham Esqvier | somtyme President of Walles which Thomas | Hake died the first of March An° Dni 1590. | Who married Anne Dovghter of Roger Wylson of Govsner in the covntie of Lancaster Gent. | and of Jane his wife Dovghter of John Wallis which | Thomas and Anne had yssve 5 sonnes and 3 dovgh- | ters which died all yonge Bvt William Hake the | yongest ther only sonne and heire now livinge[29]

[better source needed] Thomas Lynham, Esquire, referred to as sometime "President of Wales"[clarification needed] (although in reality he was probably just a member of the Council of Wales and the Marches, not its President),[according to whom?][fact or opinion? (See discussion.)] had a daughter named Alice who married Simon Hake (or Hacke). They had at least one son, Thomas (d. 1 March 1590), and he had many children, though only one surviving, William, who erected the memorial.

William Hake (d.1625[30]) of Peterborough married Lucy, daughter of Henry Gates of Gosberton, Lincolnshire, on 14 June 1596 at Gosberton, Lincoln, England and they had the children Henry, Fane, Thomas, Anthony, Symon, William (b.1601), Elizabeth, Anne, Lucy, Frances, Grace and Mary.[31]

 
Yorkshire House, 28 and 30, Peterborough. The Priestgate property seems to have been purchased by Alice Lyneham's husband Simon Hake[32]

Their eldest daughter was called Elizabeth.

Both William Hake and his father Thomas were members of Parliament.[30][33] The Hake family were Royalists during the Civil War, a sundial on a south-facing wall-end overlooking the garden then running down to the river's flood plain, but not now publicly accessible triumphantly declares VIVAL CAROLUS SECUNDUS 1663.[32]

Of the same place, Whittlesea, Cambridge, in 1544–1551, we find Thomas Lynon or Lynom, executor of Richard, son of Thomas Lynon.[34][improper synthesis?] In 1538 Thomas Lyname, yeoman, is granted a demise, indented, for 80 years, of the manor-place or lordship of Whittlesea, Cambridgeshire by Thorney Abbey.[35][improper synthesis?] Simon Hake, Alice Lyneham's husband, had been a tenant of Thorney Abbey.[32][improper synthesis?]

Fiction Edit

For a bibliography see James L. Harner, "Jane Shore in Literature: A Checklist" in Notes and Queries, v. 226, December 1981, p. 496.

Drama Edit

 
Theatre poster for Jane Shore at Royal Princess' Theatre, Edinburgh, 14 December 1885
  • She is a significant character in The True Tragedy of Richard III, an anonymous play written shortly before William Shakespeare's Richard III. In the play, she is reduced to destitution on the streets, ignored by both former lovers and people she had helped after Richard frightens citizens with severe punishments if she is supported in any way.
  • "Mistress Shore" is frequently mentioned in Shakespeare's play, Richard III. (She actually appears in Laurence Olivier's 1955 film version, played by Pamela Brown – she has only one line: "Good morrow, my Lord", which is interpolated into the film. The film shows her as attending to Edward IV, but afterwards having a passionate affair with Lord Hastings.) Edward IV, Thomas Grey, and Lord Hastings are all characters in the play.
  • The story of Jane Shore's wooing by Edward IV, her influence in court, and her tragic death in the arms of Matthew Shore is the main plot in a play by Thomas Heywood, Edward IV (printed 1600). The play shows her struggling with the morality of accepting the king's offers, using her influence to grant pardons to those wrongfully punished, and expressing regret for her relationship with Edward. In this version, her first marriage is never annulled, but the two are reconciled right before dying and being buried together in "Shores Ditch, as in the memory of them". This is supposed to be the origin of the name Shoreditch.
  • The Tragedy of Jane Shore is a 1714 play by Nicholas Rowe. Rowe portrays her as a kind woman who encourages her lover Hastings to oppose Richard's usurpation of power. In revenge Richard forces her to do penance and to become an outcast. As in Heywood's version, her husband seeks her out and they are reconciled before she dies.[5]
  • A performance of Jane Shore was given on Saturday 30 July 1796 at a theatre in Sydney. The pamphlet for the play was printed by a convict in the settlement, George Hughes, who was the operator of Australia's first printing press. The pamphlet for the play is the earliest surviving document printed in Australia. It was presented as a gift to Australia by the Canadian Government and is held at the National Library of Australia in the National Treasures collection in Canberra.[36]

