Many people know about the dramatic rise and fall of Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII’s controversial second wife, but this is the first book to look at her life from a Continental perspective.Her role models for queenship came from the Low Countries and France, and this contributed to her tragic end.Heather R. Darsie reviews the political missteps and implications of Anne Boleyn’s queenship, delving into the threat she posed to Henry, and why legal changes made during the early years of the English Reformation allowed the English king to judicially murder his inconvenient queen. Historically, certain things have been overlooked about Anne’s execution: she wore colours usually associated with martyrdom, announced that she did not come to preach, was killed by beheading instead of burning, and had a very crude burial in an unmarked grave.Anne tried to portray herself as a martyr, and Henry did everything he could to prevent her from reaching that status.If Any Person Will Meddle of My Cause is about Anne Boleyn, but not the Anne Boleyn you know.