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  1. The Nidd Hall portrait, dating to the late 16th century, which many believe to look more like Jane Seymour, has been compared to the 1534 medal by Amit Roy-Chowdhury, head of the video computing group at the University of California in Riverside, using a facial recognition programme devised by Roy-Chowdhury.

  2. Here are links to newspaper articles about this news: Possible Anne Boleyn portrait found using facial recognition software, The Guardian. Portraits of Anne Boleyn may not be her, say experts, The Telegraph. Scientists use old portrait and CCTV technology to identify the face of Anne Boleyn.

  3. The Nidd Hall Portrait. The Nidd Hall portrait showing a woman similar to Holbein’s Jane Seymour but with an AB brooch has been identified as “The Most Excellent Princesse Anne Boleyn” but Roland Hui argues that her likeness has been derived from Henry VIII’s third wife, Jane Seymour.

  4. 16 de fev. de 2015 · Lifestyle History. Scientists use old portrait and CCTV technology to identify the face of Anne Boleyn. Art historians have debated whether the Nidd Hall portrait is Boleyn or her...

  5. Most Happi Medal. I contacted the University of California yesterday regarding the news reports about how a facial recognition program had matched the 1534 Moost Happi Medal and the Nidd Hall portrait, and was very surprised to get an email back from Professor Conrad Rudolph of the Department of the History of Art, project director of FACES ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anne_BoleynAnne Boleyn - Wikipedia

    Another possible portrait of Anne was discovered in 2015 painted by artist Nidd Hall. Some scholars believe that it portrays Anne because it resembles the 1536 medal more than any other depiction. However, others believe that it is actually a portrait of her successor Jane Seymour .

  7. 16 de fev. de 2015 · Experts say the Nidd Hall portrait seems to be a genuine portrait of Anne Boleyn. Wikipedia. At present, the only undisputed portrait of the queen has been an image stamped into a four-centimetre-wide lump of lead held in the British Museum known as The Moost Happi medal.