PETER Phillips was the eldest grandchild of the late Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip and is often seen a milestone royal events.
Princess Anne‘s son Peter and her daughter, Zara, did not inherit royal titles and are not being working members of the Royal Family.
2
The Queen’s eldest grandson, Peter Phillips, with ex-wife AutumnCredit: AP
Who is Peter Phillips?
Peter Phillips was born to Princess Anne and her first husband Captain Mark Phillips on November 15, 1977, at St Mary’s Hospital.
As hereditary titles are passed down through the male line, and Captain Phillips does not have a royal title, Peter did not inherit a royal title at birth.
Peter’s parents rejected an offer from the Queen of titles, which would have enabled their children to be born into peerage.
It’s thought that they wanted their child to have the chance to lead a normal life.
Royal insiders have previously said that Peter was the Queen’s “favourite” grandson.
While they are related to the British Royal Family, Peter and Zara have never carried out royal duties.
A statement issued on their behalf said: “After informing HM The Queen and members of both families last year, Peter and Autumn jointly agreed to separate.
Royal Family roles explained
“They had reached the conclusion that this was the best course of action for their two children and ongoing friendship.
“The decision to divorce and share custody came about after many months of discussions and although sad, is an amicable one.
“The couple’s first priority will remain the continued well being and upbringing of their wonderful daughters Savannah (nine) and Isla (seven).
“Both families were naturally sad at the announcement, but fully supportive of Peter and Autumn in the joint decision to co-parent their children.”
“Both Peter and Autumn have remained in Gloucestershire to bring up their two children where they have been settled for a number of years.”
How many children do Peter Phillips and Lindsay Wallace have?
Peter is a father of two daughters from his marriage with Autumn – Savannah and Isla.
Savannah is Queen Elizabeth’s first great-grandchild, born on December 29, 2010, at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital.
She is 19th in line to the throne.
On March 29, 2012, the couple’s second daughter, Isla Elizabeth, was born at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital, making her 20th in line to the throne.
Peter and Kelly divorced in June 2021.
Lindsay also has two children from her previous marriage.
Peter and Lindsay do not share any children together.
Has Lindsay Wallace been married?
Lindsay is separated from her husband Andrew.
It is not known if the couple are divorced with reports in 2022 saying they were still married.
Royal Family roles explained
Who are Lindsay Wallace’s parents?
Linday’s father Keith was born in May 1960 and has been described as “an oil tycoon”.
He founded EPC Offshore which was taken over by Costain Group.
A source said: “Her father worked in the oil industry and the family pride themselves on being a Christian family who are pillars of their local community.”
No information is known about her mother, but Lindsay does have siblings as in an interview with Energy Voice in 2014, Keith talks about his son and daughters.
2
Lindsay and Peter grew close after a school reunion, following the breakdown of both of their previous marriagesCredit: Arthur Edwards / The Sun
Princess Theodora died just five weeks before her mother in 1969Credit: Getty Images – Getty
The second daughter in the family was Theodora, who was born on May 30, 1906, and died on October 16, 1969, when she was 63 years old.
Theodora married her paternal second cousin, Berthold, Margrave of Baden, in 1931, and they had three children together.
She died just five weeks before her mother, Princess Alice, who passed away on December 5, 1969.
Alice had been invited by Philip and the Queen to live in Buckingham Palace before passing away aged 84.
Princess Cecilie Of Greece And Denmark
7
Cecilie tragically died in a plane crash in 1937Credit: Alamy
Philip’s third sister was Cecilie, who was born on June 22, 1911.
Tragically she was the first of Prince Andrew and Princess Alice’s children to die.
Cecilie was just 26 when she died in a plane crash on November 16, 1937.
The flight had been going from Darmstadt to London, and it later emerged that pregnant Cecilie gave birth while on the plane.
A Belgian enquiry concluded that the captain had tried to do an emergency landing in bad weather due to the labour.
Her husband, Georg Donatus, Hereditary Grand Duke of Hesse, and two of Cecilie’s other children – sons Ludwig (aged 6) and Alexander (aged 4) – also perished on the flight.
Cecilie’s daughter Johanna, who was not on the flight, was adopted by another member of the royal family, but died of meningitis two years later.
Princess Sophie Of Greece And Denmark
7
Princess Sophie was married twice, and had eight children in totalCredit: Getty Images – Getty
Philip’s closest sibling in age was Sophie, who was born on June 26, 1914, and died at the age of 87 on November 24, 2001.
Sophie’s first marriage was to Prince Christoph of Hesse when she was just 16, and she was the first of Philip’s siblings to tie the knot.
The couple had five children together, but Christoph was tragically killed in an airplane accident in a war zone near Forlì, Italy, on October 7, 1943, and his body was found two days later.
Sophie’s second marriage was to Prince George William of Hanover, but the union was controversial.
Although King George VI gave permission for the couple to marry, consent was later withheld due to the UK being at war with Germany at the time.
This is the only known case of marriage permission being rejected by a British monarch.
Despite this, Sophie and George later married without monarch consent and went on to have three children.
7
Left to right: Princess Cecilie, Princess Margarita, and Princess Theodora with Princess Sophie standing in frontCredit: Getty Images – Getty
Was Philip close to his sisters?
Prince Philip had a famously turbulent childhood and was forced to flee Greece in 1922 when his father, Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark, feared he would be executed during a military coup.
The family fled to France, but were soon separated, with Philip being sent to the MacJannet American School before moving to the UK to study at Cheam School.
His sisters later largely lived in Germany and all married German aristocrats.
7
Prince Philip’s parents, Prince Andrew and Princess AliceCredit: Getty Images – Getty
Not much is known about his relationship with his sisters, but he and Sophie were said to be close.
Edward and his family are often seen making appearances at royal events and rubbing shoulders with their more famous family members, but what was life like for Prince Edward growing up?
We take a look back through the archives that show Prince Edward as a young boy and teen, before he headed off to join the Royal Marines and make a name for himself in TV production.
Here’s everything you need to know:
30
Edward is the youngest of The Queen and Prince Philip’s four children – pictured here with his older siblings Charles, Andrew, and Anne in 1965Credit: Getty
He is 16 years younger than his oldest brother King Charles.
It’s believed that Edward’s birth was the first that Prince Philip was there to witness – and the first royal father in history to be at a birth – after the Queen asked him to be there, according to the book My Husband And I: The Inside Story Of 70 Years Of Royal Marriage.
Edward, who was born on March 10, 1964, and is 16 years younger than his oldest brother Charles, pictured at The British Driving Society’s Annual Competition In Windsor in 1970Credit: Rex
30
Prince Edward, pictured as a boy in a carriage at Windsor, grew up loving horses and reportedly learnt how to ride a pony at two years oldCredit: Rex
30
Black and white photos from the archives show him looking after the Queen’s corgis, while with his mother and brother Andrew at Liverpool Street Train Station in 1971Credit: Rex
What was Prince Edward like as a young child?
It’s fair to say that Edward had a pretty unconventional childhood growing up.
It’s claimed he learnt how to ride a pony when he was just two years old and he was minded by a governess, just like his siblings.
His governess taught him early on at Buckingham Palace before he headed off to school.
30
He had an unconventional childhood growing up in the Palace – seen here with the Queen and Prince Andrew in 1970Credit: Rex
30
At five, Edward – seen here at Smith’s Lawn for the polo – reportedly told Neil Armstrong he wanted to be an astronautCredit: Rex
30
Edward, pictured shopping at Harrods in 1971, was looked after and taught from an early age at Buckingham Palace by a governessCredit: Rex
30
When he was old enough, Edward – seen here with his mother and brother Andrew, who was closest in age to him – headed to school in KensingtonCredit: Rex
By the time he was five, Edward had personally met Neil Armstrong – the first person to walk on the moon – and told him he too wanted to be an astronaut, according to The Sunday Post
Black and white photos show Edward always dressed in his Sunday best and enjoying family trips, hanging out with horses and helping to look after the Queen’s beloved corgis.
Where did Prince Edward go to school?
Edward spent his early years being taught at Buckingham Palace.
He then headed to Gibbs School in Kensington before enrolling at Heatherdown School, near Ascot, in 1972.
