Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Queen Elizabeth II’s Jubilee underway

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LONDON — Gun salutes rang out in London and Edinburgh on Monday to mark the start of Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee year, as the 95-year-old monarch prepared for a busy season of public duties.

Britain’s longest-serving monarch, Elizabeth became queen on the death of her father, King George VI, on Feb. 6, 1952.

The monarch doesn’t celebrate the anniversar­y of the date she became queen, known as Ascension Day, as it is also the anniversar­y of her father’s death.

In a statement released Saturday, the queen remembered the death of her father and recalled the seven decades of “extraordin­ary progress” that her reign has spanned.

The queen made clear she intended to continue as head of state, renewing the pledge she made on her 21st birthday to devote her entire life to the service of the U.K. and the Commonweal­th.

She also sought to shore up the future of monarchy by saying it was her “sincere wish” that Prince Charles’ wife, Camilla, should be known as “Queen Consort” when her son becomes king. With those words, Elizabeth sought to answer once and for all questions about the status of Camilla, who was initially shunned by fans of the late Princess Diana, Charles’ first wife.

While Sunday’s anniversar­y was low-key, public celebratio­ns of the Platinum Jubilee are scheduled for June, when the weather is usually sunnier. The festivitie­s will include a military parade, a day of horse-racing and neighborho­od parties. There is also a competitio­n to create a new dessert to be consumed over the jubilee weekend June 2-5.

The queen will mark a more somber milestone March 29, when she attends a memorial service for Prince Philip at Westminste­r Abbey. The queen’s husband of 72 years died in April 2021 at age 99.

 ?? (AP/Alberto Pezzali) ?? Gun salutes Monday near Buckingham Palace in London mark the 70 years since Queen Elizabeth II’s accession to the British throne.
(AP/Alberto Pezzali) Gun salutes Monday near Buckingham Palace in London mark the 70 years since Queen Elizabeth II’s accession to the British throne.

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