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Saturday, 20 June 2026

Out Now! COURAGE: Tales of History, Mystery and Hope Jean Gill

e-book & paperback from Amazon
or order from any good bookstore

Today we feature 
Jean Gill

LEGACY by Jean Gill

Tudor England, 1558

When a man loses everything, what is his legacy?...



trailer/animation by Jean Gill (A.I. generated)
cover graphics by  www.avalongraphics.org

(some stories have an adult content others a 'you will need tissues' warning) 

Fifteen short stories about Courage
featuring authors:

 Alison Morton 
The Sentry - Noricum AD 395
The Saxon - Southern Britain AD 471
The Phoenix - a fictional country circa AD 900
Siflede - London 1066
Daisy Chain - England 1141
Stepping Between - England 1308
Confronting Plague - England 1361
Kate’s Letter - Transylvania 1478
The Portrait’s Secret - Paris 1536
Jean Gill
Legacy - England 1558
Cathie Dunn
Darkness Rising - Venezia 1923
Helen Hollick 
A Taleteller’s Tale - The Caribbean 1709
Elizabeth St.John 
The Gate - London 1900
Antoine Vanner 
A Sack of Potatoes - The Netherlands 1954
Kathy Hollick-Bater 
Grumpy Old Grandfather – Anywhere, Present-day

with an introduction by

About Jean's story

The story behind ‘Legacy’ by Jean Gill

The Tudor mathematician who cared too much about equality

 

Robert Recorde memorial, St Mary’s Church, Tenby

Credit Richard Hagen from Brisbane, Australia

CC BY-SA 2.0 <>, via Wikimedia Commons

2 + 2 = 4

Simple, even for those who hate Maths! However, before 1557, English speakers would not have written a sum this way. Roman numerals were the norm and Latin was the usual written language of scholars. Even if English were used, the sum would have been written down as

ii in addition to ii is equal to iv


Clear as mud, isn’t it? Equations looked even more obscure as the symbols x and y for unknown factors weren’t yet used. And who cared whether ordinary people understood any of the scholars’ erudite thinking?


In 1557 Dr Robert Recorde cared. This Welshman grew up in Tenby, was educated in medicine at Oxford, then Cambridge universities, and turned his passion for teaching Mathematics into a revolutionary mission. In those days, there were no degree courses in Mathematics.


Through books written in the English language, he combined all the advanced knowledge that was accepted in mainland Europe with practical examples, aimed at ordinary people. He invented the = equals sign ‘to avoid tedious repetition’ and brought many more symbols, such as the plus sign +, into common use by mathematicians.


This is the equation that changed English mathematics forever, using the long parallel lines that have become our modern equals sign =.



Recorde’s books became the textbooks used in schools for hundreds of years after his death and, when my mathematical husband looked at my print-out of The Whetstone of Witte, he was shocked at how modern it is in structure and progression. If you’ve ever puzzled over how long it takes ten men to dig a ditch if one man takes five days, then that’s exactly how Recorde gave examples to practise calculations. He was the first to relate Mathematics to daily life in his teaching.


For all that he was a genius in many fields – royal physician, royal mintmaster, navigator and writer – Recorde is little known today, compared with his contemporary Dr John Dee or, later, Sir Isaac Newton.


Why?


My answer is in the short story I wrote for the anthology ‘Courage’ and I think he should be famous and honoured. You can still tell that he was a wonderful teacher from his books, as well as in the testimony of students who attended his lectures.


I usually write 12th century medieval women back into history, in all the rich variety of their unsung lives, but this time my unsung hero is a man, trying to survive in dangerous times at court under four different Tudor rulers in the 16th century.


This was quite a challenge for me, researching a different period as well as the man himself but the more I found out about him, the more I wanted others to know about all he achieved. His biography is full of contradictions – a bachelor or married with twelve children? Even his bas-relief portrait above the plaque in his Tenby birthplace is disputed and credibly attributed to some other subject. So we probably have no picture of this amazing man, a merchant’s son who changed mathematics forever. We do, however, have his words, in four books you can still read today.

 

Here if you hope your wits to whet

Much sharpness thereby shall you get,

Dull wits hereby do greatly mend,

Sharp wits are honed to their full extent.

Now to prove and praise as you do find

And to yourself be not unkind.

 

(from the Preface to The Whetstone of Wittes, with my modern tweaks)

 

I’m wondering whether this short story might turn into a novel one day – we shall see! It depends on whether you, my readers, want more of Robert Recorde’s story… let me know!

 

 

Read ‘The Whetstone of Witte’ here


read a snippet

LEGACY by Jean Gill

Tudor England, 1558

When a man loses everything, what is his legacy?

In a world of cheats and liars, an honest man can easily find himself with debts he cannot pay, though he has never spent one penny above his income. Especially if he demonstrates publicly that someone rich and powerful is a crook and swindler. The place deemed suitable by the courts for such presumption is one of the infamous prisons situated south of the River Thames in the quarter of London known as Southwark. Beside the prisons of the Marshalsea and the Queen’s Bench, (its sex changing with that of the ruling monarch), noble townhouses rub shoulders with taverns, and a miasma rises from the drained marshland of St George’s Fields.

At night, scratching the red lumps on his skin left by his bedmates, the man is tormented even more by questions than by the fleas in his hand-me-down mattress. Previous inmates have left their imprint on the saggy middle and he has no option but to lie where they have lain.

When did he run out of options? And why? If he had not sent the letter to the Queen, or if he’d phrased it differently, would he be here? He knew Queen Mary would show the letter to her advisors, who would always favour his enemy, and that whatever words he used would be twisted against him. 



about Jean

Award-winning Welsh author and photographer Jean Gill lives in Provence with the best scent-hound in the world, a Nikon D750 and a man. Best known for writing epic medieval adventures in The Troubadours and The Midwinter Dragon series, Jean has published twenty-seven multi-genre books since 1988, including the dog bestseller Someone To Look Up To.

For many years, she taught English, and was the first woman to be a secondary headteacher in the Welsh county of Dyfed. She is mother or stepmother to five children so life is hectic. With Scottish parents, Welsh and French residence and an English birthplace, she can usually shout for the winning team in sporting events.

She loves to hear from readers.

Website: www.jeangill.com

Amazon author pages:

US: https://www.amazon.com/author/jeangill

UK:https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Jean-Gill/author/B001KDUN1C?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_3&qid=1772723126&sr=1-3&shoppingPortalEnabled=true  

Jean's latest release



e-book & paperback from Amazon
or order from any good bookstore


more great anthologies
featuring various authors




> Next spotlight tomorrow: Cathie Dunn

You might also like books written by 
Helen Hollick 

cosy mystery series
nautical supernatural adventure 
historical fiction:
King Arthur / 1066 era
non-fiction:
Ghost Encounters
Pirates /smugglers



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1 comment:

  1. I enjoyed this story very much. It pulled me right into the plight of an honest man trapped by corruption. I especially appreciated the contrast between his integrity and the grim reality of Tudor England.

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