30
Edward, pictured on his first day at Gibb School in 1971, before later being educated at Gordonstoun – a boarding school in northern ScotlandCredit: Rex
30
Edward’s was the only birth Prince Philip was reportedly at- seen here with the Queen, Prince Philip, Andrew and corgis on a tour of the gardens of Windsor Castle in 1973Credit: Rex
30
A young Edward, pictured fourth from left, with his dad Prince Philip, Princess Anne, Captain Mark Phillips, the Queen, Prince Andrew and Prince Charles at the 1976 Quebec Olympics, in CanadaCredit: Rex
30
Throwback pictures see Edward spending time with his mother Queen Elizabeth II as a boy at Badminton in 1971Credit: Rex
30
Since he was little, he has appeared alongside HRH at public events – seen here again with the Queen at Badminton Horse Trials in 1978Credit: Rex
30
Prince Edward at The Montreal Olympic Games in 1976, along with his mum and two older brothers Prince Andrew and Prince CharlesCredit: Rex
30
Edward was a head boy at schoolCredit: Rex
30
Edward received his gold medal Duke Of Edinburgh Award from his father Prince Philip in 1986Credit: PA:Press Association
30
Edward, playing rugby in 1983, took a gap year after school before heading to Cambridge UniversityCredit: Rex
30
Edward, pictured at the Royal Horse Show in 1982, worked as a house tutor at a school in New ZealandCredit: Rex
30
Rugby player Edward studied a history degree at Jesus College at Cambridge UniCredit: Rex
30
Edward graduated from university in 1986, before heading off to join the Royal MarinesCredit: Rex
Following in the footsteps of his older brothers and dad Philip, Edward then moved to Gordonstoun – a boarding school in northern Scotland – where he later became head boy.
Before heading to university, Edward took a gap year to work abroad in New Zealand as a house tutor for two terms at a school.
He then attended Cambridge University and graduated from Jesus College with a history degree in 1986.
What jobs did Prince Edward do as a young man?
After university, Edward enlisted in the Royal Marines – he had been a university cadet for three years, but quit just three months into the military’s 12-month training programme.
30
Edward always had an interest in theatre and television – seen here manning the laser light display at the Royal TournamentCredit: Rex
30
Straight from uni Edward, pictured receiving weapons training at Lympstone in 1987, enrolled in the Royal Marines, who reportedly paid £12k for his tuitionCredit: LNS: London News Service
30
He quit the Royal Marines after completing three months of its 12-month training programme – seen here in uniform at RAF BensonCredit: Getty
30
Following his time in the military, Edward pursued his love of theatre, seen here on stage in costume in 1985Credit: Rex
30
He worked as a production assistant on musicals for Andrew Lloyd-WebberCredit: Rex
30
Edward later set up his own production company titled Ardent ProductionsCredit: Rex
30
Edward, seen recording for the Royal Tournament in 1984, produced documentaries and dramas in the UK and the USCredit: Rex
30
After a decade as director of the company, Edward stepped down to become a full-time working royal – pictured here at Ascot in 1984Credit: Rex
30
Edward, pictured with Prince Andrew on VJ day in London in 1995, carried out duties for the Queen and now King Charles, taking over a lot of public duties after his dad Prince Philip stepped back from public lifeCredit: Times Newspapers Ltd
The Royal Marines allegedly paid £12,000 for Edward’s tuition fees on the condition that he served five years after he graduated.
Philip had been serving as the Captain General Royal Marines at the time and while some reports say he “reduced Edward to tears” after he decided to quit, others go against this and say Philip was actually the most “sympathetic”.
Following his time in the Royal Marines, Edward went on to pursue a career in theatre and television, and worked as a production assistant on musicals like The Phantom Of The Opera and Cats for Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Your Prince Edward questions answered
In 1993, he created his own production company, Ardent Productions, to produce documentaries and dramas.
Nearly a decade later in 2002, Edward stepped down as the company’s director to become a full-time working royal and carry out his duties for his mother, the Queen.
KING Charles and his wife Queen Camilla were married in April 2005.
Both of them had been wed before, and have children from their past relationships – with her son and daughter being out of the limelight unlike their step-siblings Prince William and Prince Harry.
3
Queen Camilla seen with her children Thomas and Laura Parker BowlesCredit: Getty
Tom is a British food writer, food critic and author of seven cookbooks – in 2010, he won the Guild of Food Writers 2010 award for his writings on British food.
During his time in education, Parker Bowles was educated at Summer Fields School in Oxford and Heywood Preparatory School in Corsham, before going on to study at Eton College and Worcester College, Oxford.
Parker Bowles states that immediately after leaving school, he fell in love with food writing, and it was his mother’s cooking skills and recipes that inspired him to become a food writer.
He is also known for his appearances as a judge in numerous television food series and for his reviews of restaurant meals around the UK and overseas for GQ, Esquire, and The Mail on Sunday.
Your Queen Camilla questions answered
He shares two children from a previous marriage associate editor of Harpers & Queen magazine and senior editor of British Town & Country magazine, Sara Buys.
Uniquely, King Charles is both his stepfather and godfather.
Laura Lopes
3
Laura Lopes is an English art curatorCredit: Getty Images – Getty
Laura Rose Lopes, born January 1, 1978, is the second child of Camilla and Andrew – and the stepdaughter of King Charles III.
She is an English art curator and co-founding partner and gallery director of London’s Eleven gallery.
Lopes was educated at St Mary’s Shaftesbury, a Catholic girls boarding school in Dorset, before attending Heywood Preparatory School in Corsham, alongside her brother.
She later attended Oxford Brookes University, where she studied History of Art and Marketing.
Laura is married to chartered accountant Harry Marcus George Lopes, after the pair wed in May 2006.
The wedding took place at St Cyriac’s Church, an 11th-century Anglican church in Lacock, Wiltshire – where Lopes wore a wedding dress by Anna Valentine, the designer known for designing her mother’s dress for her wedding to the Prince of Wales in 2005.
Laura and her husband share three children, daughter Eliza and twin sons Gus and Louis.
Even though Sarah and Prince separated in 1992 and divorced in 1996 they continue to live at Royal Lodge in Windsor together.
Their close friendship and living situation has meant the former couple have often been plagued by rumours that they will one day reunite romantically – something Sarah appears to have not ruled out.
“All I can say is that we’re happy with the way we are right now,” she teased when quizzed about their relationship in an interview with The Telegraph.
“We always say we are the most contented divorced couple in the world. We’re divorced to each other, not from each other,” she added.
“We are co-parents who support each other and believe that family is everything. I’m proud of the job we have done together in bringing up our children and sustaining a strong family unit. Our bywords are communication, compromise and compassion.”
Both of their children are all grown up now, and have kids of their own.
They called him Ernest George Ronnie Brooksbank, revealing their son’s name was inspired by “his great-great grandfather George, his grandpa George and my grandpa Ronald”.
Penelope has been so much a part of royal life, household staff have nicknamed her And AlsoCredit: Alpha Press
7
Penelope has been a trusted member of the Royal Family’s inner circle for years and bonded with Philip through their love of carriage-drivingCredit: PA
The Countess Mountbatten of Burma — 32 years younger than the late Duke of Edinburgh, who died in April 2021 aged 99 — has been a trusted member of the Royal Family’s inner circle for years and bonded with Philip through their love of carriage driving.
She was the only non-family member at Philip’s small, Covid-restricted funeral, except for his personal secretary.
Indeed, she has been so much a part of royal life, household staff nicknamed her “And Also”, because whenever Philip listed guests who were to be invited to a royal do, he would end with “and also Penny”.
When Philip was involved in a car accident near the Queen’s Norfolk retreat of Sandringham in January 2019, Her Majesty dispatched Penny to encourage the duke to surrender his driver’s licence.
Ingrid Seward, author of biography Prince Philip Revealed: A Man Of His Century, said: “The Queen had enlisted the help of the Countess Mountbatten of Burma, who visited Philip and helped convince him to give up driving.”
Three weeks after the accident, which Philip blamed on him being blinded by the low winter sun, it was announced he had stopped driving.
