9 Day Giveaway – Day 5 – Win ‘Innocent Traitor’ by Alison Weir – Competition closed


To celebrate 20 years of my website, I am running a 9 Day Giveaway on key dates throughout the year that relate to Lady Jane.


On day 5 of the giveaway thanks to the generosity of Alison Weir and Arrow Books, you have a chance to win a paperback copy of, ‘Innocent Traitor’ in a world-wide giveaway!



‘Lady Jane Grey was born into times of extreme danger. Child of a scheming father and a ruthless mother, for whom she was merely a pawn in a dynastic power game with the highest stakes, she lived a life in thrall to political machinations and lethal religious fervour.

Jane’s astonishing and essentially tragic story was played out during one of the most momentous periods of English history. As a great-niece of Henry VIII, and the cousin of Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I, she grew up to realize that she could never throw off the chains of her destiny. Her honesty, intelligence and strength of character carry the reader through all the vicious twists of Tudor power politics, to her nine-day reign and its unbearably poignant conclusion.’

From Arrow Books


To enter the competition

Email me at Ljgcompetition at yahoo.co.uk. Replace ‘at’ with @. Put Day 5 in the Subject line.

The competition ends at midnight (UK time) on Saturday 24th July.

The winner will be selected at random.

Good luck!



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What people should know about Lady Jane Grey…


To mark the 468th Anniversary of Jane’s reign, I asked 9 historians and writers what they thought people should know about Jane….

Jane was descended twice over (on both her father and her mother’s side) from Queen Elizabeth Woodville, wife of Edward IV and mother of the Princes in the Tower.

Elizabeth Norton


Jane was the eldest of three daughters of Henry Grey and Frances Brandon.

Linda Porter


Lady Jane Grey was very close to her mother, despite later stories to the contrary.

Leanda de Lisle


In 1548, Sir Thomas Seymour, Lord Admiral, and husband of Dowager-queen Katherine Parr, purchased Jane’s wardship and marriage from her father, for £2,000. Seymour had persuaded Jane’s father that he would arrange a marriage for her with Edward VI.

Melita Thomas


Jane was educated with the future Elizabeth I for a time, and that they shared both a fierce intellect and a passion for religious reform. Jane was such an enlightened and impressive young woman and, like Elizabeth, far ahead of her time.

Tracy Borman


Jane was the first (though very far from either the last or least!) in a long line of ‘female’ rivals for the throne. Even through the reign of her cousin Elizabeth, all the contenders were women; Jane’s sisters among them, of course.

Sarah Gristwood


Though Jane is usually characterized today as having been exceptionally studious, her tutor John Aylmer considered her so distracted by other pursuits that he asked Heinrich Bullinger to use his religious authority and to counsel Jane to pay less attention to “braidings of the hair” and to music.

Stephan Edwards


With the young King Edward, who had named Jane his successor, fatally ill, Jane’s marriage to Guildford Dudley was a key move in the power-play of her father-in-law, Northumberland. Northumberland had envisaged his son sitting on the throne beside Jane, thereby sealing his continued hold over the country. But once Jane had been thrust reluctantly onto the throne the young queen began to demonstrate that she wouldn’t be the pawn Northumberland had hoped for by refusing to allow her husband to be crowned as her consort. This act, effectively outplaying Northumberland at his own game, has always made me wonder what kind of queen she might have been had she held the throne for longer.

Elizabeth Fremantle


Jane was fierce and utterly unbending in her faith. Like Joan of Arc a century earlier, history has tended to soften her, to make the memory of a young woman milder and gentler, more pacific and open to compromise. But for Protestant Jane, like Catholic Joan, there could be no compromise when it came to the truth of salvation. Both met a terrible and violent death – but neither in quite the way that’s often portrayed. Joan is usually seen as an unyielding martyr, but in fact she recanted and submitted to the Church before relapsing into the ‘heresy’ of which she’d been condemned. Jane is familiar – for example, from Paul Delaroche’s celebrated painting – as an unwitting victim of the dark forces that surrounded her; but according to an eyewitness she went to the horror of her execution as a proud martyr, without hesitation, ‘being nothing at all abashed, neither with fear of her own death, … neither with the sight of the dead carcass of her husband, … her countenance nothing abashed, neither her eyes anything moisted with tears, … with a book in her hand, whereon she prayed all the way till she came to the said scaffold’. In other words, the real Jane, like the real Joan, was far more complex – and far more interesting in that complexity – than the tales we often tell might suggest.

Helen Castor



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All Things Tudor Queens and Consorts


I am very happy to have been asked to take part in ‘All Things Tudor Queens and Consorts’ over at On The Tudor Trail.

9 things you might not have known about the reign of Queen Jane


(c) On the Tudor Trail


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9 Day Giveaway – Day 4 – Win ‘Crown of Blood’ by Nicola Tallis


To celebrate 20 years of my website, I am running a 9 Day Giveaway on key dates throughout the year that relate to Lady Jane.


On day 4 of the giveaway thanks to the generosity of Nicola Tallis and Michael O’Mara Books, you have a chance to win a paperback copy of, ‘Crown of Blood: The Deadly Inheritance of Lady Jane Grey’ in a world-wide giveaway!



‘Good people, I am come hither to die, and by a law I am condemned to the same.

These were the words uttered by the seventeen-year-old Lady Jane Grey as she stood on the scaffold awaiting death on a cold February morning in 1554. Forced onto the throne by the great power players at court, Queen Jane reigned for just thirteen tumultuous days before being imprisoned in the Tower, condemned for high treason and executed.

In this dramatic retelling of an often misread tale, historian and researcher Nicola Tallis explores a range of evidence that has never before been used in a biography to sweep away the many myths and reveal the moving, human story of an extraordinarily intelligent, independent and courageous young woman.

From Michael O’Mara Books


To enter the competition

Email me at Ljgcompetition at yahoo.co.uk. Replace ‘at’ with @. Put Day 4 in the Subject line.

The competition ends at midnight (UK time) on Friday 23rd July.

The winner will be selected at random.

Good luck!



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9 Day Giveaway – Day 3 – Win ‘Sisters of Treason’ by Elizabeth Fremantle


To celebrate 20 years of my website, I am running a 9 Day Giveaway on key dates throughout the year that relate to Lady Jane.


On day 3 of the giveaway thanks to the generosity of Elizabeth Fremantle and Penguin, you have a chance to win a paperback copy of, ‘Sisters of Treason’ in a world-wide giveaway!



‘1554: Lady Jane Grey is executed by her cousin Queen Mary…

Now Lady Jane’s younger sisters Katherine and Mary, cursed with the Tudor blood that saw their sister killed, face the perils of the royal court alone.

Lady Katherine – young and spirited – makes dangerous romantic liaisons. While Lady Mary – crook-backed and vulnerable – becomes the Queen’s reluctant companion, yet yearns to escape court intrigue. And both girls fear their proximity to the Queen might be their undoing.

For the childless Queen is ill. If she should die Katherine may be pushed to power, but the Queen’s half-sister Elizabeth casts a long shadow and if she gains the throne the court will become a terrifying maze of treachery and suspicion – where holding royal blood could be a death warrant for the two sisters.’

From Amazon


To enter the competition

Email me at Ljgcompetition at yahoo.co.uk. Replace ‘at’ with @. Put Day 3 in the Subject line.

The competition ends at midnight (UK time) on Tuesday 20th July.

The winner will be selected at random.

Good luck!



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