
Win a Garden Bistro Set worth £199
They are offering one Tangier Mosaic Garden bistro set worth £199 to the lucky winner.
Named because they originated in French 'bistro's' or cafe's its the perfect set to take the load off your feet after a busy day.
To enter, fill in the form below.
Or write to Sun Hillier competition, PO Box 3190, Colchester, Essex, CO2 8GP.
Include your name, age, email or phone. UK residents 18+ only.
Ends 23.59GMT 10.05.25 T&Cs apply.

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Scotsman
28 minutes ago
- Scotsman
These 35 surnames could link you to the Royal Family
Could your family tree connect you to royalty? Even Queen Elizabeth I might be a distant relation – if you've got the right surname. | Canva This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement. A-list surnames, scandalous bloodlines and a surprise link to Danny Dyer - check this list to see if your family name has royal roots Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... What if you've been royal all along… and never knew? Plenty of people across the UK have been stunned to find links to kings, queens and ancient nobility just by tracing their family tree. And in some cases, a single surname is the clue that unlocks a royal connection. That's exactly what happened to EastEnders star Danny Dyer, who famously found out on Who Do You Think You Are? that he's directly descended from King Edward III and Richard III. If it can happen to Danny, why not you? If your family name is on the list below, you could be carrying royal blood – and you don't need a castle or a crown to find out. Genealogy tools like MyHeritage DNA can help you dig into your past, build a free family tree, and connect the dots across centuries of ancestry. Search your name and start your family tree today with MyHeritage. Click here to get started. Scroll through this list of 35 surnames – all of them linked to royal or noble dynasties in the UK and Europe. Then check your family history… you might be a king or queen in the making. 1. Windsor The name of the current Royal Family. If it runs in your family, you could be closer to the throne than you think. 2. Tudor Henry VIII's lot. You know, the one with six wives. Still turning up in Welsh and English family trees. 3. Stuart Scottish royals who ruled both sides of the border. Mary Queen of Scots and Bonnie Prince Charlie were Stuarts. 4. Plantagenet The OG royal dynasty. Gave us Richard the Lionheart, Edward III and more. 5. Capet Medieval kings of France. Their descendants spread far and wide after the Norman invasion. 6. Bourbon Another French powerhouse, also ruled Spain. Think Versailles, power, and scandal. 7. Habsburg Massive European dynasty – rulers of the Holy Roman Empire and half of Europe at one point. 8. Hanover Should there be a place for you on the Royal ba;cony? | Aaron Chown/PA Wire Imported royals who ran Britain from George I through to Queen Victoria. 9. Valois French royalty from the 14th to 16th centuries – if you're part French, it's one to look out for. 10. Lancaster Famous in the Wars of the Roses. Henry IV, Henry V… a blood-soaked dynasty. 11. York The other side of the Roses war. Richard III's crew – he's the one they found under a car park. 12. Bruce Scottish legend Robert the Bruce defeated the English at Bannockburn. Enough said. 13. de Valois Elite French nobility, closely tied to the royal succession. 14. de Medici Italian rulers and Renaissance icons. If this is in your tree, you've got flair in your blood. 15. Savoy Royalty from parts of Italy and France. Played a big role in European power games. Search your name and start your family tree today with MyHeritage. Click here to get started. 16. Orange-Nassau The Dutch royal family. William of Orange became a British king. 17. Oldenburg The ruling house of Denmark and Norway – and cousins of many other royals. 18. Glucksburg A branch of Oldenburg. Modern royalty in Scandinavia comes from here. 19. Romanov Russia's last imperial dynasty. The Tsars – opulence, tragedy and all. 20. Baskerville Not just a Sherlock Holmes mystery. A real English noble family, originally Norman. 21. Darcy Medieval aristocrats in England and Ireland. Think land, power, and influence. 22. Neville Key players in the Wars of the Roses. A family of kingmakers. Search your name and start your family tree today with MyHeritage. Click here to get started. 23. Percy Northern aristocrats with castles to prove it. Big names in English history. 24. Astley Midlands landowners with links to the peerage. 25. Capell Earls of Essex. Major players in the English Civil War. 26. Howard Dukes of Norfolk. One of England's most powerful noble families. 27. Seymour Jane Seymour's family – yes, the wife Henry VIII actually liked. 28. Grey Lady Jane Grey was queen for nine days. It counts. 29. FitzAlan Former Earls of Arundel. Medieval movers and shakers. 30. Courtenay Tied to both English and French royalty. A Crusader-era power family. 31. Manners Dukes of Rutland. Still a big deal in aristocratic circles. 32. Russell Dukes of Bedford. Politicians, landowners, royal allies. 33. Cavendish Founders of Chatsworth House and the Dukes of Devonshire. 34. Talbot Earls of Shrewsbury. A stronghold name in English nobility. 35. Spencer Princess Diana's family name. And through her, connected to William and Harry. If your surname's on this list – or even in your wider family – it's well worth digging deeper. You could be sitting on a royal story just waiting to be uncovered. Start your royal search with MyHeritage today Your royal family tree might only be a few clicks away. With MyHeritage, it's free and easy to get started – just enter a few names and watch your tree grow. From birth records and marriage certificates to DNA connections and old family photos, they'll help you uncover generations of your history. You can even take a MyHeritage DNA test to uncover your origins across more than 2,100 global regions – and maybe even find distant cousins you never knew you had. Try it now: – Build your family tree in minutes – Get DNA matches and historical records – Discover connections you never imagined You don't need a crown – just curiosity.