The Truman Show actress Natascha McElhone plays Penny in The Crown, with veteran actor Jonathan Pryce taking over from Tobias Menzies as Philip.
A TV insider said: “The highly personal relationship is unlikely to be welcomed as a storyline by the Queen or the rest of the Royal Family.”
Penny was introduced to Philip at age 20 while dating husband-to-be Norton Knatchbull, Philip’s godson and grandson of the duke’s uncle Lord Mountbatten.
Norton had been a year above the then-Prince Charles at Scottish boarding school Gordonstoun and the Queen and Philip never forgot his kindness in looking after their eldest child during his challenging time there.
Back then, Penny was simply Penelope Eastwood, daughter of Reg Eastwood, a wealthy butcher turned businessman who founded the Angus Steakhouse restaurants.
Tragedy befell the family in 1979 when Lord Mountbatten — affectionately known by the royals as Uncle Dickie — was assassinated by the IRA.
The bomb blast on board his fishing boat off County Sligo, Ireland, which featured in the last series of The Crown, also killed Norton’s 14-year-old brother Nicholas and his grandmother, Lady Brabourne.
Devastated by this horror, Penny and Norton decided to postpone their wedding for two months.
When they did tie the knot, with Charles as best man, they inherited Mountbatten’s 18th-century, 60-room Broadlands estate near Romsey, Hants, where Charles and Di would spend part of their honeymoon two years later.
‘Tremendous support’
With Philip and Penny, who was previously known as Lady Romsey then Lady Brabourne, it was a meeting of the minds.
Educated in Switzerland, and with a business degree from the London School of Economics, friends describe her as being “outgoing, engaged, clever and well-read”.
She and the duke also both shared a “boisterous sense of humour”, according to Ingrid. But it was after Penny’s five-year-old daughter Leonora died of kidney cancer in 1991 that Philip really began to take her under his wing.
One source said: “He was a tremendous support during a time of unimaginable grief.”
He encouraged Penny to take up his sport of carriage driving, to distract her, and got his head groom Micky Flynn to show her the ropes.
For Philip, it meant he gained an attractive companion to events such as the Royal Windsor Horse Show and at numerous social gatherings associated with the sport and beyond.
They were even spotted dancing together at the Royal Yacht Squadron Ball during one Cowes Week. Of course, incidents like this on the Isle of Wight only fuelled whispers that they may have been more than just good friends.
It was even rumoured Prince Charles had cut off his friendship with Penny after someone close to him shared their suspicion that his father was having an affair with her.
But author Ingrid said: “We’ll never know how the Queen felt about it all. Philip always was a flirt and the Queen used to joke about his lascivious nature. If she had been hurt by rumours of supposed dalliances, she would never let on.”
Philip himself would simply laugh off any suggestion of impropriety. He told journalist Jeremy Paxman: “Every time I talk to a woman they say I’ve been to bed with her. It’s absolutely cuckoo.”
‘Absolutely cuckoo’
Penny’s marriage broke down in 2010, after 31 years and three children. Her husband Norton, now the 3rd Earl Mountbatten of Burma, fled to the Caribbean to be with fashion designer Eugenie Nuttall. Jeannie, as she is known, is the sister of former Bahamas Attorney General Sean McWeeney.
Penny, left to manage her and Norton’s 5,000-acre Hampshire estate alone, reportedly gathered together all the staff while her estranged husband was mid-flight and told them he had gone but everything else would stay the same.
One source said at the time: “Not for a moment would Penny allow her husband’s departure to interrupt the smooth running of the estate.”
There was never any question she would leave Broadlands, where every day she visits the tall stone monument, about 100 yards from the house, which stands above her daughter Leonora’s grave.
The Royal Family, in particular The Queen, were full of admiration for Penny’s stoicism. She did allow Norton back to Broadlands in 2014, not to the marital home, but to a converted barn there.
Her marriage troubles came on top of worry about their son, Nicholas, who was a year above Prince William at Eton, and had spent years hooked on crack cocaine and heroin. It was only when he feared he would be cut off from the family’s £100million fortune that he checked into rehab and kicked his habits.
In May 2021, tattooed Nicholas, 40, a music producer and gardener, married Ambre Pouzet, a French former fire-eating mermaid performer. The civil ceremony at Broadlands was a far cry from his sister Alexandra’s lavish 2016 wedding at Romsey Abbey, in which she was given away by the now-King Charles, as her father, The Queen and Philip watched.
A family friend said: “It’s very unusual to be given away by someone else at your wedding, even if it is by the Prince of Wales. Alexandra was at the time furious with her father for leaving her mother, but of course she still wanted him at the wedding.”
Alexandra, a financial analyst known as Knatch, chose to marry Thomas Hooper, an entrepreneur, on what would have been her sister Leonora’s 30th birthday. By coincidence, Leonora shared the same birthday as Uncle Dickie.
The day after Philip was laid to rest at St George’s Chapel, Windsor, Irish republican partySinn Fein — the political wing of the IRA — apologised for Mountbatten’s assassination. Penny continued to visit Philip until he died on April 9.
She was one of the only people apart from family members who he saw at Wood Farm, the five-bedroom home on the Sandringham estate where he spent most of his time after he retired from royal duties in 2017.
Ingrid says: “They were brought together by tragedy but were there for each other through thick and thin. He trusted her implicitly and she adored him. She never betrayed him. She was a keeper not only of his secrets but those of the family.”
Penny returned to the Royal Windsor Horse Show without her decades-long comp-anion for the first time. She was seen standing behind the Queen, broad grins on both their faces.
If Philip had been looking down on them, he surely would have been smiling too.
7
Jonathan Pryce as Prince Phillip and Natascha McElhone as Penny Knatchbull in The CrownCredit: NETFLIX
7
Penny was the only non-family at Philip’s small, Covid-restricted funeral, except for his personal secretaryCredit: Getty
7
Penny and Prince Charles pictured in 1983Credit: Alpha Press
7
The pair mount their motorbikes during the Royal Windsor Horse Show at Home Park, Windsor Castle on May 13, 2005Credit: Getty
7
Philip and Penny at Royal Windsor Horse Show in 2009Credit: Getty
THE Queen Mother was the late Queen Elizabeth’s mum and a much-loved national treasure.
Here’s everything you need to know about the great royal matriarch.
1
Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother on her 50th birthdayCredit: Getty – Contributor
Who was the Queen Mother?
The Queen Mother was born on August 4, 1900.
In 1923 she married Prince Albert.
She became Queen Elizabeth after Prince Albert’s brother King Edward VIII abdicated the throne on December 11, 1936.
Edward wanted to marry American divorcée Wallis Simpson, but as King he was head of the Church of England, which at that time did not allow divorced people to remarry.
READ MORE ON THE QUEEN MOTHER
Rather than abandon his plans to wed Simpson, he chose to abdicate in favour of Albert, who became King in his place on December 11, 1936 under the name of George VI.
King George VI and Elizabeth were crowned King and Queen of Great Britain, Ireland and the British Dominions, and Emperor and Empress of India in Westminster Abbey on May 12, 1937.
Elizabeth’s crown was made of platinum and was set with the Koh-i-Noor diamond.
Elizabeth was Queen consort — the title of the wife of the King, although she doesn’t rule as the monarch.
She would remain Queen consort until King George VI’s death in 1952, after which she was known as Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.
When did the Queen Mother die?
The Queen Mother died on March 30, 2002.
Her younger daughter, Princess Margaret, had passed away seven weeks earlier.
At 101 years and 238 days old, she was the longest-living member of the royal family in British history.
On the day of her funeral, April 9, 2002, the Governor General of Canada issued a proclamation asking Canadians to honour her memory, while in Australia the Governor-General read the lesson at a memorial service held in St Andrew’s Cathedral, Sydney.
How long was Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon married to King George VI?
Prince Albert — known as Bertie — first proposed to Elizabeth in 1921, but she initially turned him down.
Elizabeth said she was “afraid never, never again to be free to think, speak and act as I feel I really ought to” if she became part of the Royal Family.
But the Prince did not give up his hopes to marry her and declared he would marry no other.
His mother, Queen Mary, visited Elizabeth’s childhood home to meet her, and became convinced that she was “the one girl who could make Bertie happy”.
