Entitled:
The Rise and Fall of the House of York is an unauthorised biography of Prince
Andrew, Duke of York and Sarah, Duchess of York by historical writer Andrew
Lownie.
It has
been published by HarperCollins on 14 August 2025.[1] Lownie conducted four
years of research and submitted 'numerous' Freedom of information requests for
the book. The book also examines Andrew's links with the convicted sex offender
and financier Jeffrey Epstein (1953–2019) which HarperCollins describes as
having "[begun] earlier, continued longer and were much more frequent than
reported".
The book,
whose title alludes to the rise and fall of the House of York, focuses on the
public and personal lives of Prince Andrew, Duke of York and Sarah, Duchess of
York. The new biography, which tells the story of "a spoilt prince unable
to connect and a duchess pushed by her insecurities into a desperate need to
maintain the attention her ‘royal’ status brought," is − according to the
author − based on court papers, freedom of information disclosures, interviews
with ex-staffers and correspondence.
Apart
from the positive statement that the prince showed authentic courage when he
flew helicopters in the Falklands war and the thoughtful statement of former
military comrades that behind the bright facade of the youthful sunny boy there
lay a lonely and insecure soul, the book hardly has a good word to say about
the prince whom it portrays as short-tempered, vain, arrogant and sex obsessed.
The author accuses the prince of "cruel" behavior towards the staff,
bullying, profanities and impossible demands.[4] According to the author, the
prince never found a way to transform his war heroism into a fulfilling
civilian role, neither personally nor professionally.
Lownie
claims Andrew and Sarah had both met Jeffrey Epstein prior to 1999, despite
Andrew's claims to the contrary.[2] He also raises the possibility of Epstein
passing information on Andrew and his other high-profile friends to Mossad,
Saudi Arabian authorities and Muammar Gaddafi's Libyan intelligence services.
Included
in these references to Jeffrey Epstein was the claim he had an intimate
relationship with Melania Trump (née Knauss) a year before she began dating
Donald Trump.[5] Among other topics discussed are Andrew's sexual habits,
including a trip to Thailand that involved more than 10 women a day going to
his hotel room over the course of his 4-day stay. Lownie also recounts an incident involving
Andrew reprimanding a palace employee for not using the proper name and title
when referring to his grandmother Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and calling
him a "fucking imbecile". Another employee recounted how he
would "explode one minute and then try to take it back the next."[6]
Also discussed within the book are Sarah's excessive spending habits, her debts
and failed ventures.
In the
book, Lownie alleges that Andrew's father Prince Philip had an affair with
Sarah's mother Susan Barrantes, later citing on a TV programme his
mother-in-law, whom he claimed was a friend of Barrantes, as the source. The
book also claims that Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex punched Andrew at a family
gathering in 2013 over comments that Andrew had made about him "behind his
back" and that Andrew had disparaged Harry and his wife Megan's
relationship in 2017. Harry subsequently stated that he and Andrew "have
never had a physical fight, nor did Prince Andrew ever make the comments he is
alleged to have made about the Duchess of Sussex to Prince Harry".
As
Britain's Special Representative for International Trade and Investment from
2001 to 2011, Andrew, according to Lownie, was not afraid to ask for gifts at
meetings with heads of state and government from Azerbaijan, Libya, and
Tunisia, including, on one occasion, a Fabergé egg. Above all, Lownie describes
how, in his opinion, "The Firm" covered things up out of a misguided
sense of loyalty over any accountability.
The
prevailing tone in most comments was that the biography essentially confirmed
and reinforced all the assessments and impressions that had long been
circulating about Prince Andrew in the public anyway, which is why journalists
mainly focused on the details of the Epstein connection. Kate Mansey, assistant
editor of The Times, called the book "a 400-page character
assassination" and described the deep dive into Andrew's relationship with
Epstein as the most "disturbing" part. Writing for The Independent,
Harry Mount argued that "the intensely private and upsetting revelations
in a new biography cannot be the start of a public rehabilitation" for
Andrew who came off as stupid, entitled and self-indulgent in the book.
In his
programme on GB News with Lownie as guest, Conservative politician and
commentator Jacob Rees-Mogg described the book as a "hatchet job" and
its claims "salacious gossip" and questioned the reliability of
Lownie's sources, in response to which the author said he had interviewed 300
people.
In his
review for The Telegraph, Christopher Howse gave the book two out of five stars
and similarly called into question various claims made within it, including the
allegation that Andrew had slept with half a dozen women before turning 13. He argued that "excess is the motif of Entitled," with the deadly
sins of lust and avarice attributed to Andrew, and binge eating and spending
sprees to Sarah, but the book failed to "get to the bottom of the
psychology of the Duke of York."

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