Jane Howard's father, the Earl of Surrey, was tried and convicted of
treason at the
Guildhall on 13 January 1547, and beheaded on
Tower Hill on 19 January 1547. In 1548 his children were placed in the care of their aunt,
Mary FitzRoy, who appointed the
martyrologist,
John Foxe, as their tutor. Under Foxe, Jane learned Latin and Greek to the level that she could "compete with the most learned men of the age." Despite being educated by Foxe, who was a well-known Protestant, Jane was Roman Catholic as were most of her family (his father had fallen out of favour in part because he was a Catholic and his grandfather, the
3rd Duke of Norfolk had been a prisoner in the
Tower from the end of the reign of
Henry VIII and was kept there throughout the reign of
Edward VI for the same reason, although he was then released early in the rule of the Catholic Queen
Mary I). About 1563/4 Jane Howard married
Charles Neville, 6th Earl of Westmorland, who had succeeded to the earldom after his father's death on 10 February 1564. In November 1569 Westmorland joined the
Earl of Northumberland in the
Northern Rebellion. After initial successes, Westmorland and Northumberland were forced to flee to the Scottish border when Queen
Elizabeth I sent forces north under the
Earl of Sussex. Sussex proclaimed Westmorland and Northumberland rebels at
York on 19 November. Shortly thereafter Northumberland was handed over to the Scottish Regent, the
Earl of Moray. However Westmorland was given refuge by
Lord Kerr at
Ferniehirst Castle in Roxburghshire, and eventually escaped by sea in 1570 to the
Spanish Netherlands, where he remained an exile until his death. In 1571 he was attainted, and all his honours forfeited. After her husband's
attainder, the Queen granted Jane a pension of £200 for life. In the events which preceded the
Northern Rebellion in 1569, the Countess had more to do with raising the troops than her husband did. She was well educated but perhaps not the cleverest of women when it came to understanding political machinations. She was first to urge the rebels to rise up against Elizabeth, and yet she expected the Queen to pardon her when they failed. The Countess hoped to arrange the marriage of her brother,
Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk, to
Mary, Queen of Scots, and put them both on England's throne and along with it, the Catholic religion would be restored in England. He was executed for treason in 1572 and she lived under house arrest for the rest of her life. The Countess was buried 30 June 1593 at
Kenninghall, Norfolk. Westmorland continued to be involved for many years in plots to invade England and replace Queen Elizabeth with
Mary, Queen of Scots. In 1599 he considered marrying again. His prospective bride was the daughter of
President Richardot. Westmorland died 16 November 1601 at
Nieuwpoort, Flanders. On 25 June 1604 two of his daughters, Katherine and Anne, were granted pensions of 200 marks a year by
King James. Westmorland's cousin,
Edmund Neville, the only son of Richard Neville (d. 27 May 1590) by Barbara Arden, the daughter of William Arden of Park Hall,
Warwickshire, unsuccessfully claimed the earldom. ==Marriage and issue==