In February 1922 Elizabeth was a bridesmaid at the wedding of Albert’s sister, Princess Mary, to Viscount Lascelles.
The following month, Albert proposed again, but she refused him once more.
Eventually, in January 1923, Elizabeth agreed to marry Albert, and they selected a platinum engagement ring featuring a Kashmir sapphire with two diamonds adorning its sides.
They married on April 26, 1923, at Westminster Abbey, and Elizabeth, aged 22, became styled Her Royal Highness The Duchess of York.
Following a wedding breakfast at Buckingham Palace, the new Duchess and her husband honeymooned at Polesden Lacey, a manor house in Surrey.
The couple were married for 29 years, until the King’s death on February 6, 1952.
Their eldest daughter Princess Elizabeth was born three years later, on April 21, 1926.
An estimated 200,000 people over three days filed past as she lay in state in Westminster Hall at the Palace of Westminster.
In London, more than a million people filled the area outside Westminster Abbey and along the 23-mile route from central London to her final resting place beside her husband and younger daughter in St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle.
At her request, after her funeral, the wreath that had lain atop her coffin was placed on the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior, in a gesture that echoed her wedding-day tribute 79 years before.
What was the Queen Mother’s name?
Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon was the Queen Mother’s given name.
She became Queen Elizabeth after her husband’s brother, King Edward VIII, abdicated the throne.
A Queen Mother is a dowager queen who is the mother of an empress mother.
She was popular, earning the nickname “Smiling Duchess” and was known for her cheerful spirit.
BETWEEN 1927 AND 1979, barely a year went by in which a member of the royal family was not the subject of Cecil Beaton’s enchanting lens. More concerned with his idea of the person than the person themself, the photographer transformed his subjects, and his romantic, reverential vision would help shape the image of the British monarchy in the mid-20th century. In the 1960s and ’70s, Beaton’s style evolved to reflect the changing mood of the time, and he adopted a more matter-of-fact and bold aesthetic. His presentation of motherhood, in particular, helped generate an emotional affinity between the royal family and the public. Yet he was still firmly associated with an opulence and artifice that spoke of an earlier era. Employed primarily at moments of celebration and ceremony, Beaton’s photographs were undoubtedly intimate, able to capture a clear sense of the individuals behind the public image, but they were rarely spontaneous. Rather, their affected poses and considered contexts acknowledge the splendor and status of the institution but with a generosity of spirit that invited the viewer to share in the fantasy.
Queen Elizabeth II being photographed by Beaton at Buckingham Palace, November 1955. Photograph by Patrick Matthews.CECIL BEATON/VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM, LONDON.
ONCE dubbed ‘Acid Raine’ by the late Princess of Wales, the two endured a bitter feud that lasted two decades.
Here’s everything you need to know about Princess Diana’s “wicked” stepmother Raine Spencer.
1
Raine pictured with Princess Diana outside The Connaught Hotel in Mayfair, LondonCredit: Getty – Contributor
Who was Princess Diana’s stepmother Raine Spencer?
Raine was born on September 9, 1929, and was the daughter of romantic novelist and socialite Dame Barbara Cartland.
Her mum held the longest entry in Who’s Who, due to every one of her 723 books being included.
Her father was Alexander McCorquodale, an Army officer who was also the heir to a printing fortune but her parents divorced and her mother married his cousin Hugh and had two sons.
She spent time in Canada and was “always top of the class” at school, and was described as an excellent dancer.
Read More on Princess Diana
Raine was married three times which gave her five titles including the Honourable Mrs. Gerald Legge, Viscountess Lewisham, Countess of Dartmouth, Countess Spencer and Comtesse de Chambrun.
After entering London high society aged 18, she became engaged to Hon Gerald Humphry Legge, who was heir to earl of Dartmouth and they wed in 1948.
They had four children but their marriage broke down after she began a relationship with John Spencer in 1973.
Raine married Princess Diana’s father John in 1976 after her mother Frances Shand Kydd left.
Latest on The Royal Family
After John’s death in 1992, she left the family seat of Althorp due to her strained relationship with her stepson Charles.
She went on to marry her third husband, Count Jean-François Pineton de Chambrun in 1993, after a 33-day courtship but they divorced just two years later.
What was her relationship with Diana?
Diana and her siblings did not like their stepmother and referred to her as “Acid Raine” and often sang “Raine, Raine, go away!”
The Daily Mail reported that “as the Princess was coming to terms with the breakdown of her marriage — while estranged from her own mother — Raine had provided a no-nonsense shoulder to cry on”. In a rare public appearance at Diana’s inquest, she said: “She (Diana) always said I had no hidden agenda.
“So many people, because she was so popular and so world famous, wanted something out of her. It was a very draining life.”
The pair shared a passion for horoscopes and Raine quipped at the inquest “we all want the dark, handsome gentleman to walk through the door”.
The BBC reported Raine said to the Judge Lord Justice Scott Baker: “I beg you to do your utmost to solve this mystery, to tear aside anything that could be a cover up and sift everything possible and indeed impossible in order to allow poor Diana and poor Dodi [Al Fayed] to at last, truly, rest in peace.”
What was her career in politics and role at Harrods?
Raine publicly cautioned women on the dangers of work in the 1950s and 1960s, while pursuing a political career.
She hit the headlines for complaints about dirty cups and ashtrays on the table at London Airport which she branded a “disgrace to Britain”, the Telegraph reported.
In 1967 she was elected to the Greater London Council (now the Greater London Authority) as a councillor for Richmond borough.
Raine won praise for resigning from a committee overseeing a large development in Covent Garden because of the lack of public support.
She later was involved with the British Tourist Authority.
In 1996, she became a member of the boards of directors at Harrods and occasionally worked in the store.
She said: “Ironically, I never went shopping in Harrods.
“It was my husband [Earl Spencer] who practically lived there.”
In 1989 a big falling out is said to have taken place between Raine and Diana, who was then 27 years old.
According a Channel 4 documentary, entitled Diana’s Wicked Stepmother, Diana pushed Raine down some stairs.
Raine’s personal assistant, Sue Howe, told the documentary how Diana grew a strong dislike for her stepmother as she felt she was not paying enough attention to her mother, Frances Shand Kydd, during Charles Spencer’s wedding.
Ms Howe said: “[Raine] was badly bruised and dreadfully upset. It was not justified at all, it was a cruel heartless thing to do and I think it was Diana’s perception of how Raine was treating Mrs Shand Kidd. I think Diana was very stressed. This sounds really wrong but she wasn’t centre of attention on this occasion.”
What was Raine Spencer’s cause of death?
The stepmother of Diana, Princess of Wales, died aged 87 on October 21, 2016.
She died on Friday morning at her London home, her son William Legge, the Earl of Dartmouth and a Ukip MEP, confirmed.
In a short statement the family said: “Raine, Countess Spencer, died peacefully at her home in London on 21st October, 2016, after a short illness.”
The tunnel is located in the heart of the French capital next to the River Seine.
The Sandringham-born Princess was being chauffeured after staying at the Hotel Ritz Paris, and according to reports, she was travelling to an apartment in Rue Arsène Houssaye.
She was making the journey with companion, Dodi Al Fayed.
In 2008, a lengthy inquest officially concluded those involved in the crash were unlawfully killed by the grossly negligent driving of chauffeur Henri Paul, who had high levels of alcohol in his system, and paparazzi photographers pursuing their limousine.
The forewoman read: “The crash was caused or contributed to by the speed and manner of the driving of the Mercedes, the speed and manner of driving of the following vehicles, the impairment of the judgment of the driver of the Mercedes through alcohol, and there are nine of us who agree on those conclusions.
“In addition, the death of the deceased was caused or contributed to by the fact that the deceased [were] not wearing seatbelt(s), the fact that the Mercedes struck the pillar in the Alma Tunnel rather than colliding with something else, and we are unanimous on that, sir.”
Forensic Collision Investigator Tony Read was one of the experts drafted in to the Met’s Operation Paget team to investigate conspiracy theories surrounding the crash.
Speaking for the first time about the high-profile case to The Sun, the former traffic cop said: ”I’m firmly convinced that if both of the occupants had been wearing seatbelts they almost certainly would have survived – I have almost no doubt in my mind.