Poetry Edit

  • Thomas Churchyard published a poem about her in Mirror for Magistrates.
  • Anthony Chute's 1593 poem "Beauty Dishonoured, written under the title of Shore's wife" is supposed to be the lament of Jane Shore, whose ghost tells her life story and makes moral reflections.
  • Michael Drayton wrote a poem about her in his Heroical Epistles.
  • Andrew Marvell refers to her in "The King's Vows", a satire on Charles II, in which the king says, "But what ever it cost I will have a fine Whore, /As bold as Alce Pierce and as faire as Jane Shore."

Novels Edit

  • The Goldsmith's Wife (1950) by Jean Plaidy
  • She appears in Anne, The Rose of Hever (1969) by Maureen Peters
  • She appears in Elizabeth, the Beloved (1972) by Maureen Peters
  • Figures in Silk (2008) by Vanora Bennett is told from her (fictional) sister Isabel's perspective as well as Jane's
  • She is the main character in Isolde Martyn's Mistress to the Crown (2013)
  • She is the main character in Royal Mistress (2013) by Anne Easter Smith.
  • She is mentioned several times and modern translation of the Thomas Lynom letter concerning her is published in Josephine Tey's novel "The Daughter of Time" (1956).
  • She appears as a minor character in The Sunne in Splendour (1982) by Sharon Kay Penman
  • Shore appears in Philippa Gregory's The White Queen (2009), a novel about Elizabeth Woodville, Queen Consort to Edward IV, under her real name, Elizabeth. In the television adaptation, she is referred to by her more familiar name of Jane Shore.
  • A character in George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series is forced to perform a penance walk modeled very loosely after Shore's.[37]

Film Edit

The IMDB lists three films titled Jane Shore:

