A good reason to buy All About History Magazine…


(c) Immediate Media Company Ltd


Issue 60 of All About History Magazine has an article by Melita Thomas that briefly mentions Lady Jane.

‘Bringing up Bloody Mary’ looks at the relationship between Mary Tudor and her father, King Henry VIII.


(c) Immediate Media Company Ltd


Melita’s book, ‘The King’s Pearl: Henry VIII and His Daughter Mary’ was published by Amberley in September 2017.

Melita is the co-founder and editor of Tudor Times website.


(c) Amberley Publishing



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BBC History Extra Podcast – Lady Jane Grey by Helen Castor


Helen Castor discusses Lady Jane on the BBC History Extra Podcast.


(c) BBC History Magazine



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‘England’s Forgotten Queen’ starts on BBC4 this evening at 9pm…

(c) DSP TV


The first part of ‘England’s Forgotten Queen: The Life and Death of Lady Jane Grey’ that I did research for last summer, starts tonight on BBC4 at 9pm.

‘In this three-part series for BBC Four, historian Helen Castor pieces together the astonishing true story of Lady Jane Grey – the first reigning Queen of England.’

BBC.co.uk

The programme features Lady Jane historians, Leanda de Lisle, Stephan Edwards and Nicola Tallis, as well as eminent historians, Anna Whitelock, John Guy, Joanne Paul and Saul David.


(c) BBC



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‘England’s Forgotten Queen’ is Pick of the Day and Critics’ Choice


England’s Forgotten Queen: The Life and Death of Lady Jane Grey is pick of the day in ‘Event Magazine’ (The Mail on Sunday) and gets 4 stars.

‘If we remember Lady Jane Grey at all, it’s simply because of the fact that she ruled England for a total of nine days after the death of Edward VI, only to meet a tragic end on the executioner’s block after Queen Mary had wrestled the throne from her.

Historian Helen Castor is determined to give Grey a much fuller place in history, and is telling the teenage royal’s story in detail in this series showing across three consecutive nights.

Castor not only vividly recreates the intrigue and politics of the Tudor court but also manages to unpick the royal lineage with remarkable clarity and explain just why Grey was able to take the crown, albeit temporarily. Supported by a chorus of fellow historians, Castor spins a fascinating yarn…’

From Event Magazine, The Mail on Sunday, p.49


It is Critics’ Choice in ‘The Culture’ (The Sunday Times).

‘After touching on Lady Jane Grey in her series She Wolves, Helen Castor devotes a three-parter on consecutive evenings to the nine-day Queen of England in her own right. Her opener starts by explaining the context with typical lucidity. When Edward VI was on his deathbed in 1553, the most plausible heir was his Catholic sister, Mary. Determined to keep her from the throne, the king’s chief advisor induced Edward to name a brainy Protestant teenager as his successor.

In narrating what ensued after Edward’s death, Castor deftly manages to shape the story into a ‘Tudor thriller’ without sacrificing scholarly respect for evidence and complexity….’

From The Culture, Sunday Times, p.52.



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‘England’s Forgotten Queen: The Life and Death of Lady Jane Grey’ – Trailer


Thanks to Stephan Edwards for sending me the link to the trailer for ‘England’s Forgotten Queen.’





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