“The collision was survivable because [bodyguard] Trevor Rees-Jones survived.”
What happened to Dodi Al Fayed, Princess Diana’s lover?
Princess Diana’s companion, Dodi Al-Fayed died almost instantly at the scene of the crash.
The pair spent time in the South of France and Sardinia before flying to Paris where they later died.
Following his death, Al Fayed’s body was flown to Britain, for a funeral service in line with Muslim customs – where a small Islamic funeral was held at a mosque in central London.
His coffin was escorted by police and a number of well-wishers lined the streets to pay their respects.
He was then buried in a London cemetery – but was later transported to his father, Mohamed Al-Fayed‘s property in Surrey, for his final resting place.
Once Dodi’s death was confirmed, the 11,000 electric bulbs which usually light up the facade of the Harrods store were switched off – which at the time was owned by his father.
The department store also honoured the late couple with miniature shrines – and in 2005 a bronze statue of the couple dancing was erected.
However, in 2018 it was announced that the statue would be removed and returned to Dodi’s father. Mohammed reportedly spends 300 days a year sitting beside his son’s body for hours at his mausoleum in the grounds of his mansion in Surrey.
What happened to Princess Diana’s bodyguard, Trevor Rees-Jones?
Trevor Rees-Jones was the only survivor of the tragic car crash, but suffered life-changing injuries.
He spent 10 days in a coma, sustained severe brain and chest injuries and every bone in his face was broken.
Surgeons used 150 pieces of titanium to rebuild his face, using family photos as a guide.
Everything you need to know about Princess Diana’s final years
In 1997, Princess Diana spent her summer in the south of France and Italy. During August, she visited Sarajevo, Bosnia, to highlight the fight against landmines.
By the end of the month, the Princess of Wales and Dodi Al-Fayed travelled to Paris together.
Her funeral was held on September 6, 1997. As her coffin made the journey from Kensington Palace to Westminister Abbey, Prince William and Prince Harry walked behind their late mother.
Due to him suffering from a serious head injury – Trevor Rees-Jones does not recall any details from the night of the fatal crash.
Trevor reportedly travelled back to Britain and quit his job as Mohammed Al-Fayed’s bodyguard the following year.
The grief-stricken bodyguard later published a book called The Bodyguard’s Story: Diana, The Crash, And The Sole Survivor, which earned him a rumoured £1million in 2000.
What happened to Henri Paul, Princess Diana’s driver?
Driver and French bodyguard Henri Paul was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash.
The 41-year-old had a reputation as a “macho action man” who loved being around celebrities.
Blood analysis results from Paul’s post-mortem suggest he spent the early evening drinking – he was found to be three-times over the French drink-drive limit.
An inquest into Diana’s death heard he had been privately treated for alcoholism but his family denied he had a drinking problem.
Evidence from a Ritz bar bill shows he had two Ricards – a French aniseed spirit – while waiting for Diana and Dodi to leave the hotel.
As mentioned above, after 22 hours of deliberations, an inquest jury ruled Diana had been unlawfully killed as a result of Paul’s drinking driving, and chasing photographers.
Dodi attended schools in Paris, the exclusive Le Rosey in Switzerland and had a brief stint at Sandhurst military academy, which Princes William and Harry also attended.
He split his time between the Khashoggi homes in Paris, the Riviera, Cairo, and his father’s home in Alexandria, Egypt.
Read more on Dodi Al Fayed
When he was 15, Dodi moved to London and became a familiar face on the nightclub scene.
He worked as a junior officer in the United Arab Emirates air force, stationed in London, but he soon moved into the film industry.
Did Dodi Al Fayed produce Chariots Of Fire and did he win an Oscar for it?
Dodi won an Academy Award as part of the production team, along with David Puttnam, on the 1981 film Chariots Of Fire.
The legendary movie actually won a total of four Oscars, which also included Best Picture.
The film is based on the true story of two British athletes competing in the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris.
What other films did Dodi Al Fayed produce?
Through his family’s production company, Allied Stars, Dodi was an executive producer on a number of successful films.
This included Hook, Breaking Glass, and The Scarlet Letter.
He was also executive creative consultant for F/X: The Series.
Who did Dodi Al Fayed date before Princess Diana?
The Playboy was linked to a string of famous women – including rumours he dated actresses Brooke Shields, Winona Ryder and Nancy Sinatra.
He married model Suzanne Gregard in 1986 but they divorced after just eight months together.
In 1997, he got engaged to American model Kelly Fisher and bought a house in Malibu for themselves using money from his dad.
She later claimed Dodi had dumped her for Princess Diana and tried suing him for $500,000 because she said she had sacrificed her modelling career to marry him.
The Royal Family was initially just told Diana had a broken arm, and Charles was even making plans to visit her in hospital after the crash.
But he was informed at 3.45am UK time that the Princess had died of her injuries.
An inquest held in London concluded in 2008 that the Princess had been unlawfully killed, blaming the crash on grossly negligent driving by Paul and the pursuing paparazzi.
Paul was speeding and over the drink-drive limit at the time of the smash.
He was the go-between for the Princess of Wales and biographer Andrew Morton for the famous tell-all book, Diana: Her True Story, which was published in 1992.
Dr Colthurst took Morton’s questions to the palace and then made secret recordings with Diana.
He told Daily Mail Australia how he remembered listening back to the tapes in a working man’s cafe.
Read more on Princess Diana
Colthurst said: “All around everyone’s eating bacon and eggs chatting away, and I put these headphones on and turn on the tape recorder and listen to Diana talking about bulimia nervosa, which I’d never heard of, talking about her suicide attempts, talking about this woman called Camilla Parker Bowles.
“It was like entering a parallel universe, I walked out of that café thinking, ‘wow what on Earth have I heard’.”
He added: “It was the most incredible outburst of really innermost pain, rage, frustration, anger – you were swept away with it.
“It was very compelling.”
Born in March 1957, Dr Colthurst married Dominique Coles in 1990.
The couple have two daughters, Cicely and Leah.
He was educated at Eton College in Windsor, before training as a surgeon at St Thomas Hospital in London.
His family in Ireland live in the medieval Blarney Castle near Cork.
How did Dr James Colthurst and Princess Diana become friends?
The two met in Val Claret in France when Diana hurt her ankle on a ski trip and needed a doctor.
On what would have been Diana’s 60th birthday, he wrote: “She knew several of the friends I was with [on the trip], and they brought her back to our apartment when she twisted her ankle, telling her I would look at it as I was a medical student at the time.
“Good fun, bright and mischievous, it was hard not to hit it off with Diana straight away, and so began the friendship she and I maintained for the rest of her short, eventful life.”
He also added how he supported her when she became a member of the Royal Family.
He added: “Perhaps one of the toughest features of being her friend was trying to encourage her to limit her task list as well as coaxing her over the many bumpy moments which she found almost overwhelming.
“But she was so happy to feel she had something to give that she took on a daunting number of patronages and these all took time and effort.
“She was interested in such a wide range of subjects that it balances what seemed an unhappy life at Kensington Palace with daily encounters with happy, smiling faces.”
How did Dr James Colthurst help Princess Diana?
Dr Colthurst was a person that Princess Diana could always speak to about difficult topics, especially when it came to life as a royal.
The doctor claimed that Princess Diana feared that palace officials wanted to undermine her because of her media popularity compared to Charles and separate her from William and Harry.
In a documentary Dr Colthurst said: “There was a great deal of jealousy from the grey men who sat behind Prince Charles, not wanting him to be living in her shadow.
“Her character was being written down – as she saw it, a campaign to sideline her and remove her from the boys.
“That was her worry, that she was going to lose the boys – overriding, above everything else, that was the concern – and that they were using a character run-down as a means of making that happen, an understandable next step.”
He also believed that Diana’s suffering with bulimia was a “reaction to her circumstances” and that “all staff” knew about Prince Charles’ affair with Camilla.
In their 2022 Netflix docuseries detailing the course of their relationship and events leading to their dramatic split with the monarchy, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle revealed that Halloween played an important role in the timeline of their personal and public lives.
