Cary Elwes and Helena Bonham Carter in Lady Jane
In the 1986 film Lady
Jane (starring Helena Bonham Carter and Cary Elwes), when the teenage Lady
Jane Grey is unexpectedly proclaimed Queen of England, she and her husband
Guilford Dudley really shake things up!
Being socially woke, they make
new laws to help the needy, they give away the treasury to the poor, and they reform the currency. For years, coinage in England had been debased to near worthlessness. Jane and Guilford mint a new shilling as a symbol of righting
old wrongs, and as a testament of their love for one another.
Historically, the real
Jane was not a 'proto-socialist feminist, a strange amalgam of Robin Hood and
Beatrice Webb', as one historian described her,* nor was she in love with
Guilford. During Jane's brief reign of nine days, the two bickered over whether
Guilford should be made King or not; Jane refused.
And as for the reformed
shilling, there was none of course.
However, two examples
of coins with Jane as Queen appeared in the mid 19th century. They were quickly
exposed as fakes, and the work of one Edward Emery, who had also made other
counterfeits. Still, Emery's forgeries can fetch good prices on today's collectors'
market.
Forged Queen Jane coins by Edward Emery, circa 1840