12 September 2025
New Audiobook in The Elizabethan Series: Bess - Tudor Gentlewoman
The First King of England: Æthelstan and the Birth of a Kingdom, by David Woodman
The First King of England is a foundational biography of Æthelstan (d. 939), the early medieval king whose territorial conquests and shrewd statesmanship united the peoples, languages, and cultures that would come to be known as the “kingdom of the English.”
Set against the backdrop of warring powers in early medieval Europe, The First King of England sheds new light on Æthelstan’s early life, his spectacular military victories and the innovative way he governed his kingdom, his fostering of the church, the deft political alliances he forged with Europe’s royal houses, and his death and enduring legacy.
Beautifully illustrated and breathtaking in scope, The First King of England is the most comprehensive, up-to-date biography of Æthelstan available, bringing a magisterial richness of detail to the life of a consequential British monarch whose strategic and political sophistication was unprecedented for his time.
“Bringing to life the reign of one of the most important English monarchs, Woodman expertly weaves his way through the tangled threads of evidence to explore the many dimensions of Æthelstan’s rule, from his military leadership and international diplomacy to his religious and intellectual initiatives. This engaging and beautifully written book demonstrates the fascinating range of Æthelstan’s achievements.”—Katy Cubitt, University of East Anglia
“In this lucid and learned account, Woodman places enigmatic Æthelstan at the center of British and continental history during a formative moment in the forging of Europe. It will find a wide readership among experts and enthusiasts alike.”—Justine Firnhaber-Baker, author of House of Lilies: The Dynasty That Made Medieval France
11 September 2025
Historical Fiction Spotlight: The House of Wolf, by Sir Tony Robinson
Wessex: King Aethelwolf's power is fading, but none of his feckless children are fit to rule. His eldest sons would rather fight each other than the blood-thirsty Norland invaders. His daughter, Swift, is clever and cunning, but often blinded by her ambition. Finally there's Alfred, his once-promising younger son, whom nobody has seen in years. Then Wolf meets a young priest with a proposition from Rome that could change everything.
Lindisfarne: Rhiannon is a slave with a profound hatred for her Saxon captors. When she meets Guthrum, a Norlander hell-bent on wiping Wessex from the map, they set out on a journey of destruction.
5 September 2025
Book Launch: The Worlds of Jane Austen: The Influences and Inspiration Behind the Novels, by Helena Kelly
4 September 2025
Witches: A King's Obsession, by Steven Veerapen
But where did our perception of witches – good and bad – come from? What motivated wide-scale panics about witchcraft during certain periods? How were alleged witches identified, accused, and variously tortured and punished?
Steven Veerapen traces witches, witchcraft, and witch-hunters from the explosion of mass-trials under King James VI and I in the late sixteenth century to the death of the witch-hunting phenomenon in the early eighteenth century.
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About the AuthorSteven Veerapen is a writer of fiction and nonfiction and a lecturer at the University of Strathclyde who specialises in sixteenth-century literature. His first novel was The Queen’s Consort, which focused on Mary Queen of Scots’ infamous husband, Lord Darnley. Steven’s other books include the Simon Danforth trilogy, the Queen’s Spies trilogy, and three non-fiction works: Blood Feud, Elizabeth and Essex, and Slander and Sedition in Elizabethan Law, Speech, and Writing. Find out more at https://www.stevenveerapen.com/ and you can follow Steven on Instagram @steven.veerapen.3 and on Goodreads and Twitter @ScrutinEyeWomen Who Ruled the World: 5000 Years of Female Monarchy, by Elizabeth Norton
Female kings have always been a rarity, an oddity, or an undesirable outcome. In almost all places throughout the world a male ruler was preferred to a woman, with female inheritance vanishingly rare and frequently disputed. In spite of this, women have secured crowns - or fought for them - over several millennia.
From the lush oases of Ancient Egypt to the cherry blossomed lands of Japan, the machinations of the Tudor court to the far reaches of Pacific Island kingdoms, Women Who Ruled the World is an expansive and comprehensive history of female royal power.
Covering five millennia of global history, renowned historian Elizabeth Norton weaves together the stories of women rulers throughout the ages. Establishing beloved and already celebrated figures amongst those who have been left in the margins of history, Norton peels away the layers of time, geography and culture to reveal what it was to be a woman who ruled.
A gripping and beautifully crafted book that skilfully interweaves the stories of female rulers who on the face of it have little but their sex in common. As well as introducing the reader to lesser-known characters from history, it brings a fresh perspective on famous figures such as Cleopatra and Elizabeth I. There is a striking contemporary resonance throughout, making even the long distant past seem within touching distance. An astonishing achievement. -- Tracy Borman
3 September 2025
Murder in the Tower - A Special Guest Post by Gemma Morris-Conway
The Tower of London stands as one of Britain’s most enduring landmarks, steeped in centuries of power, politics, and bloodshed. The grey walls have witnessed the rise and fall of monarchs, the intrigues of court life, and the struggles for the English crown.
For all the pageantry and ceremony, the Tower is perhaps most famous for the darker side of the monument's history — the shadows of betrayal, confinement, and death that cling to every damp stone.
Among the most haunting of these tales is the disappearance of two young brothers, Edward V and his younger sibling, Richard, Duke of York. Together they became known — and ever since remembered — as the Princes in the Tower.
Edward IV, their father, reigned for twenty-two years. He was the son of Richard, Duke of York, who had been the Lord Protector of England twice, during the King’s debilitation. Cecily Neville had been his wife, and the Neville family was one of the most noble in the land.
