Anne Shelton (née Boleyn) | |
---|---|
Spouse | Sir John Shelton |
Issue | |
Father | Sir William Boleyn |
Mother | Lady Margaret Butler |
Born |
Blickling, Norfolk |
28 November 1475
Died | 6 January 1555 | (aged 79)
Anne Shelton née Boleyn (28 November 1475 – 8 January 1556) was the elder sister of Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, and an aunt of his daughter, Queen Anne Boleyn, the second wife of King Henry VIII.
Anne Boleyn was born at Blickling, Norfolk, the daughter of Sir William Boleyn and Lady Margaret Butler, daughter of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond, and Joan de Beauchamp. She married Sir John Shelton before 1503.
In 1533, Lady Shelton and her sister, Lady Alice Clere, were placed in charge of the household of the King's daughter, Mary. There is some evidence that Lady Shelton was harsh towards the young Mary, often taunting her with Elizabeth's higher status, but it is widely believed that she never resorted to actually hitting the young girl to chastise her. She received letters from Queen Anne criticising Mary. By July 1536 Sir John Shelton was comptroller of the household established for Mary and Queen Anne Boleyn's daughter, Princess Elizabeth.
In the same year five women were appointed to serve Queen Anne while she was imprisoned in the Tower and to report to Sir William Kingston, the Lieutenant of the Tower, and through him to the King's chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, all that the Queen said. These women included Lady Shelton, who had perhaps fallen out with Queen Anne during Henry VIII's affair with Anne's first cousin, Lady Shelton's daughter, Madge Shelton. The other women to attend Anne were Sir William Kingston's wife, Lady Mary Kingston; Lady Elizabeth Boleyn, Queen Anne's aunt by marriage; Lady Margaret Coffin, the wife of Queen Anne's Master of the Horse; and Elizabeth Stoner, wife of the King's Serjeant-at-Arms. Sir William Kingston described the five as "honest and good women", but Queen Anne said that it was "a great unkindness in the King to set such about me as I have never loved". Shelton may have been sent by Cromwell to spy on the Queen. It is also possible she was motivated by the appalling treatment her daughter Madge Shelton had suffered in a brief affair with King Henry. She had been manoeuvred into his path by Queen Anne and her court faction. Lady Shelton might have sought revenge. Moreover, her son, John Shelton, was married to Margaret Parker, whose sister, Jane Rochford, had complained about her husband's incest with Queen Anne. Lady Shelton seems to have had no compunction at 'shopping' her to Cromwell. Other members of the Boleyn family, such as Sir James Boleyn, had already abandoned the Queen, in his case Mary's household, rather than await the inevitable destruction of their faction. When in 1536 the Queen was arrested and taken to the Tower, Lady Shelton was dismissed from her service. Four days later Anne Boleyn was executed. Historians have debated as to whether Lady Shelton and Mrs Coffin were still in her service; and whether she was one of the 'four young ladies' said to attend and escort Anne to the scaffold.