The Star Early Edition

UK royals to mark 70 years of wedlock at home

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LONDON: Britain’s Queen Elizabeth will add another landmark to her record-breaking reign on Monday when she and Prince Philip celebrate their 70th wedding anniversar­y.

Princess Elizabeth, as she was at the time, married dashing naval officer Lieutenant Philip Mountbatte­n at London’s Westminste­r Abbey on November 20, 1947, just two years after the end of World War 2, in a lavish ceremony attended by statesmen and royalty from around the world.

Seventy years on, Elizabeth, 91, and her 96-year-old husband will mark their platinum anniversar­y with a small family party at Windsor Castle, the monarch’s home to the west of London.

A spokesman for Buckingham Palace said there would be no public event to mark the occasion.

Greek-born Philip, a descendant of Elizabeth’s great-great-grandmothe­r Queen Victoria in his own right, has been at his wife’s side throughout her 65-year reign, the longest in British history.

He was the person who broke the news to her in 1952 that her father, George VI, had died and that she was now queen.

“One of the secrets of this very, very long marriage, and it’s an incredibly impressive anniversar­y, is the fact Prince Philip has always seen it as his main duty to support the queen, to help her in whatever way he can,” royal historian Hugo Vickers said.

“He is the only person who can actually tell the queen absolutely straight what he thinks, and if he thinks some idea is ridiculous he will say so in whatever language he chooses to use.”

The couple first met when they attended the wedding of Prince Philip’s cousin, Princess Marina of Greece, to Elizabeth’s uncle, the Duke of Kent, in 1934.

Philip then gained the attention of his future wife when the then-13year-old princess made a visit with her parents to Britain’s Royal Naval College at Dartmouth in southern England where he was a cadet.

“She was truly in love from the very beginning,” the queen’s cousin Margaret Rhodes, a life-long friend and one of her bridesmaid­s who died last year, wrote in her memoir. Their engagement was announced in July 1947 and they married four months later. With Britain still recovering from the war, the wedding offered a rare burst of colour and pageantry against an austere background of rationing and shortages. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? Britain’s Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
PICTURE: REUTERS Britain’s Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.

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