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|summary=Orphaned prince Alamayu is brought from a warm and loving home in Abyssinia (Ethiopia) to the rigours of a Victorian public school, with its casual brutality, social divisions and rigid code of ethics.
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{{competition
|prize=a copy of ''The Prince Who Walked with Lions'' by Elizabeth Laird
|text=Three people will each win a copy of the book. For your chance to win just answer the following question:
 
What is the modern day name for Abyssinia?
 
|date=31 March 2012
}}
 
This book is closely based on the story of a real boy, Prince Alamayu of Abyssinia, whose short life was divided between his beloved African home and Britain, the country of the people who conquered his father's kingdom. In fact, his grave can still be seen at St George's Chapel, Windsor. For his first few years he was brought up surrounded by servants, luxury and power, with a loving mother and a fierce but adored warrior father. But the king, a despotic and, some would say, reckless man, challenged the might of the British Army by chaining up and imprisoning the European envoys sent to negotiate with him, simply because he found them irritating. This action led to the attack on his lands and consequently the downfall of the Abyssinian monarchy.