The council sends several letters to Continental…
May 1553 CE
The council sends several letters to Continental reformers in May, assuring them that Edward's health is improving.
Among the letters is one addressed to Melanchthon inviting him to come to England to take up the Regius Chair in Cambridge, vacant since the death of Martin Bucer in February 1551.
Both Henry VIII and Cranmer had previously failed to persuade Melanchthon to come; this time the council makes a serious effort by sending him an advance to cover his travel expenses.
Cranmer sends a personal letter urging him to take the offer.
Despite his plea, Melanchthon never makes the voyage to England.
While this effort to shore up the reformation is taking place, the council is working to convince several judges to put on the throne the Protestant Lady Jane Grey instead of the Catholic Mary.
The elder daughter of Henry VIII by his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, Mary had reluctantly abjured Roman Catholicism to end the harsh treatment she had endured as a girl, but has privately retained her Catholic faith through the reign of her half-brother.
Northumberland, who dominates the government, hastily arranges the marriage in May 1553 of his nineteen-year-old son Lord Guildford Dudley, to Jane.
Jane's sister, Lady Katherine, is married in the same ceremony, to Lord Herbert, son of the Earl of Pembroke, and Northumberland's daughter, Katherine, to Lord Hastings.
Jane's younger sister, Lady Mary Grey, is betrothed to her cousin, Lord Arthur Grey.
The marriages thus ally Northumberland to three of the most powerful families at Court.
Northumberland's plans culminate in the King's “Device,” a document reluctantly signed by Edward's council that removes both Elizabeth and Mary from the line of succession, naming Frances Grey and her offspring as the heirs to his dominion.