Being educated by the French humanist and poet, Nicholas Denisot, Anne Seymour with her sisters Margaret and Jane composed 103 Latin distichs for the tomb of Marguerite de Navarre, which were published in France as Hecatodistichon.
[1] On 3 June 1550 Anne Seymour was married to John Dudley, Viscount Lisle, son and heir of the Duke of Northumberland.
[2] The match was intended as an expression of renewed amity between the young people's fathers, who were political rivals, but the peace would not last.
After the Lady Jane Grey episode in 1553, Anne's husband, now Earl of Warwick, was imprisoned in the Tower of London, where she was allowed to visit him.
Anne Seymour's second husband was Sir Edward Unton KB (1534–1582), a Member of Parliament.