Television Edit

Graphical artwork Edit

  • A number of romanticised graphical artwork representations of Ms Shore can be dated to the late 18th century, see the National Portrait Gallery collection.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Lady Jane Grey and Jane Shore – The Anglesey Abbey Portrait". katherinethequeen.com. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Will of John Lamberd or Lumbard, Mercer of London – National Archives. 20 October 1487.". Published by Ancestry here.
  3. ^ a b jmc4 - Church Explorer (14 April 2010), Hertfordshire, Hinxworth, retrieved 1 July 2021
  4. ^ "Will of Anie Lamberd, Widow of Saint Olave Fleet Street, City of London – National Archives. June 1488.". Published by Ancestry here.
  5. ^ a b c d "Shore [née Lambert], Elizabeth [Jane]". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25451. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) "Shore, Jane" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  6. ^ Taylor, Gary; Lavagnino, John (2007). Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture: A Companion to the Collected Works. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-967873-0.
  7. ^ a b Thompson (1933), p. 34.
  8. ^ Thompson (1933), p. 32.
  9. ^ a b c d More, Thomas. The History of King Richard III. Cambridge University Press, 1883, p. 54.
  10. ^ a b Scofield, p. 162.
  11. ^ Thompson (1933), p. 48.
  12. ^ a b c Thompson (2003), p. 52.
  13. ^ a b Clive, p. 241.
  14. ^ a b Kendall, p. 173
  15. ^ a b Ross, Charles. Edward IV. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1974, 316.
  16. ^ Kendall, p. 248.
  17. ^ Royal Historical Society (Great Britain); Royal Historical Society (Great Britain). Camden third series (1919). The Stonor Letters and Papers Vol. 2. Robarts - University of Toronto. London. p. 161.
  18. ^ a b Kendall, p. 379.
  19. ^ Thornley, Isobel Dorothy (1938). The Great Chronicle of London, Edited by A.H. Thomas and I.D. Thornley. p. 233.
  20. ^ Kendall, p. 393.
  21. ^ Kendall, p. 390. "...it is shewed unto us that our servant and Sollicitor Thomas Lynom merveillously blynded and abused with the late wife of William Shore nowe being in Ludgate by our commandement hathe made contract of matrymony with hir, as it is said, and entendethe to our full grete mervaile to procede to theffect of the same..."
  22. ^ a b Clive, p. 286.
  23. ^ Revisited, Lady Jane Grey (18 February 2019). "The Streatham Portrait Revisited". Lady Jane Grey Revisited. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  24. ^ Revisited, Lady Jane Grey (4 January 2023). "Lady Jane Grey and The Longleat Portrait". Lady Jane Grey Revisited. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  25. ^ Sir Saint Thomas More, J. Rawson Lumby (1883). The History of King Richard III. Harvard University. University Press.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  26. ^ Anne F. Sutton and Livia Visser-Fuchs with Hannes Kleineke. The Children in the Care of Richard III: New References. A Lawsuit between Peter Courteys, Keeper of Richard III's Great Wardrobe, and Thomas Lynom, Solicitor of Richard III, 1495-1501 (PDF). p. 54.
  27. ^ a b "The Anglesey Abbey Portrait – www.katherinethequeen.com". The Tudors. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  28. ^   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: "North Witchford Hundred: Whittlesey". A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely: Volume 4, City of Ely; Ely, N. and S. Witchford and Wisbech Hundreds. British History Online. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  29. ^ E. Mansel Sympson (1888). Lincolnshire notes and queries. a quarterly journal...devoted to the antiquities, parochial records, family history, folk-lore, quaint customs, etc. of the county. University of Michigan. Horncastle, W. K. Morton. p. 229.
  30. ^ a b "HAKE, William (d.1625), of Peterborough, Northants. | History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  31. ^ Harvey, William; Vincent, Augustine; Metcalfe, Walter C.; England. College of arms (1887). The visitations of Northamptonshire made in 1564 and 1618-19 : with Northamptonshire pedigrees from various Harleian mss. unknown library. London : Mitchell and Hughes.
  32. ^ a b c Design, C. S. "Peterborough Civic Society - Blue Plaques page 3". www.peterboroughcivicsociety.org.uk. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  33. ^ "HAKE, Thomas (d.1590), of Peterborough, Northants. | History of Parliament Online". www.histparl.ac.uk. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  34. ^ Description: Short title: Lynon v Hyll. Plaintiffs: Thomas LYNON (Lynom) of Whittlesea, co. Cambridge, executor of Richard, son of Thomas Lynon. Defendants: Hugh HYLL. Subject: Stitchbrook Hall (in Curborough), of the demise of Richard Egerton, late master of the hospital of St John the Baptist, Lichfield. Staffordshire. Date: 1544–1551. Held by: The National Archives, Kew.
  35. ^ Reference: LR 14/892/7 Catalogue Description: GRANTOR: Thorney Abbey. GRANTEE: Thomas Lyname, yeoman. PLACE OR SUBJECT: Demise, indented, for 80 years, of the manor-place or lordship of Whittlesea. COUNTY: Cambs. Date: 29 Hen.VIII. Held by: The National Archives, Kew.
  36. ^ "Digital Collection, Books and Serials – Jane Shore". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 28 June 2008.
  37. ^ DeVries, Kelly (29 March 2012). "Game of Thrones as History". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 5 April 2012.

Sources Edit

  • Clive, Mary (1973). This Sun of York: A Biography of Edward IV. London: Macmillan.
  • Kendall, Paul M. (1956). Richard the Third. New York: W.W. Norton and Company Inc.
  • Scofield, Cora L. (1967). The Life and Reign of Edward the Fourth: King of England and of France and Lord of Ireland 2. London: Frank Cass and Co. Ltd.
  • Thompson, C.J.S. (1933). The Witchery of Jane Shore, the Rose of London. the romance of a royal mistress. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Thompson, C.J.S. (2003). The Witchery of Jane Shore. Whitefish: Kessinger Publishing.

