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Friday, February 19, 2021

The Queen has relinquished Harry and Meghan of their honorary military appointments and Royal Patronages:

 



Buckingham Palace statement on The Duke and Duchess of Sussex



Published 19 February 2021

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have confirmed to Her Majesty The Queen that they will not be returning as working members of The Royal Family.  

Following conversations with The Duke, The Queen has written confirming that in stepping away from the work of The Royal Family it is not possible to continue with the responsibilities and duties that come with a life of public service. The honorary military appointments and Royal patronages held by The Duke and Duchess will therefore be returned to Her Majesty, before being redistributed among working members of The Royal Family.
 
While all are saddened by their decision, The Duke and Duchess remain much loved members of the family.





Notes to editors: 

Following The Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s decision to step away last year as working members of The Royal Family, a 12-month review was agreed.

A decision has now been made after conversations between The Duke of Sussex and Members of The Royal Family. 

The military, Commonwealth and Charitable associations which will revert to The Queen are:

The Royal Marines, RAF Honington, Royal Navy Small Ships and Diving.

The Queen's Commonwealth Trust, The Rugby Football Union, The Rugby Football League, The Royal National Theatre and The Association of Commonwealth Universities.

Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Queen gives up on dark chocolate for Lent

 


Today is Ash Wednesday, a Christian holy day of prayer and the first day of Lent.


Many Christians fast or give something up to remember Jesus Christ's trial in the Judean Desert, in which He fasted and was tempted for 40 days and 40 nights by Satan. 


A former chef to the Queen, Darren McGrady, told OK Magazine that Her Majesty particularly enjoys dark chocolate, and gives this up for the duration of Lent. 


 "Her Majesty loves chocolate, but particularly dark chocolate.


"She gives it up for Lent and then looks forward to tucking into her favourite Bendicks Bittermints", he said.


He continued, saying that once Lent was over, boxes of the Queen's favourite chocolate would be provided for everyone to have a nibble on.


And these aren't the only chocolate treats that are enjoyed over the Easter weekend, the team in the kitchen at Windsor Castle also make their own Easter eggs too.


"Those for the adults would be decorated in pretty sugared flowers and placed on the table, so people could break off pieces," explained McGrady.


"There were no Easter egg hunts back then but we’d make special novelty eggs for the children."

Harry ‘upset’ as Queen ‘backs royal patronage removal’ after Oprah interview



 Prince Harry is said to be ‘upset’ after the Queen agreed he should be stripped of his honorary military titles and patronages, reports say.

It comes amid concern they could be used by TV bosses to promote his Netflix documentaries and talk show appearances in the US.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are expected to lose all the official positions they kept after stepping down as working royals last year, The Sun reports. 

This would include Harry’s beloved title as captain general of the Royal Marines, and potentially his patronages with the Rugby Football Union, Rugby Football League and the London Marathon, according to the Daily Mail.

Meanwhile Meghan, 39, would have to step down as patron of the National Theatre, which the Queen had previously been for 45 years.

It is understood the decision to strip the couple of their last remaining royal titles is not being done as a retaliation to a ’tell-all’ interview with Oprah Winfrey.

Meghan is expected to be the focus of the interview with Oprah, who is a close friend and attended their wedding in 2018.

Harry is expected to appear at the end to talk about his family and new life, following the news that they are expecting their second child.

Oprah Winfrey
Oprah Winfrey will interview the couple (Picture: Getty)

A former friend of the Duke told The Sun: ‘There is no secret that Americans love a Brit in army uniform. Harry is far more marketable pictured with his Army uniform at events in the UK than as a bloke in a shirt and chinos.’

But a source said: ‘There would always be a suspicion military titles and patronages could end up being used on a documentary or television show somewhere.

‘Is this picture going to be used to promote something next time he has something coming out?

‘There will always be that doubt. You can’t allow people to accuse you of doing it for your own interests. It’s unworkable.’

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
Meghan and Harry quit life as senior royals almost a year ago (Picture: EPA)

It is believed the programme has already been recorded and will air on CBS next month.

The 90-minute show will see the pair speak publicly about their decision to leave Britain.

The interview will be staged in two parts, with Meghan first speaking about everything from ‘stepping into life as a royal, marriage, motherhood, philanthropic work to how she is handling life under intense public pressure’.


She will then be joined by Harry and the couple will speak about their move last year and their future ‘hopes and dreams for their expanding family’.

Buckingham Palace declined to comment about the interview, which will be aired six weeks before the Queen’s 95th birthday and in advance of celebrations for Prince Philip’s 100th.




Saturday, February 6, 2021

Queen Elizabeth II embarks on her 70th year as Monarch Today February 6th








It is exactly 69years since Princess Elizabeth, on a trip to Kenya, became Queen. What were the events that followed, and how prepared was the 25-year-oldIt was February 1952 and Princess Elizabeth was enjoying a short break in Kenya with Prince Philip, her husband of five years. It was a brief respite from their royal duties.

They were standing in for George VI on a long-planned international tour that was to also take in Australia and New Zealand. The 56-year-old King, thousands of miles away at Sandringham, had been too ill to travel.

The pair were relaxing at a game-viewing lodge, at the now-famous Treetops Hotel just over 100 miles (165km) from Nairobi. Elizabeth had spent the day of 5 February taking cine films of elephants at a nearby watering hole before retiring with the Duke of Edinburgh to their cabin high up in the trees. They spent the night surrounded by wild animals.