The young Edward seized the throne in 1461 after years of bitter civil war. Edward had two surviving brothers: George, Duke of Clarence, and Richard, Duke of Gloucester. George was reckless and disloyal, and in the end he was convicted of treason and put to death in 1478.
Legend tells that his final wish was to be drowned in a butt of his most favoured wine, Malmsey, and it is understood that Richard was at hand to see this request carried out. Richard, by contrast, proved a steadfast and capable soldier, often entrusted with the hardest tasks of the reign, and his loyalty to Edward never wavered.
Edward IV was tall, strikingly handsome, and charismatic, but his fondness for mistresses was well known. In 1464, he secretly wed Elizabeth Woodville, a widowed commoner with golden hair and eyes said to be as clear as spring water.
The marriage upended expectations at court and angered the Earl of Warwick, who had been seeking a diplomatic union for the King. Elizabeth had approached the young King Edward to plead for the lands of her late husband, Sir John Grey. Instead, she won his heart, and their marriage shocked the nobility — not least Richard Neville, the powerful Earl of Warwick, who had long expected Edward to marry a European princess. Warwick, who became known as the Kingmaker, never forgave the slight, and it marked the beginning of growing tensions within the Yorkist court.
By the time of Edward IV’s death in April 1483, the King and Queen Elizabeth Woodville had seven surviving children. Their eldest son, Edward, was just twelve years old and had been raised at Ludlow Castle as heir apparent. After Edward IV’s sudden death, the boy was brought to London to prepare for his coronation. As was customary, he was lodged in the royal apartments of the Tower of London. Because the young Prince Edward felt isolated, his younger brother Richard, Duke of York, whom he had never met, was later brought to join him.
Queen Elizabeth Woodville, suspicious of Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who had been named Lord Protector, sought sanctuary at Westminster Abbey with her remaining children. Richard and many nobles debated that allowing the Woodville family to dominate the young King would be disastrous. Later, in a privy council meeting, it was discovered that Edward, the dead King, had in front of the Bishop of Bath and Wells in his youth made a pre-contract with Lady Eleanor Butler.
It had also been alleged that Lady Butler was sent away to give birth to a child. This complicated who was the real heir.
Therefore, Edward IV’s marriage to Elizabeth was invalid. By this reasoning, their children were illegitimate, and Edward V could not be King. Civil war loomed. To avoid chaos, the realm’s leading men urged Richard to take the crown himself.
Richard, after all, was a son of Richard of York and was a man with both experience and a well-respected soldier.
The two boys remained within the Tower, but sightings of them grew rarer as the summer of 1483 passed. Eventually, they disappeared from view altogether. Rumours flew on the late summer wind that they had been murdered, perhaps at Richard III’s command, though no definitive proof ever emerged.
They had vanished.
Two centuries later, in 1674, workmen demolishing a staircase in the White Tower uncovered a wooden chest containing two small sets of bones, thought to be children. Some fine fabric was in the box, indicating the children were from a wealthy family.
Charles II, the then English King, announced that they must be the lost York princes and ordered them placed in a white marble urn, designed by Sir Christopher Wren, and interred with honour in Westminster Abbey’s Henry VII Chapel, in the corner of the Innocents. Yet they were not complete skeletons, and their identity has never been proven.
The white marble urn in Westminster Abbey –, designed by Sir Christopher Wren, believed to hold the remains of the Princes in the Tower.
In 1933, the bones were studied by an anatomist who suggested that they might indeed be the remains of the two princes and were suspected to be of male origin and seemed to be of a correct age to match the two lost York princes.[1]
Modern science offers a chance to resolve the mystery. DNA testing could confirm whether the bones belong to the lost princes, but Queen Elizabeth II consistently opposed disturbing royal burials, mainly due to her firm Christian beliefs. For now, the marble urn remains sealed, a silent sentinel over centuries of speculation.
In recent years, new research has added to the debate. In 2024, Professor Tim Thornton uncovered a will indicating that Edward V’s chain of office ended up in the estate of Lady Margaret Capell, a relative of Sir James Tyrell, who was implicated in the princes’ alleged murder.
Thornton also highlighted links between Sir Thomas More’s famous account and his father, John More, a lawyer of great repute, who personally knew two of the supposed assassins.[2] These discoveries have strengthened the case for reconsidering the mystery.
As Westminster Abbey is a royal peculiar, only the reigning monarch can authorise such testing.[3] Should King Charles III give his consent, modern forensic methods could reveal the truth at last. If confirmed as Edward and Richard, the boys could be reinterred beside their parents — Edward IV and Queen Elizabeth Woodville — in St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle. At last, the lost princes would come home, reunited with their family in peace.
And how poignant it would be that King Charles II gave them secret rest in Westminster Abbey if then King Charles III could see them rightly home.
Support our petition for DNA testing and for giving the boys a Christian burial:
Thank you
Gemma Morris-Conway
References
1. Tanner, Lawrence E., and Wright, William. *Report on the Investigation of the Remains in the Urn in Westminster Abbey.* Archaeologia, 1935.
2. Thornton, Tim. *The Political Thought and Influence of Sir Thomas More: New Research Findings.* University of Huddersfield, 2024.
3. Westminster Abbey official guidance: As a royal peculiar, the decision for any testing or disturbance rests solely with the reigning monarch.
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About the Author
Gemma Morris-Conway is a British historical writer and campaigner focused on late-medieval and Tudor history. She leads the Murder in the Tower initiative to secure DNA testing of the remains believed to be those of Edward V and Richard, Duke of York, with the aim of a Christian reinterment alongside their parents. More information and petition details are available at www.murderinthetower.london