External links Edit

jane, shore, elizabeth, jane, shore, née, lambert, 1445, 1527, many, mistresses, king, edward, england, became, best, known, history, through, being, later, accused, conspiracy, future, king, richard, compelled, public, penance, also, sometime, mistress, other. Elizabeth Jane Shore nee Lambert c 1445 c 1527 was one of the many mistresses of King Edward IV of England She became the best known to history through being later accused of conspiracy by the future King Richard III and compelled to do public penance She was also a sometime mistress of other noblemen including Edward s stepson Thomas Grey 1st Marquess of Dorset and William Hastings 1st Baron Hastings but ended her life in bourgeois respectability Portrait of a woman called Jane Shore wearing a red silk non boned bodice and a pearl hennin 1580 s details may have been added later to an existing portrait or incorporated into copy created in the 1580 s in the manner of as seen in certain portraits of Anne Boleyn and Jane Seymour Inscribed BAKERS WIFE AND MISTRIS TO A KING The portrait bears a remarkable resemblance to the one undisputed likeness of Jane Shore that exists that of her parents memorial brass in Hinxworth Hertfordshire 1 For other people with the same name see Jane Shore disambiguation and Elizabeth Shaw Contents 1 Early life and first marriage 2 Royal mistress 3 Prison second marriage and later life 4 Descriptions 5 Children 6 Fiction 6 1 Drama 6 2 Poetry 6 3 Novels 6 4 Film 6 5 Television 6 6 Graphical artwork 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEarly life and first marriage EditBorn in London in about 1445 Elizabeth Lambert was the daughter of a prosperous merchant John Lambert d 1487 2 3 and his wife Amy d 1488 4 3 who was the daughter of a well off grocer named Robert Marshall The name Jane which has sometimes been attached to her was the invention of a 17th century playwright Heywood 5 because during the course of the sixteenth century her real first name was omitted then forgotten by authors The tradition must go further back however as on 28 August 1599 was licensed the History of the Life and Death of Master Shore and Jane Shore his Wife 6 Spending time in her father s shop at a young age may have brought the young Elizabeth into contact with ladies of high rank C J S Thompson s highly romanticised biography The Witchery of Jane Shore the Rose of London The Romance of a Royal Mistress 1933 claimed that she was able to observe their behaviour and gain an understanding of the manners of those higher ranking than herself 7 She was thought to have been highly intelligent and as a result received an education that was not usually associated with a person of her class 8 Thompson also claimed that her beauty earned her the title of The Rose of London although this is not mentioned in contemporary sources 7 According to Thomas More writing when Shore was elderly she had been fair of body though not tall she was attractive to men more through her personality than her physical beauty being intelligent literate merry and playful 9 10 She attracted many suitors among them William Hastings 1st Baron Hastings friend and confidant of Edward IV It is likely Hastings fell in love with Elizabeth Lambert before her marriage his affection for her is apparent later in life by his continual protection of her 11 Such extreme attention made John Lambert desirous of finding his daughter a suitable husband 12 Such an opportunity presented itself with William Shore d 1494 a goldsmith and banker and common visitor to the Lambert home 12 He was approximately 14 or 15 years older than Jane 12 Though handsome and well to do he never really won her affections Their marriage was annulled in March 1476 after she petitioned for the annulment of her marriage on the grounds that her husband was impotent which prevented her from fulfilling her desire to have children Pope Sixtus IV commissioned three bishops to decide the case and they granted the annulment 13 Royal mistress EditAccording to the Patent Rolls for 4 December 1476 it was during this same year that Shore began her liaison with Edward IV after his return from France 14 Edward did not discard her as he did many of his mistresses and was completely devoted to her 13 She had a large amount of influence over the king but would not use it for her own personal gain 15 9 This was exemplified by her practice of bringing those out of favour before the king to help them gain pardon 10 9 Shore according to the official records was not showered with gifts unlike many of Edward s previous mistresses 15 Their relationship lasted until Edward s death in 1483 It is reputed that her advocacy saved Eton College and the society for the ladies at Eton College is to this day called the Jane Shore Society in her memory Prison second marriage and later life Edit nbsp The Penance of Jane Shore by William