Proven for weeks and still live — safe to model.
Battle-tested: running 23/30 days across 1 GEO. Surviving this long usually means it's profitable enough to keep funding.
Running in a single market (United States) — a focused test, not a broad rollout yet.
- Seen 23/30 days
- 1 GEO
- Redirect chain checked
- LP host: factinate.com
Reverse-engineered from the live ad — longevity, GEOs, and the affiliate funnel behind it. Verified by following the redirect chain on Jun 14. Free, no login.
Funnel, reverse-engineered
The campaign behind this creative
← the actual path the money takes.
Creative
Factinate
Landing page
factinate.com
where it lands
Product / Offer: not detected
Tracker: not detected
Affiliate network: not detected
How we know: the tracker and affiliate network come from the live redirect chain we followed and fingerprinted hop by hop. Greyed nodes weren’t detected.
Active
running 23d · last seen 1d ago · 1 market
Running with a modest observed footprint so far.
Gravity
8/100
push pressure now · 30d index
Strength
21/100
overall scale · 30d index
Run
23d
last seen 1d ago
Markets
1
countries seen
Landing page
factinate.com
final host
Screenshot
—
not captured yet
Operator
—
unidentified
Network
Taboola
traffic source
Tragic Facts About Lady Jane Grey, The Nine Days Queen
Factinate@factinate
Jane Grey was perhaps one of the youngest queens ever publicly condemned. She was only 16 or 17 years old when it happened. Blindfolded, she hesitated and fumbled to find the block with her hands—as awkward teenagers often do.
Top 25% longevity in network
Days alive is a profitability proxy — advertisers don’t pay to run losers.
Seen in
Geo reach
Single-geo testa single marketPredominantly Tier 1, concentrated in North America — United States.
What the data shows
Factinate's Taboola creative has been running for 23 days across 1 country and first seen on May 21, 2026 and last seen on June 14, 2026. It has been observed in United States. The ad lands on factinate.com. On our 30-day observation series the creative has run in intermittent bursts over the last 30 days. Factinate is running 8 other creatives we have indexed, linked below for side-by-side comparison.
Creative headline: Tragic Facts About Lady Jane Grey, The Nine Days Queen. Indexed on Taboola by mediabuyer.
Landing-page intelligence
Landing page intelligence
Where this ad lands
The lander is the product — screenshot, redirect chain, offer, tech stack, and on-page text in one place.
Landing page not captured yet
Our crawler renders each advertiser’s funnel on a rolling schedule. Recently observed ads are queued first — check back to see the full-page screenshot.
Host
factinate.com
Path
/people/facts-lady-jane-grey-the-nine-days-queen
Full URL
https://www.factinate.com/people/facts-lady-jane-grey-the-nine-days-queen
Redirect chain
Chain not captured yet.
Final host: factinate.com. Hop-by-hop capture runs as a separate pipeline; ads observed in recent ingests get crawled first.
Tracking parameters
No query string on this URL.
Tracking setup · Taboola
Taboola passes site, site_id, campaign_id, campaign_item_id and click-id by default. Map those to your tracker's source/sub1-4 fields. Use {click_id} as your unique click identifier when posting back conversions.
?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}Default Taboola setup template: ?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}
Tech stack
No third-party monetization stack detected — this appears to be a direct landing page.