And it was here on 6 February, that the princess became Queen, after George VI passed away in his sleep.

The British hunter Jim Corbett, who was also staying at Treetops at the time, later wrote the now famous lines in the visitors' log book:

"For the first time in the history of the world, a young girl climbed into a tree one day a Princess and after having what she described as her most thrilling experience she climbed down from the tree next day a Queen."

At the time, however, Elizabeth had no knowledge of the event that was to change her life.

Because their location was so remote, the news of the King' s death took some time to reach the royal party. It came first to a senior courtier, who passed it to the princess's private secretary, Martin Charteris, who then telephoned Prince Philip's aide.

Elizabeth had returned to Sagana Lodge, a farm some 20 miles (32km) away that had been given to her by the Kenyan government as a wedding present, when Philip eventually broke the news to her.

After what would undoubtedly have been an emotional walk in the grounds with her husband, the 25-year-oldwho had become Queenput aside her grief to write letters apologising for cancelling the rest of her tour. Arrangements were made for her to return home immediately.





From Nairobi, theBBC's Frank Gillardfiled a report. "How tragic to think that even this morning, as she sat at breakfast, talking about her father, and proudly describing how bravely he'd stood up to his illness, how well he'd recovered - sitting there in her yellow bush shirt and brown slacks - even at that moment her father was lying dead and she had succeeded to his vast responsibilities."

Robert Lacey, author of A Brief Life of the Queen, says she would have been prepared for the news, even if her father's death from a coronary thrombosis was a shock.

"Her private secretary carried sealed envelopes containing a draft Accession Declaration. She was ready but it was a secret that was shared with few people."

It is said that she reacted stoically, and showed little immediate distress. "She was sitting erect, fully accepting her destiny," Martin Charteris is quoted as saying in Lacey's book. No-one saw any tears.

But royal historian and biographer Sarah Bradford is sure that she would have cried later, in private.

"Although she didn't show it in public, she absolutely adored him. They were very close. He was the one who brought her up in the ways of the monarch. She read state papers when she was still a princess. She saw heads of state in an informal way."





George VIhad waved off his daughter and her husband at London Airport on 31 January. He had had a series of operations for cancer, and his health was failing.

Princess Elizabeth had been carrying out more and more of his engagements, such as greeting foreign dignitaries andriding in the King's placefor the Trooping the Colour.

On a wet and cold February day, special black-bordered editions of the newspapers appeared on the streets of London, announcing George VI's death, at the age of 56.

The news of a royal death was very controlled in those days, says historian Hugo Vickers - who acted as a consultant for the film The King's Speech.

"They had a code at Sandringham which was 'Hyde Park Corner'. The private secretary in Sandringham rang Buckingham Palace and got the private secretary there. He would have said 'Hyde Park Corner' which meant that the King had died.

"That was his cue to go and see Queen Mary, and then Churchill to inform them of the news. All these people had to be told before it could be officially announced.

"He was a highly respected monarch, who'd had an awful reign. He had come to the throne unprepared, gone through the war, and then his health broke down. His death would have been much less sensational than it might be today, but the mood was more respectful - it wasn't a time for speculation."

Valerie Lowe, from Herefordshire, was 12 years old when George VI died. "We were in the art room at school when we saw the union jack being hoisted to half-mast.

"We started wondering who might have died. One imaginative child suggested that Princess Elizabeth might have been eaten by a lion on her safari.

"I don't think any of us guessed it was the King, in spite of knowing that he was in poor health. Then we were summoned to the school hall and given the news. We all felt very solemn, but also excited at the thought of the beautiful young Princess Elizabeth becoming Queen."

Princess Elizabeth formally proclaimed herself Queen and Head of the Commonwealth and Defender of the Faith on 8 February, at a 20-minute meeting at St James's Palace.

One hundred and fifty Lords of the Council, representatives from the Commonwealth, officials from the City of London and other dignitaries witnessed the Accession.

From her official proclamation Queen Elizabeth II read: "By the sudden death of my dear father I am called to assume the duties and responsibilities of sovereignty.

"My heart is too full for me to say more to you today than I shall always work, as my father did throughout his reign, to advance the happiness and prosperity of my peoples, spread as they are all the world over."

When George VI died, there were only around 1.5m television sets in a population of about 50m. Most people would have heard the news on the wireless, on the BBC's Home Service, or the popular Light Programme.

"The way the media covers royal events has completely changed. [Elizabeth's] father's funeral was, for her, a very private occasion," says Sarah Bradford.

George VI's body lay in state for three days in Westminster Hall. Some 300,000 people filed by to pay their respects, and he was buried in St George's Chapel, Windsor, on 15 February.

His funeral procession was televised, an event which helped to spark the first wave of mass television purchases.

But the funeral service was broadcast by sound only. At the time television was still seen as rather a vulgar medium by the establishment, and it would have been deemed to be an intrusion. The then Archbishop of Canterbury labelled it as "potentially one of the great dangers of the world".

The Queen's Coronation on 2 June 1953 (a day estimated by meteorologists to be the likeliest to produce sunshine that summer - although, of course, it rained) would be the first such event to be properly televised, and the first to be genuinely witnessed by the people.

Additional reporting: Melissa Hogenboom




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