The Tudor Society

18 June – Protestant martyr Anne Askew is found guilty of heresy

On this day in Tudor history, 18th June 1546, twenty-five-year-old Anne Askew was found guilty of heresy at London’s Guildhall along with Nicholas Shaxton (former Bishop of Salisbury), Nicholas White and John Hadlam.

Anne Askew has gone down in history as a Protestant martyr, after having been burned at the stake in July 1546, but also as a woman who was illegally put to the rack at the Tower of London by two of Henry VIII's trusted men.

In today's video, I use contemporary sources and Anne Askew's own accounts, to piece together what happened that June and July, and what led to Anne Askew's execution.

Also on this day in history:

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