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If the teenager lived a few more days, the Queen of the Nine Days would become the Queen of England and would not go to the guillotine

author:Dream of Pengshan Road

It is destined that a man has no heirs, and it is useless to be childless in fate, and it is useless to marry more wives. The King of England married six queens in order to have sons and sent two queens to the guillotine. It's really a fight for the birth of a son!

But Henry VIII married so many times that he had only one son, Edward VI. Unfortunately, Edward VI died at the age of sixteen, leaving no descendants, and Henry VIII died.

If the teenager lived a few more days, the Queen of the Nine Days would become the Queen of England and would not go to the guillotine

Edward VI was born in 1537, and his biological mother was The Third Queen of Henry VIII, Jane Seymour, a good queen of kindness, kindness, dignity and beauty, but unfortunately had a short life, and just a month after giving birth to his son Edward VI, he died of puerperal fever.

Jane Seymour was queen for only one year, and she gloriously fulfilled the task given to her by Henry VIII- to give birth to a son, but she lost a life, and she really made a great contribution to Henry VIII.

Unfortunately, Queen Jane Seymour's son Edward VI, who had been exchanged for her life, was a frail and sick child, while Henry VIII was too old to live to become an adult and died.

If the teenager lived a few more days, the Queen of the Nine Days would become the Queen of England and would not go to the guillotine

In January 1547, the nine-year-old King Edward VI ascended the throne, but he was too young to govern, and Henry VIII had no brothers and was regent by Queen Jane Seymour's younger brother (Edward's uncle) Edward Seymour. Edward Seymour was made Duke of Somerset and became the Protector of England.

At this time, our heroine is about to debut, and she is Jane Gray. Jane Grey was the granddaughter of Henry VIII's sister, the cousin niece of the young son Edward VI. Edward VI had an uncle, Thomas Seymour, who was the regent, and an uncle, Thomas Seymour.

Thomas Seymour was no ordinary man either, he married Catherine Parr, the sixth queen of Henry VIII, and when he saw his brother in power, he was a little dissatisfied and began to find opportunities for himself. So he felt that the marriage of his nephew Edward VI should be booked by him, he fell in love with Jane Gray, and gave Jane Gray's parents 2,000 pounds in exchange for Jane Gray's custody, and he must make Jane Gray the Queen of England.

If the teenager lived a few more days, the Queen of the Nine Days would become the Queen of England and would not go to the guillotine

Unfortunately, in 1548, queen Catherine Parr gave birth to a daughter to Thomas Seymour, who had puerperal fever and died of illness. Thomas Seymour was anxious and tried to marry Princess Elizabeth, the daughter of Henry VIII, but was unsuccessful, and ended up on the guillotine.

Edward VI's regent uncle, Edward Seymour, was defeated by the nobles led by Dudley, Earl of Warwick, in 1551 and sent to the guillotine. The two uncles who could decide Edward VI's marriage were not alive, but Jane Grey's origins doomed her to be the most suitable queen of England. Edward VI had grown up and could get engaged to his own marriage.

If the teenager lived a few more days, the Queen of the Nine Days would become the Queen of England and would not go to the guillotine

If Edward VI had lived a few more years, he could have married Jangray as queen, but in 1553 he was terminally ill, and Dudley, Earl of Warwick, understood that Edward VI was no longer able to do so, so he had his eldest son marry Jangray, and then had Edward VI propose that Jangray take the throne.

Perhaps Edward VI had feelings for Jane Grey, and he agreed to TheOdley, Earl of Warwick, by appointing the lovely little girl Jane Gray as heir to the throne, excluding both his half-sisters Mary and Elizabeth. The move was highly controversial, and the ministers disagreed.

At this time, Edward VI was only fourteen years old, Jane Gray was fifteen years old, Edward VI could not give the queen laurel to Jane Gray, so he gave the queen's crown to Jane Gray, but it caused Jane Gray's tragic fate.

If the teenager lived a few more days, the Queen of the Nine Days would become the Queen of England and would not go to the guillotine

In July 1553, Edward VI died of illness and Jane Grey ascended the throne, but within nine days she was overthrown by Edward VI's half-sister Mary I and imprisoned in the Tower of London, after which Mary I became queen, and Jane Gray and her husband and father-in-law were on the guillotine.

If the young Son Edward VI had lived a few more years, Jane Grey would have been the queen of England and would not have become the Guillotine of the Nine-Day Queen. The early death of Edward VI caused jane Gray's tragic fate.

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