Nan Bullen

One thing that could be added to this answer about Anne Boleyn is a clarification of what “strawberry-size” means exactly.

In the 16th Century a strawberry wasn’t the enormous fruit we see today, but instead a tiny little thing. “Perhaps King Henry VIII believed that royal pleasure led to royal health for in 1530, four years after the publication of The Grete Herball, he paid ten shillings for a “pottle of strawberries” according to the Privy Purse Expenses of Henry VIII. A pottle was a small basket, shaped like an inverted cone, and often held less than one-half a pint. This measure indicates that the fruits of the time were small, and must have been wood strawberries.”

Cite

Her “strawberry-size mole” wasn’t an enormous grotesque lump of flesh, but instead probably was small enough to be covered by a necklace or narrow ribbon.

Twiddle

So, a “beauty mark”