Alison Weir is one of the best-selling historians in the United Kingdom. She has published twenty-one books and sold more than 2.7 million copies worldwide. Alison has written extensively about the Tudor period, in highly respected and very popular non-fiction and fiction books. Her novel, “ The Marriage Game ", centres on the life-long love affair between Elizabeth I and Lord Robert Dudley.

The execution of Henry VIII's second wife, Anne Boleyn, in May 1536 was to have a profound impact on many people, not the least of them her two-year-old daughter Elizabeth, who was disinherited and declared a bastard.

But others profited vastly by Anne's fall, notably the Seymour brothers, Edward and Thomas, whose sister Jane married the King ten days after her predecessor's head fell.

Sir Thomas Seymour c. 1547 Aged about 40

Jane died in 1537 giving Henry VIII his longed-for son, Edward, but the Seymours, as uncles to the future king, were now firmly in power. When Henry himself passed away in January 1547, Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford, became Lord Protector of England, ruling for the nine-year-old Edward VI, and Sir Thomas Seymour was sidelined. And that is where this story begins.