Alison Weir Bio, Age, Height, Family, Husband, Books, Net worth

Alison Weir Biography

Alison Weir is an English author and public historian, she is known for writing on history of English royal women and families. She has written numerous works on historian fiction. Britain’s Royal Families was her debut book, and it provided a genealogical survey of the British royal family. Eleanor of Aquitaine, Isabella of France, Katherine Swynford, Elizabeth of York, and the Princes in the Tower were among the people she authored biographies for.

Alison Weir Education

She studied at City of London School for Girls and North Western Polytechnic, later becoming a history teacher.

Alison Weir Wiki

Weir spent four years in the 1970s researching and writing a biography of Henry VIII’s six wives. Publishers thought her work to be too long and hence rejected it. Her second work, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, was published in 1991 with a revised form.

She wrote a book about Jane Seymour in 1981, but publishers rejected it again, this time because it was too short. With Britain’s Royal Families, a compendium of genealogical knowledge regarding the British Royal Family, Weir finally became a published author in 1989. She’d rewritten the work eight times over the course of twenty-two years and decided it may be “of interest to others.” The Bodley Head consented to publish it after putting it in chronological sequence.

Weir would not begin full-time writing until the late 1990s. She authored the nonfiction works The Princes in the Tower (1992), Lancaster and York: The Wars of the Roses (1995), and Children of England: The Heirs of King Henry VIII while heading the school for children with learning disabilities (1996).

She wrote Elizabeth the Queen (1998) (also known as The Life of Elizabeth I in the United States), Eleanor of Aquitaine: By the Wrath of God, Queen of England (1999), Henry VIII: The King and His Court (2001), Mary, Queen of Scots and the Murder of Lord Darnley (2003), and Isabella: She-Wolf of France, Queen of England (2003). (2005).

The Lady in the Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn was published in 2009, and Katherine Swynford: The Story of John of Gaunt and his Scandalous Duchess was published in 2007. In 2010, the novel Traitors of the Tower was published. The Ring and the Crown: A History of Royal Weddings and Mary Boleyn: The Mistress of Kings, the first full non-fiction biography of Mary Boleyn, Anne Boleyn’s sister, were published the following year.

Elizabeth of York – A Tudor Queen and Her World, a biography of Henry VIII’s mother, Elizabeth of York, was published in 2013. Weir has written two volumes about England’s Medieval Queens: Queens of Conquest (Random House, 2017) and Queens of the Crusades (Random House, 5 November 2020).

Weir began writing historical novels as a youngster, and her historical fiction novel, Innocent Traitor, was released in 2006. It is based on the life of Lady Jane Grey. Weir realized while researching Eleanor of Aquitaine that writing a novel in which he could “write whatever I wanted while staying true to the facts” would be “quite liberating.” Jane Grey was chosen as her subject since she “didn’t have a very lengthy life and there wasn’t a lot of material.” “Every book is a learning curve, and you have to keep an open mind,” she says of the switch to fiction.

Her second novel, The Lady Elizabeth, is about Queen Elizabeth I’s life before to her accession to the throne. It was released in the United Kingdom and the United States in 2008. The Captive Queen, her next novel, was published in the summer of 2010. Eleanor of Aquitaine, the subject of the film, was the subject of a non-fiction biography by Weir in 1999.

Weir’s writings have been classified as popular history, a genre that has been criticized by academics. Popular history “seeks to inform and entertain a large general audience… Dramatic storytelling often prevails over analysis, style over substance, simplicity over complexity, and grand generalization over careful qualification,” according to one source. “History is not solely the domain of academics,” Weir says, “though I have the deepest respect for those historians who conduct fresh study and add to our understanding.”

Alison Weir Net worth

Weir has an estimated net worth of $ 1.5 million dollars.

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Alison Weir Age

Weir is 70 years old as of 2022. She was born on July 8, 1951.

Alison Weir Height

Weir stands at an average height of 5 feet 6 inches tall.

Alison Weir Family

Weir was born in 1951 , her mother as she described her “A genuinely nice person with lots of integrity, strength of character, humour, and knowledge who has faced life’s hardships with great fortitude,” according to the nomination.

Alison Weir Husband

She has been married to Rankin Weir since 1972 and the couple have two sons.

Alison Weir Books

  • Britain’s Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy (1989)
  • The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1991)
  • The Princes in the Tower (1992)
  • Lancaster and York – The Wars of the Roses (1995)
  • Children of England: The Heirs of King Henry VIII (1996, later reissued as The Children of Henry VIII)
  • Elizabeth the Queen (1998) (published in America as The Life of Elizabeth I)
  • Eleanor of Aquitaine: By the Wrath of God, Queen of England (1999)
  • Innocent Traitor: A Novel of Lady Jane Grey (2007)
  • The Lady Elizabeth (2008)
  • The Captive Queen (2010)
  • Dangerous Inheritance: A Novel of Tudor Rivals and the Secret of the Tower (2012)
  • The Marriage Game: A Novel of Elizabeth I (2014)
  • Katherine of Aragon: The True Queen (2016)

How Old is Alison Weir?

Weir is 70 years old as of 2022. She was born on July 8, 1951.

Is Alison Weir Married?

She has been married to Rankin Weir since 1972 and the couple have two sons.

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