The couple met while Meghan was spending the summer in Europe in 2016 while on a break from filming her TV show, Suits, and Harry was living at Nottingham Cottage at Kensington Palace in London while undertaking full-time royal duties.
Harry & Meghan on Netflix revealed never-before-heard details about the couple’s early relationship, later followed by an extended account in Harry’s Spare memoir, including how the prince had first come to know his future wife after asking a friend to connect them after seeing her in a social media post.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle photographed in Germany on September 6, 2022, and (inset) the couple on October 29, 2016, dressed up for a Halloween party before news broke about their relationship. Patrick van Katwijk/Getty Images/NETFLIX
In July 2016, the couple began seriously dating. Through the early months of seeing each other, both anticipated the story being picked up by the British press, which maintained an interest in Harry’s dating life.
While the couple got to know each other in relative secrecy they later revealed that things all changed three months in, around the time they attended a Halloween party with Harry’s cousin.
Here, Newsweek looks at everything Harry and Meghan have said about the Halloween party that served as a last hurrah before their relationship was made the subject of international headlines.
‘This Might Be Our Last Shot’
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle photographed with Princess Eugenie, Jack Brooksbank and Markus Anderson at Soho House in Toronto, October 2016. They spoke about the party in their show and Harry’s memoir. NETFLIX
After they started dating in July 2016, Harry and Meghan’s relationship became serious, with the couple quickly embarking on a bonding vacation to Botswana and spending time between their homes in London and Toronto.
While in these early stages the press hadn’t caught on to the identity of the prince’s new girlfriend until the couple received a tip in October 2016 from Harry’s palace communications secretary, Jason Knauf, alerting them that a tabloid planned to break the story the next day.
Recounting their reactions to the tip in their Netflix docuseries, Meghan told viewers: “We said: ‘Well, if its going to come out tomorrow then lets go and have fun tonight.’”
That evening, the couple attended a post-apocalyptic Halloween party held at Soho House in Toronto, accompanied by Prince Andrew‘s daughter, Princess Eugenie, and her future husband, Jack Brooksbank.
“We went to this Halloween party together where we could be completely dressed up and no one would know,” Harry said in the series, with Meghan adding that he had borrowed a “great costume.”
“We were like ‘Well this might be our last shot to just go out and have fun,’” she said.
Meghan then revealed that the party was “so great. So silly. And then…” after which she snapped her fingers and news commentary about their relationship was played closing out the first episode of the 6 part show.
Harry & Meghan Episode 1
Harry:“We’d been dating secretly since July.”
Meghan:“We’d been so petrified about when it [the story] would break and H trying to prepare me for what that might look like, knowing what he had experienced in the past. And then he and his brother’s communications secretary, Jason, called him to let him know that the story was scooped by a tabloid. We said: ‘Well, if its going to come out tomorrow then lets go and have fun tonight.’”
Harry:“We went to this Halloween party together where we could be completely dressed up and no one would know…with a bandana and goggles.”
Meghan:“He borrowed a great costume. And we were like ‘Well this might be our last shot to just go out and have fun…”
Harry:“…and pull the pin on the fun grenade, of which we did.”
Meghan:“His cousin, Eugenie, and her boyfriend at the time, Jack, and my friend Markus were there too. It was so great. It was silly fun. And then… [snap].”
‘Everything Was Changed Forever’
In his memoir, released a month after the Netflix show, Harry gave readers some more insight into the Halloween party and its aftermath, including the detail that his post-apocalyptic costume had been borrowed from Mad Max actor Tom Hardy.
He described the party as “loud, dark, drunk—ideal” and noted that while some attendees recognized Meghan among the crowds, he passed by unnoticed.
While describing the fun time the group had together, he also explained that it marked a moment where “everything was changed forever,” as the couple prepared for the scrutiny that would come with the press and public attention on their relationship.
“We’re going to be hunted” he told Meghan, as he prepared to head back to London after the party while reports began to surface online.
Following the party the rest of Harry and Meghan’s relationship played out in the public eye, with attention reaching it height around the November 2017 announcement of their engagement and May 2018 wedding day at Windsor Castle.
Prince Harry in Spare
“The party was loud, dark, drunk—ideal. Several people did double-takes as Meg passed through the rooms, but no one looked twice at her dystopian date. I wished I could wear this disguise every day…”
“Everything was changed forever, because the next day was when news of our relationship broke wide open. Well, we said, staring anxiously at our phones, it was going to happen eventually. In fact, we’d had a heads-up that it was likely to happen that day. We’d been tipped, before heading off to the Halloween Apocalypse, that another apocalypse might be coming. More proof that the universe had a wicked sense of humor.”
Do you have a question about King Charles III, William and Kate, Meghan and Harry, or their family that you would like our experienced royal correspondents to answer? Email royals@newsweek.com. We’d love to hear from you.
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
AN UNASSUMING lawyer from India has been identified as a possible heir to the French throne.
Balthazar Napoleon IV de Bourbon, 65, believes he is a senior descendant of France‘s Bourbon kings and the rightful ruler of the defunct Kingdom of France.
10
Indian lawyer Balthazar Napoleon IV de Bourbon claims he is the pretender to the throne of the defunct Kingdom of FranceCredit: Rex
10
The 65-year-old is married and has three children
10
Big brass letters spelling out ‘House of Bourbon’ hang outside Balthazar’s front doorCredit: 2007 AFP
10
Shaukat Mahal is a 19th century palace designed by a Frenchman said to be a descendent of the Bourbon kingsCredit: Alamy
The Bourbon dynasty ruled France from 1589 to 1789.
Balthazar claimed his royal heritage was instilled in him from the moment he gained consciousness.
“I am born an Indian,” he told the LA Times in 2008. “But the fact of life is that I belong to the royal family of France.”
A lawyer and part-time farmer by trade, Balthazar is married to an Indian woman named Elisha Pacheco with whom he shares three children: Frederick, Michelle, and Adrian.
It is his family’s understanding that an exiled French noble by the name of Jean Philippe de Bourbon ended up in Goa on India’s southwestern coast after escaping the clutches of pirates.
The story goes he survived assassination attempts as well as a kidnapping at sea before washing up in India.
The French noble, a nephew of King Henry IV, made his way to and served at the court of the Mughal Emperor Akbar in the 16th century.
By the 18th century, his descendants had moved to Bhopal, central India – where Balthazar Napoleon de Bourbon and his family reside today.
Members of the De Bourbon family are understood to have intermarried with members of the local population.
Balthazar Napoleon IV de Bourbon seems, on the surface, as ordinary as they come.
He is short and portly, and often spends his days tending to his tractor and covered in grease, describing himself as “poor” but “happy”.
“I’m not looking for any claim to any riches,” he said. “I’m not begging [for] anything from anybody. I’m a happy man.”
His unwavering belief in his supposed royal heritage was apparently confirmed by Prince Michael of Greece – the first cousin of the late Prince Philip – in the mid-2000s.
The prince came to know of Balthazar in 2006 while staying at a hotel in Bhopal on holiday.
He told the LA Times: “I was upgraded in the best hotel from a room to a suite. And what do I see on the door of my suite? ‘Bourbon Suite.’
“So I rushed to the porter of the hotel and asked, ‘Why do you call it Bourbon here?’ And he said, ‘There is a family called Bourbon and they are well-known in Bhopal.’
“I had no idea they were still existing. I must say it’s quite amusing to see in a directory in India the name Bourbon.”
The coincidence inspired Michael to research and write a historical novel, Le Rajah Bourbon, in which he seemed to confirm Balthazar was the long-lost descendent of the Bourbon kings.
Balthazar told Times of India in 2007: “Ever since I was a boy people have been contacting me to establish my French lineage. But this is the first time my lineage is being acknowledged in Europe.”
He noted he wanted to continue to live in India as an Indian citizen and had no interest in relocating to France or trying to obtain French citizenship.
The entrance to Balthazar’s home in Bhopal features big brass letters declaring “House of Bourbon” and the fleur-de-lis: a heraldic crest that has been associated with the French monarchy for centuries.
His living room is also French in style.
According to the Legitimists, Louis Alphonse de Bourbon is the head of the House of Bourbon and the pretender to the defunct throne of France as Louis XX.