Blake c 1780 Shore s two other lovers were Edward IV s eldest stepson Thomas Grey 1st Marquess of Dorset and William Hastings 1st Baron Hastings Grey s wife was the wealthy heiress Cecily Bonville 7th Baroness Harington who also happened to be Hastings stepdaughter Shore was instrumental in bringing about the alliance between Hastings and the Woodvilles which was formed while Richard Duke of Gloucester was Protector before he took the throne as King Richard III She was accused of carrying messages between Hastings and Edward IV s widow Elizabeth Woodville It was because of her role in this alliance that Shore was charged with conspiracy along with Hastings and the Woodvilles against the Protector s government 16 Simon Stallworth wrote to Sir William Stonor on 21 June 1483 that Mastres Chore is in prisone what schall happyne hyr I knowe nott 17 Shore s punishment included open penance at Paul s Cross for her promiscuous behaviour by Richard 18 The Great Chronicle of London records that this was ffor the lyfe that she ledd wt the said lord hastyngys amp othir grete astatys 19 But it may have been motivated by the suspicion that she had harboured Grey when he was a fugitive or as a result of Richard s antagonism towards any person who represented his older brother s court 18 A clash of personalities between the lighthearted Shore and stern Richard also generated a mutual dislike between the two 14 Shore accordingly went in her chemise through the streets one Sunday with a taper thin candle in her hand attracting a lot of male attention along the way 5 After her public penitence Shore resided in Ludgate prison 20 While there she captivated the King s Solicitor General Thomas Lynom After he expressed an interest in Shore to Richard the king tried to dissuade him for his own good This is evinced by a letter to John Russell from Richard where the King asked the chancellor to try to prevent the marriage 21 but if Lynom were determined on the marriage to release Shore from prison and put her in the charge of her father until Richard s next arrival in London when the marriage could take place 22 They were married and had one daughter It is believed that Shore lived the remainder of her life in bourgeois respectability Lynom lost his position as King s Solicitor when Henry VII defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth in August 1485 but he was able to stay on as a mid level bureaucrat in the new reign 5 becoming a gentleman who sat on the commissions in the Welsh Marches and clerk controller to Arthur Prince of Wales at Ludlow Castle 22 Thomas More attested that even in old age an attentive observer might discern in her shriveled countenance traces of her former beauty 9 nbsp Portrait type called Jane Shore based on an earlier portrait of Lady Jane Grey 1 23 24 Descriptions Edit nbsp Publicity cover for Jane Shore printed 1915Thomas More description remains to this day the most famous This woman was born in London worshipfully frended honestly brought vp amp very wel maryed sauing somewhat to sone her husbande an honest citezen yonge amp goodly amp of good substance But forasmuche as they were coupled ere she wer wel ripe she not very feruently loued for whom she neuer longed Which was happely the thinge that the more easily made her encline vnto the kings appetite when he required her Howbeit the respect of his royaltie the hope of gay apparel ease plesure amp other wanton welth was hable soone to perse a softe tender hearte But when the king had abused her anon her husband as he was an honest man amp one that could his good not presuming to touch a kinges concubine left her vp to him al togither When the king died the lord Chamberlen toke her Which in the kinges daise albeit he was sore ennamored vpon her yet he forbare her either for reuerence or for a certain frendly faithfulnes Proper she was amp faire nothing in her body that you would haue changed but if you would haue wished her somewhat higher Thus say thei that knew her in her youthe Albeit some that now se her for yet she liueth deme her neuer to haue ben wel visaged Whose iugement semeth me somwhat like as though men should gesse the bewty of one longe before departed by her scalpe taken out of the charnel house for now is she old lene withered amp dried vp nothing left but ryuilde skin amp hard bone An yet being euen such whoso wel aduise her visage might gesse amp deuise which partes how filled wold make it a faire face Yet she delited not men so much in her bewty as in her plesant behauiour For a proper wit had she amp could both rede wel amp write mery in company redy amp quick of aunswer neither mute nor ful of bable sometime taunting without displeasure not without disport The king would say that he had iii concubines which in three diuers properties diuersly exceled One the meriest an other the wiliest the thirde the holiest harlot in his