This beautiful effigy caught my eye on a trip to Westminster Abbey, as everyone filed past in search of those of more famous royals.
Frances Brandon was the daughter of Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk and his wife Mary Tudor, the former Queen of France. Charles and Mary embarked on an initially secret relationship after the death of her husband Louis XII of France, marrying in private, without telling Mary’s brother, Henry VIII. On their return to England Henry was said to have been enraged when he found out, but softened after they paid a hefty fine for their audacity. He even threw them another wedding celebration after he calmed down.
As one of their daughters, she was a granddaughter of Henry VII, and cousin to Henry VIII's children Mary, Elizabeth and Edward. She married Henry Grey, Marquis of Dorset, who was later created Duke of Suffolk by Edward IV. Their daughter was Lady Jane Grey, the queen who ruled for nine days before being imprisoned by Mary I and later beheaded at the Tower of London. Losing her husband and daughter through the succession crisis after Edward VI's death, Frances would have felt huge grief and adversity in the early years of Mary I's reign. But the Greys’ fate wasn’t really any of their fault. Edward IV, close to death in his teens, decided to sidestep his half-sisters Mary and Elizabeth in the succession and wrote an order that the throne would instead pass to the heirs of Frances Brandon, in other words: Jane. It was even said that when the messenger arrived to tell Jane that she was now queen, she replied to say she didn’t even want the title but would take it out of respect of God's wishes.
After Mary’s successful coup and her accession to the throne, Frances lived quietly – a good idea for a woman with a bloodline so close to the throne. She married a second time, to Adrian Stock, a groom she knew from her household. She was not the only woman of her time to look for a humbler way of life in the fractious Tudor court of the 1540s and 1550s. Both Anne Seymour, Duchess of Somerset and Catherine Willoughby, Duchess of Suffolk married men from their households after their first marriages ended.
Frances died in November 1559, and her second husband erected the tomb we see at Westminster today. Elizabeth I, Frances' cousin, issued a warrant that arms were to be borne at Frances' funeral, an act seen as a public nod and show of respect to her royal status. Frances’ effigy shows her lying with her head propped up on a cushion, wearing a cloak finished in ermine. Around her neck is a small ruff and she wears a coronet on her head. It is reasonable to imagine, like many of the other effigies of the period, that it might convey how Frances looked in life, with its strikingly individual features. She has hair tucked under a headdress, a rounded nose and care has been taken to carve a small double chin. Although speculative, I think that a family likeness can be seen when compared with portraits of other Tudors, particularly her uncle Henry VIII and cousin Mary I.
Westminster Abbey






