Published in 2025
352 pages
10 hours and 32 minutes
Dr Elizabeth Norton is a historian and archaeologist. She is the author of several books, including The Lives of Tudor Women and England’s Queens: The Biography, the first comprehensive study of English queenship from the Roman period to the present. She appears regularly on television documentaries and has experience as a historical consultant for both film and tv. She has a degree in Archaeology and Anthropology from the University of Cambridge, another in European Archaeology from the University of Oxford, and a PhD in Early Modern British History from King’s College London. She has taught History at King’s College London, and lectured and tutored in Archaeology at Oxford University.
What is this book about?
A fascinating history of female rulers across time and across the world
Female kings have always been a rarity, an oddity, or an undesirable outcome. In almost all places on the globe 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.
This scintillating book tell the story of the female kings: women who risked everything, sometimes unwillingly, to find a place in a man’s world. Women Who Ruled the World covers an exhilarating expanse of time and space: from the lush oases of Ancient Egypt to the cherry blossomed islands of Japan, from the nineteenth-century Queens of Madagascar who defied French attempts to colonize them to Tamar the Great, who presided over a golden age in Georgia. From the familiar—Boudicca, Cleopatra, Catherine to Great—to the unfamiliar—Urracca of Castile and Leon, Kushite queen Shanakdakhete, Lili’uokalani of Hawaii.
This groundbreaking book casts a global eye over five millennia of queenship, a truly remarkable feat of historical skill and breadth of knowledge.