realme as one whom no man could get out of the church lightly to any place but it wer to his bed The other two were somwhat greter parsonages amp Natheles of their humilitie content to be nameles amp to forbere the praise of those properties But the meriest was this Shoris wife in whom the king therfore toke speciall pleasure For many he had but her he loued whose fauour to saithe trouth for sinne it wer to belie the deuil she neuer abused to any mans hurt but to many a mans comfort amp relief where the king toke displeasure she wolud mitigate amp appease his mind where men were out of fauour she wold bring them in his grace For many that had highly offended shee obtained pardon Of great forfetures she gate men remission And finally in many weighty sutes she stode many men in gret stede either for none or very smal rewardes amp those rather gay then rich either for that she was content with the dede selfe well done or for that she delited to be suid vnto amp to show what she was able to do wyth the king or for that wanton women and welthy be not alway couetouse I doubt not some shal think this woman to sleight a thing to be written of amp set amonge the remembraunces of great matters which thei shal specially think that happely shal esteme her only by that thei now see her But me semeth the chaunce so much the more worthy to be remembred in how much she is now in the more beggerly condicion vnfrended amp worne out of acquantance after good substance after as gret fauour with the prince after as gret sute amp seking to with al those that those days had busynes to spede as many other men were in their times which be now famouse only by the infamy of their il dedes Her doinges were not much lesse albeit thei be muche lesse remembered because thei were not so euil For men vse if they haue an euil turne to write it in marble amp whoso doth vs a good tourne we write it in duste which is not worst proued by her for at this daye shee beggeth of many at this daye liuing that at this day had begged if she had not bene 25 Children EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Blue plaque erected in March 2017 at 30 Priestgate Peterborough PE1 1WG by Peterborough Civic Society Replaced an earlier stainless steel rectangular plaque at the same address Julyan Lyneham is given 40 shillings in John Lambert s will of 1487 26 2 It was recently discovered 2021 27 unreliable source a quoted inscription in an old book which may throw some further light on the matter On the north wall of the chancel of St Mary s Whittlesea is a marble mural monument to Thomas Hake 1590 Its two panels are now blank but it is probable that they had figures 28 The text however is still extant and perfectly readable 27 Celastia seqvor terrestria sperno Here Lyeth Bvried the Bodye of Thomas Hake Esqvier sonne and heire of Symon Hake of Depinge in the countie of Lyncolne Esqvier and of Alice his wife dovghter of Thomas Lynham Esqvier somtyme President of Walles which Thomas Hake died the first of March An Dni 1590 Who married Anne Dovghter of Roger Wylson of Govsner in the covntie of Lancaster Gent and of Jane his wife Dovghter of John Wallis which Thomas and Anne had yssve 5 sonnes and 3 dovgh ters which died all yonge Bvt William Hake the yongest ther only sonne and heire now livinge 29 better source needed Thomas Lynham Esquire referred to as sometime President of Wales clarification needed although in reality he was probably just a member of the Council of Wales and the Marches not its President according to whom fact or opinion See discussion had a daughter named Alice who married Simon Hake or Hacke They had at least one son Thomas d 1 March 1590 and he had many children though only one surviving William who erected the memorial William Hake d 1625 30 of Peterborough married Lucy daughter of Henry Gates of Gosberton Lincolnshire on 14 June 1596 at Gosberton Lincoln England and they had the children Henry Fane Thomas Anthony Symon William b 1601 Elizabeth Anne Lucy Frances Grace and Mary 31 nbsp Yorkshire House 28 and 30 Peterborough The Priestgate property seems to have been purchased by Alice Lyneham s husband Simon Hake 32 Their eldest daughter was called Elizabeth Both William Hake and his father Thomas were members of Parliament 30 33 The Hake family were Royalists during the Civil War a sundial on a south facing wall end overlooking the garden then running down to the river s flood plain but not now publicly accessible triumphantly declares VIVAL CAROLUS SECUNDUS 1663 32 Of the same place Whittlesea Cambridge in 1544 1551 we find Thomas Lynon or Lynom executor of Richard son of Thomas Lynon 34 improper synthesis In 1538 Thomas Lyname yeoman is granted a demise indented for 80 years of the manor place or lordship of Whittlesea Cambridgeshire by Thorney Abbey 35 improper synthesis Simon Hake Alice Lyneham s husband had been a tenant of Thorney