He has used the title Duke of Anjou since his father’s death in 1989.
The French monarchy was formally abolished during the French Revolution in 1792.
Louis XVI, the last king to live at the Palace of Versailles, died at the guillotine in January 1793.
The Bourbon monarchy was briefly restored in 1814 and again in 1815, after the fall of Napoleon, with Louis XVI’s brothers on the throne.
It lasted until a popular uprising in 1830.
After that, Louise Philippe I ruled as “King of the French” from 1830 to 1848 when the Second Republic was formed.
10
Balthazar’s father Salvador instilled his royal heritage in him at a young ageCredit: Rex
10
Prince Michael of Greece, cousin of Prince Philip, was the first in Europe to acknowledge BalthazarCredit: Wikipedia
10
Balthazar never had any doubts about his royal lineageCredit: 2007 AFP
10
Louis-Philippe I (1773-1850) was the last French kingCredit: Heritage Art/Heritage Images
10
The current Duke of Anjou, Louis Alphonse de Bourbon, is another pretender to the French throneCredit: Wikipedia
10
Louis XVI was the last king to live at the Palace of Versailles
INDIAN Royal families today might have lost their political relevance, but they continue to capture the imagination of the world with their billion-dollar lifestyle.
The glamorous lives of these last-remaining Maharajas transcend the boundary of time, and the essence of extravagance is like fairy tales in modern times.
7
Maharaja Sawai Padmanabh Singh of the erstwhile royal family of JaipurCredit: 2016 Hindustan Times
7
Shriji Arvind Singh Mewar of Udaipur is the 76th Custodian of the House of MewarCredit: 2011 Gamma-Rapho
Hundreds of royal families were stripped of their princely rights when the monarchy was abolished in India.
A few, however, still carry honorary titles as they live their lives king-size.
Despite their derecognition, these modern-day royals continue to influence India’s rich culture and put the country’s name on the world stage.
Since the royal families in India do not have a kingdom to run, most of them have carved a niche as hoteliers, politicians, and philanthropists – even athletes.
But what they share in common is a love for rich heritage, lavish palaces, and a billion-dollar lifestyle.
Here, we take a closer look inside the lives of the last-remaining royal families in India
The Mewar Dynasty
Once led by the great king Maharana Pratap, the Mewar Dynasty is perhaps one of the most prolific royal families in India.
Today, the descendants of this dynasty live in Udaipur.
At the head of this family is His Royal Highness Arvind Singh Mewar – the 76th custodian of the house of Mewar.
Acting as the nominal monarch, Arvind Singh lives with his wife in the great Udaipur City Palace – a part of which is open for tourists to visit and see the historic architecture.
He also has given some of the most iconic palaces that belong to his royal family on lease to the famous Taj Group of Hotels to manage.
Maharaja Arvind is known for his museum of antique cars and likes to manage his father’s million-dollar crystal collection.
Nawab of Pataudi
The Nawab of Pataudi is the most famous royal family in India today – because of the family’s connection to Bollywood and the Indian cricket team
Legendary actor Saif Ali Khan is the son of the last emperor, and serves as the current Nawab of the kingdom.
His father, His Royal Highness Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi, was the captain of the Indian cricket team and served as the last titular head of the kingdom.
Mansoor Ali Khan married actress Sharmila Tagore and had three children – Saif being one of them.
The royal family is known for the mega-famous Pataudi Palace – their ancestral home – which is worth more than Rupees 800 crore
The Royal Family of Jaipur
The Royal Family of Jaipur was headed by the last titular head of state His Highness Bhawani Singh.
In 2011, Maharaj Padmanabh, grandson of Bhawani Singh, became the Maharaja of Jaipur.
Today, the head of the Royal Family of Jaipur is a fashion icon, and no less than an international celebrity.
Padmanabh walked the runway at the Dolce & Gabbana show during Milan Men’s Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2019
He is also a national-level polo player and is recognised for his work to bring more awareness to the sport today.
The royal family owns the magnificent Rambagh Palace – and has leased it to the Taj Hotel Group to manage.
The Wadiyar Dynasty
Back in the day, the Wadiyar Dynasty ruled the iconic Kingdom of Mysore.
Their history can be traced back to the Yaduvanshi clan of Lord Krishna in ancient times.
The royal family is famous for a 400-year-old curse put on them that does not let them have children.
The curse, put by Queen Alamelamma of Vijaynagar for capturing the throne, has been in power over the years and still continues to affect the royal family.
Currently, the head of the dynasty is 27-year-old Yaduveer Krishnadutta Chamaraj Wadiyar.
However, he was not the direct heir to the throne as his predecessor died childless.
He tied the knot to the Princess of Dungarpur in 2016 – and is rumoured to own assets over Rupees 10,000 Crore.
Bourbons of India
The most interesting royal family of all – The Bourbons of India are known for their alleged claim over the defunct throne of the Kingdom of France.
It is claimed that this family is a direct descendant of the House of Bourbon, descended from Jean Philippe de Bourbon.
Jean Phillipe was an exiled French noble who served in Mughal Emperor Akbar’s court and was considered to be a nephew of the French king Henry IV.
If true, Balthazar Bourbon – head of the Indian royal family, would be first in line to the French throne.
7
Saif Ali Khan is the current Nawab of Pataudi
7
Various Dignitaries attend the 18th birth anniversary celebrations of Maharaja Sawai Padmanabh Singh of the erstwhile Royal family of JaipurCredit: 2016 Hindustan Times
7
Maharaja Padmanabh Singh walks the runway at the Dolce & Gabbana show during Milan Men’s Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2019Credit: Getty Images
7
Prince Lakshaya Raj, son and heir of 76th Maharana of Mewar, Shriji Arvind Singh Mewar of Udaipur
7
Balthazar Napoleon de Bourbon III is alleged to be the direct successor of the French throneCredit: 2007 AFP
Thirteen months after King Charles began his reign, writer Hugo Vickers has one small complaint: his majesty’s oft-reported plan to see a more slimmed-down monarchy might be unrealistic. “I don’t know who’s going to do all the work!” Vickers said in a recent interview. “People either want celebrities or they want the royal family, and they’d have a much better deal out of the royal family. I can assure you celebrities are very demanding and not very reliable.”
For nearly half a century, the biographer and broadcaster has been a premier observer of Britain’s aristocracy as it adjusted its traditions and worldviews for the modern age. In the 1970s, he tracked down the reclusive Duchess of Marlborough in a psychiatric hospital and turned what he learned over two years of conversations into a biography, reissued in 2021 as The Sphinx: The Life of Gladys Deacon – Duchess of Marlborough. Ever since, he has documented the royals and their orbit in their highs and lows, even seeking Prince Philip’s personal recollections for a biography about his mother, Alice, Princess Andrew of Greece. His relationships with courtiers and understanding of the royal family’s day-to-day life have given him a unique point of view on the challenges that King Charles has faced as he ascended to the throne.
Along with his books, Vickers has become a lecturer who interprets the history and symbolism of the monarchy for Americans, and it’s turned him into one of the institution’s most committed and visible defenders. This weekend, he will be a marquee speaker at the debut edition of the Empire State Rare Book and Print Fair. Founded by Eve and Edward Lemon of Fine Book Fairs, the event will fill midtown Manhattan’s St. Bartholomew’s Church with over 50 exhibitors and a slate of events aimed at getting a generation of young people excited about collecting. In conversation with writer and auctioneer Nicholas Nicholson, Vickers will discuss his views on the future of the monarchy and the legacy of the late queen.
In an interview before he traveled to New York, Vickers said he knows that promoting a hereditary monarchy might seem outdated, but he’s seen its benefits up close. “I know it’s unfashionable to promote anything being hereditary as opposed to on merit, but it does have its great advantages, because there’s a humility that goes with that. The queen was tremendously aware that she wasn’t there except by accident of birth,” he said, adding that he thinks King Charles has taken a similar approach. “I think it works very well. You wouldn’t invent it, necessarily, but it’s there.”
So far, he is giving Charles positive marks for his performance as king, emphasizing his energy and the success of his trip to Germany in March and France in September. “I think he’s doing a good job—and his two state visits abroad so far have been immensely successful,” Vickers said. “He is a real workaholic. He doesn’t really eat lunch. He has a big dinner in the evening, but he’s at his desk most of the time.”