Landing page hubs
Landing page text
Show landing page text
Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-06-15
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Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-06-15
Tragic Facts About Lady Jane Grey, The Nine Days Queen HOME EDITORIAL LISTS PEOPLE ADVENTURERS ACTORS & ACTRESSES ARTISTS & WRITERS MUSICIANS ROYALTY SCANDAL-MAKERS SCIENTISTS & SCHOLARS PLACES CASTLES CITIES & COUNTRIES HAUNTED PLACES THE ANCIENT WORLD NATURE THINGS ENTERTAINMENT MYSTERIES HIDDEN HISTORIES SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY QUIZ NEWSLETTER VIDEO ABOUT ✕ ADVERTISE PARTNER FAQ CAREERS PRIVACY TERMS OF USE CONTRIBUTE ABOUT HOME EDITORIAL LISTS PEOPLE ADVENTURERS ACTORS & ACTRESSES ARTISTS & WRITERS MUSICIANS ROYALTY SCANDAL-MAKERS SCIENTISTS & SCHOLARS PLACES CASTLES CITIES & COUNTRIES HAUNTED PLACES THE ANCIENT WORLD NATURE THINGS ENTERTAINMENT MYSTERIES HIDDEN HISTORIES SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY LGBTQ QUIZ NEWSLETTER VIDEO ABOUT Tragic Facts About Lady Jane Grey, The Nine Days Queen Jul 7 PEOPLE Christine Tran Tucked quietly between the reigns of her cousins Edward VI and Mary I, Lady Jane Grey isn’t called the “Nine Days Queen” because her reign was long and prosperous. Her story has the basic ingredients of legend: her Protestant martyrdom, her brutal end, and her unlikely Cinderella-like ascension—right down to the (allegedly) abusive parents. These tropes have invited romantic artists and Protestant polemics alike to build the unlucky teen into the ultimate symbol of virgin sacrifice. Behind the legend, what was Jane Grey really like? Was she so passively a pawn? Could her dark fate have been prevented? Climb the scaffold with these 42 facts about Lady Jane Grey, England’s Nine Days Queen. Lady Jane Grey Facts 1. A Dubious Title If there's one reason why we're here today talking about her, it's because Lady Jane Grey holds an extremely dubious historical title. She's the queen with the shortest reign in history —just nine days, hence the nickname. She might have been the monarch with the shortest title in history if not for Louis-Antoine of France, who made it all of 20 minutes before abdicating. Wikipedia Advertisement 2. “Humble” Origins Despite the heights she would (briefly) reach, Jane was not born to an important branch of the royal family tree. At the time of her birth, her parents weren’t really public figures, so her early life is unrecorded. Historians still debate whether she was born in October 1537 in Leicestershire, or if it was sometime in late 1536 in London. What is certain: Jane was the eldest of three girls born to Henry Grey, the 3rd Marquess of Dorset, and Frances Brandon, a niece of Henry VIII. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement 3. Named in Your Foreboding Honor Jane Grey was likely named after the third wife of Henry VIII, Jane Seymour . Seymour was the mother of Edward VI, and Henry’s only wife to deliver a legitimate surviving son. Unfortunately, this older Jane passed shortly after childbirth. Wikipedia Advertisement 4. Not a Princess, But She Had Pedigree Jane’s maternal grandmother was the former Queen of France, Mary Tudor, who was also the younger sister of Henry VIII. After Mary’s first husband passed, she eloped with Henry’s own best friend, Charles Brandon. Mary and Charles had several children together, including Jane’s mother Frances. This royal lineage made Jane a grand-niece to Henry VIII and a direct descendant of the first Tudor king Henry VII. Wikipedia Advertisement 5. You Can Never Know Too Much Jane received one of the finest humanist educations for a lady of her day. She was fluent in French, Italian, Latin, and Greek—as was the fashion among learned ladies of the English Renaissance— but also in Hebrew. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement 6. I Like Big Books and I Cannot Lie While Jane loved her studies, she disliked sports and was not a hunting fan like her parents. One day, the visiting scholar Roger Ascham asked why she was inside instead of on the family hunting trip. The young girl replied that “their sport in the Parke is but a shadoe to the pleasure I find in Plato. Alas! Good folke, they never felt what trewe pleasurement.” In other words, “Plato is better than guns, my guy!” Needpix Advertisement 7. Back to the Drawing Board To the frustration of Tudor fan artists, no detailed report exists on Jane Grey’s physical appearance. But it wasn’t always like this: until 2010, historians made due with only one detailed account of her. A merchant supposedly witnessed her procession to the Tower of London. In his letter, he describes the teen queen as “very short and thin, but prettily shaped” with “nearly red” hair, “sparkling and reddish-brown eyes,” and freckled skin. Many Tudors were redheads, so his take seemed plausible enough—but there was a dark twist. In 2010, historians outed this letter as a fake. The face of Lady Jane Grey remains a mystery. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement 8. Royally Impossible Standards According to historians, Jane's parents were incredibly harsh , and it made her utterly miserable. Jane confided the pressure she was under to perform every little act perfectly. If she didn't, she was cruelly tormented and threatened, if not outright physically abused by her parents. She wrote that their taunts and abuse made her think that she was in hell. Shutterstock Advertisement 9. Harsh? It’s Debatable Lady Frances Brandon goes down in history as an abusive and cruel mother to Jane, even by 16th century standards, but it might not be true. In fact, writers revolve their accusations of abuse around that one account, wherein Jane complains about her parents. On one hand, one shouldn’t totally miscount her recall of “pinches, nips, bobs, and other ways” of punishment. However, no other accusations exist. This had led some scholars to more closely re-examine the accusations that Jane led an abuse-filled life. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement History's most fascinating stories and darkest secrets, delivered to your inbox daily. SUBSCRIBE Thank you! Error, please try again. 10. The Windfall of a Lifetime Although no one could have predicted it, Henry VIII’s Act of Succession (1544) changed Jane’s life forever . In the bill, the king famously re-inherited his daughters, Mary and Elizabeth. Additionally, he laid out that his sister’s descendants (i.e. Jane’s family) would inherit the throne in the event that all three of Henry’s kids passed before having heirs. No one thought this was going to happen (although it actually did later on), so placing Jane fourth in line was seen as more of an insurance policy than a reality to plan for. Welp. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement 11. Royal Model The nine-year-old Jane Grey was sent to the royal court as a ward of Queen Catherine Parr. Considering Parr's own great love of learning (and Protestant opinions), it’s not a stretch to assume her time there had some influence on Jane. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement 12. Matchmaker, Matchmaker In February 1547, Jane was sent to live with Parr and her new husband, Thomas Seymour. It’s believed her parents sent Jane there with hopes of marrying her to the king, Edward VI, as Seymour was the maternal uncle to the king. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement 13. Queens-in-Waiting When Jane moved in with Parr and Seymour, the young Princess Elizabeth Tudor was also living with her stepmother. Thus, it’s very likely these two book-loving future Queens of England were playmates. Wikimedia Commons Advertisement 14. Behind Closed Doors Jane had much in common with her cousin Elizabeth Tudor and might have enjoyed being ward to the similarly pious Queen Catherine. However, this bliss was not to last . Catherine’s new husband, Thomas Seymour, took an inappropriate interest in Elizabeth. His advances escalated as Catherine advanced in her pregnancy. Eventually, Catherine sent Elizabeth away. After this, we don’t know much about Jane’s interactions with her better-fated cousin. The Tudors, Showtime Networks Advertisement 15. Loss of a Surrogate Lady Jane Grey had already seen upheaval in her life after being sent from her parents' home to live with Catherine Parr, and then seeing young Elizabeth Tudor depart—but the tumult didn't stop th…
Text scraped from the landing page for research purposes. © respective owners. This text is sourced from the advertiser's public landing page; for removal, contact dmca@luba.media.
Observed daily (last 30 days)
Apr 25 → May 24·peaks May 21
30-day run pattern
PulsedIntermittent runs with quiet stretches — likely paused for budget cycles or rotation against fresher creatives.
- Coverage
- 7% of 30d
- Peak surge
- 1× vs median
- Last 7d
- 3
- WoW
- new
Peak day:
Window: Apr 25 → May 24
Sibling creatives from this campaign
Other creatives in Other on Taboola
The rest of the set they’re running — see what else this angle is paired with.
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Tested headline variants8
Tested headline variants
Factinate's own A/B test — which headline they kept
The advertiser’s own A/B result, handed over: ranked by days running, the survivor on top. Variants they stopped running are struck through — they tested and killed those angles.
- #1The Most Terrifying Frontman In Rock and Roll60d4 content tokens
- #2Undeniable Facts About Michael Jackson, The King Of Pop60d7 content tokens
- #3Chilling Facts About Edward VI, The Doomed Son Of Henry VIII59d9 content tokens
- #4This Scandalous First Lady Kept Many Secrets59d6 content tokens
More from Factinate8
More from Factinate
Henry II Of France Was History's Worst Husband? HOME EDITORIAL LISTS PEOPLE…
factinate.comEdward VI Of England Was A Spoiled Brat With A Vicious Temper HOME EDITORIAL…
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