Abbey 32 improper synthesis Fiction EditFor a bibliography see James L Harner Jane Shore in Literature A Checklist in Notes and Queries v 226 December 1981 p 496 Drama Edit nbsp Theatre poster for Jane Shore at Royal Princess Theatre Edinburgh 14 December 1885She is a significant character in The True Tragedy of Richard III an anonymous play written shortly before William Shakespeare s Richard III In the play she is reduced to destitution on the streets ignored by both former lovers and people she had helped after Richard frightens citizens with severe punishments if she is supported in any way Mistress Shore is frequently mentioned in Shakespeare s play Richard III She actually appears in Laurence Olivier s 1955 film version played by Pamela Brown she has only one line Good morrow my Lord which is interpolated into the film The film shows her as attending to Edward IV but afterwards having a passionate affair with Lord Hastings Edward IV Thomas Grey and Lord Hastings are all characters in the play The story of Jane Shore s wooing by Edward IV her influence in court and her tragic death in the arms of Matthew Shore is the main plot in a play by Thomas Heywood Edward IV printed 1600 The play shows her struggling with the morality of accepting the king s offers using her influence to grant pardons to those wrongfully punished and expressing regret for her relationship with Edward In this version her first marriage is never annulled but the two are reconciled right before dying and being buried together in Shores Ditch as in the memory of them This is supposed to be the origin of the name Shoreditch The Tragedy of Jane Shore is a 1714 play by Nicholas Rowe Rowe portrays her as a kind woman who encourages her lover Hastings to oppose Richard s usurpation of power In revenge Richard forces her to do penance and to become an outcast As in Heywood s version her husband seeks her out and they are reconciled before she dies 5 A performance of Jane Shore was given on Saturday 30 July 1796 at a theatre in Sydney The pamphlet for the play was printed by a convict in the settlement George Hughes who was the operator of Australia s first printing press The pamphlet for the play is the earliest surviving document printed in Australia It was presented as a gift to Australia by the Canadian Government and is held at the National Library of Australia in the National Treasures collection in Canberra 36 Poetry Edit Thomas Churchyard published a poem about her in Mirror for Magistrates Anthony Chute s 1593 poem Beauty Dishonoured written under the title of Shore s wife is supposed to be the lament of Jane Shore whose ghost tells her life story and makes moral reflections Michael Drayton wrote a poem about her in his Heroical Epistles Andrew Marvell refers to her in The King s Vows a satire on Charles II in which the king says But what ever it cost I will have a fine Whore As bold as Alce Pierce and as faire as Jane Shore Novels Edit The Goldsmith s Wife 1950 by Jean Plaidy She appears in Anne The Rose of Hever 1969 by Maureen Peters She appears in Elizabeth the Beloved 1972 by Maureen Peters Figures in Silk 2008 by Vanora Bennett is told from her fictional sister Isabel s perspective as well as Jane s She is the main character in Isolde Martyn s Mistress to the Crown 2013 She is the main character in Royal Mistress 2013 by Anne Easter Smith She is mentioned several times and modern translation of the Thomas Lynom letter concerning her is published in Josephine Tey s novel The Daughter of Time 1956 She appears as a minor character in The Sunne in Splendour 1982 by Sharon Kay Penman Shore appears in Philippa Gregory s The White Queen 2009 a novel about Elizabeth Woodville Queen Consort to Edward IV under her real name Elizabeth In the television adaptation she is referred to by her more familiar name of Jane Shore A character in George R R Martin s A Song of Ice and Fire series is forced to perform a penance walk modeled very loosely after Shore s 37 Film Edit The IMDB lists three films titled Jane Shore Jane Shore 1911 Jane Shore 1915 played by Blanche Forsyth Jane Shore 1922 played by Sybil Thorndike Television Edit Shore is portrayed by Emily Berrington in The White Queen the 2013 TV adaptation of Gregory s novel Graphical artwork Edit A number of romanticised graphical artwork representations of Ms Shore can be dated to the late 18th century see the National Portrait Gallery collection See also EditEnglish royal mistressReferences Edit a b Lady Jane Grey and Jane Shore The Anglesey Abbey Portrait katherinethequeen com Retrieved 12 October 2023 a b Will of John Lamberd or Lumbard Mercer of London National Archives 20 October 1487 Published by Ancestry here a b jmc4 Church Explorer 14 April 2010 Hertfordshire Hinxworth retrieved 1 July 2021 Will of Anie Lamberd Widow of Saint Olave Fleet Street City of London National Archives June 1488 