Vickers notes that the job of monarch is time-consuming. “It’s a bit like being the CEO of a company. The trouble is, as you know, when you get to the top, you spend your time administering rather than doing what you necessarily want to do. You have to deal with so many problems,” he said. “He’s taken on a lot at this age. Suddenly the boxes are coming and he’s got to get through them, and he does it.”
But along with the busywork comes a lot of responsibility. Vickers cited one event as an example of the power a monarch must possess in order to do their job. Days after a tragic fire in Grenfell Tower killed 72 people in June 2017, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince William traveled to visit the survivors. “When she went to [visit the victims], in a sense what she did was to bring with her all the other places that she’d been to where there’d been great tragedies, like Aberfan and Dunblane,” he said. “She wasn’t doing it for political purposes, she was comforting her people, her nation, if you like.”
NEW YORK ― Prince William touched down in New York on Monday and immediately did the one thing most New Yorkers would never dream of doing.
The Prince of Wales walked into the East River ― waders and all ― with the Manhattan skyline in the background.
While most city dwellers actively try to avoid coming into contact with the water, William walked in as part of an event put on with the Billion Oyster Project. The nonprofit is working to restore 1 billion oysters to the New York Harbor by 2035.
The visual of the royal going into and being in the water is very important, according to Agata Poniatowski, the public outreach manager for the Billion Oyster Project. Poniatowski waded into the water alongside the prince, who she said was “really, really excited” about the activity.
“Having the prince join us here in the water in New York changes that perspective of the water, where people think it’s so dirty, it’s so gross,” she told reporters, including HuffPost, after the outing. “But really, you know, the water is swimmable on certain days of the week. We want to work on that change in perspective, and the prince really helped us with that.”
The Prince of Wales walks into the East River.
Cindy Ord via Getty Images
Checking out the oysters with members of the Billion Oyster Project.
Cindy Ord via Getty Images
The royal’s outing with the organization first took him to Governor’s Island by boat on Monday, just after his commercial flight landed from the U.K.
After meeting with restaurateurs, volunteers, staff and students involved with the project on the island, he took another boat over to Brooklyn Bridge Park, where he hopped in the water to look at the oysters.
He then met with 12-year-old students from Harbor Middle School and measured the oysters with them.
The Prince of Wales meeting with some of the middle schoolers, who didn’t know they were meeting the prince as their “special guest” until their teacher surprised them with the news.
Cindy Ord via Getty Images
The prince is in town on behalf of his environmental initiative, The Earthshot Prize. The 15 finalists for this year’s awards will be unveiled on Tuesday at the Earthshot Prize Innovation Summit, which is being co-hosted by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Bloomberg Philanthropies.
During the Prince of Wales’ time in New York ― which also coincides with New York Climate Week ― the heir to the throne met with the U.N. secretary-general on Monday ahead of the 78th session of the U.N. General Assembly.
Upon landing at Newark airport, the royal said that it was “so good to be back in the United States.”
“No one does optimism and ingenuity like the American people, so it’s only right we unveil this year’s Earthshot finalists in New York City,” he said.
William is also expected to meet with first responders in Manhattan on Tuesday. The royal, who was an emergency first responder during his time as a helicopter pilot, is expected to speak to the firefighters about their work and mental health.
“He’s conscious that he’s doing this visit only a few days after September 11th, where many of the people that he will be meeting tomorrow were remembering those that were lost on 9/11 itself,” a Kensington Palace spokesperson said Monday morning.
The Prince of Wales said it was “so good to be back in the United States” after he landed at Newark airport on Monday.
The palace spokesperson said that the prince was excited to meet with New Yorkers this week, and appreciated their understanding when his trip was called off last year.
“As he remarked previously, the prince was incredibly appreciative for the love and support shown by the American people during that time,” the spokesperson said. “And he is grateful and continues to be. And he is very much looking forward to being back in New York this week and hopefully meeting as many New Yorkers as possible.”
The Prince of Wales last visited New York in 2014 with his wife, Kate Middleton.
Both the Prince and Princess of Wales also made it to the U.S. last year, when they visited Boston in November. HuffPost covered their royal tour, which also included attending the 2022 Earthshot Prize ceremony.
Ahead of the awards show in Boston, William also wrote an exclusive essay for HuffPost in which he said he is a “stubborn optimist” when it comes to the Earth’s future.
“Dire predictions about our natural world aren’t the only side to this story and they don’t have to be our future,” he wrote at the time. “In this critical decade, I invite you all to be optimistic, to support the game-changers and to believe in the power of human ingenuity.”
King Charles released an emotional statement paying tribute to his mother, Queen Elizabeth, on behalf of the one-year anniversary of her death.
The 96-year-old monarch “died peacefully” at Balmoral in Scotland on Sept. 8, 2022, after reigning for 70 years.
Charles, longtime British heir apparent, ascended to the throne immediately following the death of his mother.
“In marking the first anniversary of Her late Majesty’s death and my Accession, we recall with great affection her long life, devoted service and all she meant to so many of us,” Charles said in a Buckingham Palace statement, shared with HuffPost on Thursday.
A photo of the late Queen Elizabeth and then-Prince Charles on May 18, 2009, in London.
WPA POOL VIA GETTY IMAGES
“I am deeply grateful, too, for the love and support that has been shown to my wife and myself during this year as we do our utmost to be of service to you all,” the king said.
He signed off on the note ― which was also released as an audio recording ― as “Charles R.” The “R” stands for “Rex,” which means “King” in Latin.
One day after the death of Queen Elizabeth last year, Charles made his first speech as king and spoke of his “darling mama.”
“Throughout her life, her majesty the queen — my beloved mother — was an inspiration and example to me and to all my family, and we owe her the most heartfelt debt any family can owe to their mother,” he said at the time.
Prince William, 41, and Prince George, 10, are now first and second in line to the throne.
“[She] felt like she was bringing an element of each of those countries down the aisle with her. So that her new role—and that bridge to the new role—was captured in what she was wearing,” Waight Keller says. “For both of us, we felt it was a really beautiful signature, and I think even Prince Harry was just thrilled at the idea that we really tried to capture something for everyone in that service.”
To symbolize love and charity, crops of wheat were intricately blended into the floral motif at the front of the veil, which was secured with Queen Mary’s diamond and platinum bandeau tiara. The Givenchy atelier workers in Paris sewed for hundreds of hours and washed their hands every 30 minutes to ensure that the threads and tulle remained immaculate.
The groom’s father, a staunch supporter of British hand-craftsmanship and artisan traditions, was also moved by the gesture. “King Charles was just in awe of the dress and the [veil] embroidery, and he asked me about it while we were waiting inside the nave,” Waight Keller says. “He was really very interested, actually, in all the different motifs and the floral representations.”
Celebrating Prince Harry With “Something Blue”
The duchess put a creative twist on her serendipitous “something blue.” After dismissing “a garter or something like that,” Waight Keller explains, Markle snipped a piece of fabric from the dress she wore on her first date with Prince Harry.
“We basically sewed it into the hem of the wedding dress, so she was the only one that knew that it was there. It was a little blue gingham check,” Waight Keller says, dropping a significant clue about the Sussexes’ origin story—and for social media sleuths to scour the Wayback Machine. “It was the perfect personal memento that was secretly hidden inside the dress.”
Coordinating With the Bridesmaid Dresses
The six bridesmaids (or flower girls), including Prince William’s daughter, Princess Charlotte, coordinated with Markle in crisp white Givenchy haute couture. “She said, ‘I don’t want them to feel trussed up or like they’re in some old-fashioned dress,’” Waight Keller explains. “So these were just really modern and clean, but also something that they could move around in and felt like they were real children’s clothes.”
Evoking “very simple little T-shirt shapes,” in look and comfort, Waight Keller animated the ivory silk radzimir frocks with lively details: empire waistlines, short puff sleeves, tiny pleats, and hand-finished double silk ribbon bows at the back. “They had the same principles of modernity that the wedding gown had,” says Waight Keller, who also added pockets. “It was an important link between the two.”