Daily Mail

Meghan kicks up a stink!

Bride wanted air fresheners for ‘musty’ Windsor chapel ... but the Palace told her No

- By Rebecca English Royal Correspond­ent

LIKE all brides she wanted every aspect of her wedding to be perfect, not least the venue.

St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle couldn’t have been more to Meghan Markle’s liking – historic and picturesqu­e with long family ties... it had it all.

The only problem was, apparently, the smell. According to well- placed royal sources, the musty odour of the 15th century chapel did not find favour with the soon to be Duchess of Sussex, who asked for air fresheners to be deployed before her guests arrived.

The same insiders report that Meghan’s request to use the atomisers did not find favour with Buckingham Palace, which swiftly pointed out that the chapel was a regular place of worship for the Queen – as it had been for successive monarchs since 1475 – and if it was good enough for them, it would be good enough for her.

The fascinatin­g vignette about the royal wedding on May 19 comes amid speculatio­n about Meghan’s friendship with her sisterin-law the Duchess of Cambridge – which is not believed to be close – after it was announced that Meghan and Prince Harry are to move out of Kensington Palace to live in Frogmore Cottage, Windsor, early next year.

There have also been suggestion­s that Meghan and Harry are proving unpopular with royal staff, and can be difficult and ‘dictatoria­l’.

Recent reports have suggested that despite Harry telling staff ‘What Meghan wants, Meghan gets’, they also clashed with the Queen’s household over which tiara Meghan could wear, until the Queen stepped in. She was also said to have warned her grandson about their behaviour.

It is understood that the request to use the atomisers – hand-held devices for spraying water or perfume – to create a pleasant aroma for guests at St George’s Chapel specifical­ly came from Meghan’s office at Kensington Palace.

Although she and Harry organised the wedding themselves with an in-house team, anything to do with the chapel – the venue for several royal marriages including Queen Victoria’s and burial place of ten monarchs – is a matter for the Queen, who had to give them permission to use it.

That meant all of the arrangemen­ts needed to be passed by the Lord Chamberlai­n’s Office at Buckingham Palace, which is in charge of ceremonial mat- ters such as state visits and garden parties. And when the request to use the atomisers was raised, the response was, well, a little sniffy.

The source said: ‘ Apparently Meghan didn’t like the smell of the chapel, which, as you would expect, is a little musty. It’s not unpleasant at all, though. It just smells how you would expect an old building to smell. And that’s something the Royal Family are particular­ly used to.

‘Meghan wanted staff to go around with these atomisers, like spritzer guns, and spray the chapel with scent before anyone arrived.

‘ Royal Household staff stepped in and told her office politely, but firmly, that this was the Queen’s Chapel and it simply wasn’t appropriat­e. I don’t believe they said no because they thought it could affect the chapel in any way. It was simply the principle of the thing.

‘This is a place that has held royal weddings, funerals and even contains the Royal Vault. I don’t believe a request of that nature had been made before.’

The source stressed there had been ‘ no falling out’ between the two households, but that there was a certain amount of surprise at the request. ‘Frankly it was all a bit ridiculous and rather over the top,’ they said.

A second source, while also confirming that atomisers had been requested, said: ‘The two households worked very well together. I don’t believe they [the atomisers] caused con- cern.’ St George’s Chapel was built by successive monarchs starting with Edward IV in 1475 and completed by Henry VIII in 1528.

Kensington Palace declined to comment last night.

 ??  ?? Windsor whiff: The chapel has been used by monarchs since 1475
Windsor whiff: The chapel has been used by monarchs since 1475

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