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
What is Chantaines in The Assassin?
The Prime Video series has been gripping viewers The Assassin only landed last week, but the show has already shot to the top of Prime Video in the UK as audiences binge through the thriller. The six-part series follows retired hit woman Julie Green (played by Keeley Hawes), who is pulled onto one last job - but there's more to it than she could ever have imagined. Adding another layer of complexity is that Julie's estranged son Edward Green (Freddie Highmore) has come to visit her after several years. What starts out as a run-of-the-mill job turns into something much bigger with Julie and Edward going on the run as they try to uncover the truth. The series from the makers of The Tourist and The Missing has left fans with many questions and surprise after realising one cast member's iconic role - here's the answer to two of the biggest mysteries of the show. What is Chantaines in The Assassin? The big mystery of the show was the word 'Chantaines' after Kayla Cross (Shalom Brune-Franklin) asked right from episode one what it all meant. Chantaines was the name of Kayla's mother's French poodle, which was in turn was named after a marmalade that she'd become obsessed with. However, Chantaines was actually the codeword for the hit Kayla's parents ordered on a French arms dealer Jean-Luc Bertrand. Aaron Cross (Alan Dale) and his wife ordered the hit to 'erase' Jean-Luc after they borrowed money from him when their lucrative company CGM fell on hard times during its early days. Details of Chantaines were in Kayla's mother's suicide note, which Aaron had tried to keep from his children. Sadly, the guilt of the ordered murder pushed her to take her own life, while Aaron was left living with their decision. Julie confirmed she had been assigned to the French Poodle hit, which also had another shocking twist and coincidence to it. Who is Edward's dad in The Assassin? There were plenty of red herrings before Edward's father was finally revealed. Edward's father was Jean-Luc, who was killed by Julie and the same arms dealer the Cross family had ordered the hit on. Julie had believed the house was empty apart from the arms dealer and was shocked to discover Jean-Luc's family, including his wife Marie (Gina Gershon) and infant son Florent were also in the property. Marie revealed to Edward that Julie had shot her in the head after killing Jean-Luc, believing she was dead. Julie had then heard Florent crying out and had kidnapped him, hoping to provide the child with a better and less dangerous life. So, she had lied to Edward/Florent to protect him from the truth. Despite getting shot, Marie had survived and remained in a coma before eventually coming to. She had vowed to take revenge on Julie and be reunited with her surrogate son Florent. Marie also confirmed she wasn't Edard's mother and never wanted children, so Jean-Luc had used a surrogate to have a child. The show ended with Edward/Florent going off to meet his real mother with Julie accompanying him and Kayla.


The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
Canal+ flags smaller line-up of films in 2025 but hails Paddington hit
French media giant Canal+ said fewer big films released in 2025 helped drag on sales for its studio arm, despite the success of blockbusters like Paddington In Peru and Bridget Jones. The company, which launched its shares on the London Stock Exchange last year, reported group revenues of 3.1 billion euros (£2.7 billion) for the first half of 2025. This was down 3.3% on the same period a year ago, driven by contracts coming to an end, including with Disney in France and the Uefa Champions League, it said. For the group's film and TV production business, which includes StudioCanal, revenues dipped by about 3% year on year. This was mainly because of a smaller line-up of films sold internationally over the first half of 2025, compared with 2024, which included the releases of Back To Black and Wicked Little Letters. But the impact of fewer releases was partly offset by the success of major films including Paddington In Peru, Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy, and We Live In Time. Canal+ said there had been 'record viewership' in cinema, series and live sports events across its regions over the period. The company floated on the London Stock Exchange in December in one of the biggest new listings for the City in several years. The decision for Paris-based Canal+ to list in London was hailed by Chancellor Rachel Reeves as a 'vote of confidence' in the UK's stock market. The company had 25.7 million subscribers at the end of June – about 1.2% fewer than it had the same time last year. It has been eyeing cost reductions across Europe which it hopes will boost profits. Maxime Saada, chief executive of Canal+, said: 'I am pleased with all we have accomplished at Canal+ since our listing. 'Our strategy of bringing our in-house content together with content from the world's best studios, sports competitions and streaming platforms, and super-aggregating it all on our enhanced Canal+ app for the benefit of our customers, provides us with a unique value proposition.'