Skip to main content

We’re expecting high visitor numbers on Saturday 9 and Sunday 10 August and the car park is very likely to get full, which means we can’t guarantee entry. Please car share if you can and consider visiting in the afternoon for a smoother visit. For more tips to help you get the most from your visit this summer read our full guide.

Edward VI (1537-1553) became King of England in 1547 at the age of 9 and ruled for six years until his death in 1553.

This portrait may have been painted for Michael Stanhope, who was an important member of the King’s household.

Commissioning or owning a royal portrait was a way of demonstrating loyalty and the picture is full of messages and symbols that would have been readily understood in Tudor times.

The King is shown with a group of plants which are turning their flowers towards him rather than towards the sun. Among them, the red and white roses, combined in the Tudor Rose, are a reminder that he came from a powerful royal dynasty.

An elaborate text beneath, in both Italian and Latin, reiterates the power of the King as an equal power to the sun. Edward is dressed in magnificent clothes, embroidered with gold thread and trimmed with lynx fur.

The profile format evokes the coinage of Imperial Rome and was well suited for depicting rulers. William Scrots (active 1537-53) became court painter for Henry VIII in 1546, following the death of Hans Holbein the Younger, and had previously worked for Mary of Hungary, Regent of the Netherlands.

Scrots was very highly regarded and earned twice the salary of his predecessor.