Published by Ancestry here a b c d Shore nee Lambert Elizabeth Jane Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25451 Subscription or UK public library membership required Shore Jane Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Taylor Gary Lavagnino John 2007 Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture A Companion to the Collected Works Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 967873 0 a b Thompson 1933 p 34 Thompson 1933 p 32 a b c d More Thomas The History of King Richard III Cambridge University Press 1883 p 54 a b Scofield p 162 Thompson 1933 p 48 a b c Thompson 2003 p 52 a b Clive p 241 a b Kendall p 173 a b Ross Charles Edward IV Los Angeles University of California Press 1974 316 Kendall p 248 Royal Historical Society Great Britain Royal Historical Society Great Britain Camden third series 1919 The Stonor Letters and Papers Vol 2 Robarts University of Toronto London p 161 a b Kendall p 379 Thornley Isobel Dorothy 1938 The Great Chronicle of London Edited by A H Thomas and I D Thornley p 233 Kendall p 393 Kendall p 390 it is shewed unto us that our servant and Sollicitor Thomas Lynom merveillously blynded and abused with the late wife of William Shore nowe being in Ludgate by our commandement hathe made contract of matrymony with hir as it is said and entendethe to our full grete mervaile to procede to theffect of the same a b Clive p 286 Revisited Lady Jane Grey 18 February 2019 The Streatham Portrait Revisited Lady Jane Grey Revisited Retrieved 13 October 2023 Revisited Lady Jane Grey 4 January 2023 Lady Jane Grey and The Longleat Portrait Lady Jane Grey Revisited Retrieved 13 October 2023 Sir Saint Thomas More J Rawson Lumby 1883 The History of King Richard III Harvard University University Press nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Anne F Sutton and Livia Visser Fuchs with Hannes Kleineke The Children in the Care of Richard III New References A Lawsuit between Peter Courteys Keeper of Richard III s Great Wardrobe and Thomas Lynom Solicitor of Richard III 1495 1501 PDF p 54 a b The Anglesey Abbey Portrait www katherinethequeen com The Tudors Retrieved 2 January 2023 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain North Witchford Hundred Whittlesey A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely Volume 4 City of Ely Ely N and S Witchford and Wisbech Hundreds British History Online Retrieved 1 July 2021 E Mansel Sympson 1888 Lincolnshire notes and queries a quarterly journal devoted to the antiquities parochial records family history folk lore quaint customs etc of the county University of Michigan Horncastle W K Morton p 229 a b HAKE William d 1625 of Peterborough Northants History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 1 July 2021 Harvey William Vincent Augustine Metcalfe Walter C England College of arms 1887 The visitations of Northamptonshire made in 1564 and 1618 19 with Northamptonshire pedigrees from various Harleian mss unknown library London Mitchell and Hughes a b c Design C S Peterborough Civic Society Blue Plaques page 3 www peterboroughcivicsociety org uk Retrieved 1 July 2021 HAKE Thomas d 1590 of Peterborough Northants History of Parliament Online www histparl ac uk Retrieved 1 July 2021 Description Short title Lynon v Hyll Plaintiffs Thomas LYNON Lynom of Whittlesea co Cambridge executor of Richard son of Thomas Lynon Defendants Hugh HYLL Subject Stitchbrook Hall in Curborough of the demise of Richard Egerton late master of the hospital of St John the Baptist Lichfield Staffordshire Date 1544 1551 Held by The National Archives Kew Reference LR 14 892 7 Catalogue Description GRANTOR Thorney Abbey GRANTEE Thomas Lyname yeoman PLACE OR SUBJECT Demise indented for 80 years of the manor place or lordship of Whittlesea COUNTY Cambs Date 29 Hen VIII Held by The National Archives Kew Digital Collection Books and Serials Jane Shore National Library of Australia Retrieved 28 June 2008 DeVries Kelly 29 March 2012 Game of Thrones as History Foreign Policy Retrieved 5 April 2012 Sources EditClive Mary 1973 This Sun of York A Biography of Edward IV London Macmillan Kendall Paul M 1956 Richard the Third New York W W Norton and Company Inc Scofield Cora L 1967 The Life and Reign of Edward the Fourth King of England and of France and Lord of Ireland 2 London Frank Cass and Co Ltd Thompson C J S 1933 The Witchery of Jane Shore the Rose of London the romance of a royal mistress London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Thompson C J S 2003 The Witchery of Jane Shore Whitefish Kessinger Publishing External links EditKingsford Charles Lethbridge 1911 Shore Jane Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed p 1003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jane Shore amp oldid 1180004897, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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