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=== In music === * As Giovanna Seymour, she appears in [[Gaetano Donizetti]]'s opera ''[[Anna Bolena]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.librettidopera.it/annabol/annabol.html |title=Anna Bolena (1830) |website=Libretti d'opera italiani |language=it |access-date=28 May 2018 }}</ref> * [[Rick Wakeman]] recorded the piece "Jane Seymour" for his 1973 album ''[[The Six Wives of Henry VIII (album)|The Six Wives of Henry VIII]]''.<ref>{{AllMusic |class=album |id=mw0000650944 |title=The Six Wives of Henry VIII}}</ref> * The English ballad "[[The Death of Queen Jane]]" ([[Child Ballads|Child]] No. 170) is about the death of Jane Seymour following the birth of Prince Edward. The story as related in the ballad is historically inaccurate, but apparently reflects the popular view at the time of the events surrounding her death. The historical fact is that Prince Edward was born naturally, and that his mother succumbed to infection and died 12 days later. Most versions of the song end with the contrast between the joy of the birth of the Prince and the grief of the death of the Queen.<ref name="Vannan">{{cite journal |url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+death+of+Queen+Jane%3a+ballad%2c+history%2c+and+propaganda-a0321683005 |title=The death of Queen Jane: ballad, history, and propaganda |last=Vannan |first=Alastair |date=1 January 2013 |journal=Folk Music Journal |issn=0531-9684 |access-date=28 May 2018 |via=[[The Free Library]]}}</ref> ** A setting of the ballad to a tune by Irish musician [[Dáithí Sproule]] was included on the [[Bothy Band]]'s 1979 album ''After Hours (Live in Paris)'',<ref>{{AllMusic |id=mw0000675610 |title=After Hours (Live in Paris) |class=album}}</ref> on the 1995 album ''Trian II''<ref>{{AllMusic | id=mw0000646402|title=Trian II|class=album}}</ref> by Trian (Sproule, [[Liz Carroll]], and [[Billy McComiskey]]), and the Bothy Band's 2008 album ''Best of the Bothy Band''.<ref>{{AllMusic |id=mw0000198561 |title=Best of the Bothy Band |class=album}}</ref> The song also appears on [[Loreena McKennitt]]'s 2010 album ''[[The Wind That Shakes the Barley (album)|The Wind That Shakes the Barley]]'',<ref>{{AllMusic |id=mw0002067160 |title=The Wind That Shakes the Barley |class=album}}</ref> and on Dáithí Sproule's 2011 album ''Lost River: Vol. 1'';<ref>{{AllMusic |id=mw0002201839 |title=Lost River: Vol. 1 |class=album}}</ref> and it was performed by [[Oscar Isaac]] in the [[Coen brothers]]' 2013 film ''[[Inside Llewyn Davis]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.vulture.com/2013/12/toughest-scene-i-wrote-the-coens-llewyn-davis.html |title=The Toughest Scene I Wrote: The Coen Brothers on Inside Llewyn Davis |last=Buchanan |first=Kyle |date=24 December 2013 |website=Vulture |language=en |access-date=28 May 2018 }}</ref>
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