Hartford Courant

Restoratio­n of Camilla’s image is finally complete

Recognitio­n by late monarch helped to cap years of repair

- By Megan Specia

LONDON — Earlier this year, Queen Elizabeth II issued a letter that was seen as a major moment of recognitio­n for a long beleaguere­d member of the royal family, intended to smooth the path for her ascent when the inevitable finally came.

In a statement marking her 70 years on the throne, the queen laid out how her daughter-in-law Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall and wife of Prince Charles, should become the queen consort when Charles, “in the fullness of time,” ascended the throne. Elizabeth also asked the nation to pass on the goodwill it had long shown her to the woman who would bear the title of queen.

So when Elizabeth died Thursday at 96, there was no question that as her eldest son became King Charles III, his wife would become queen consort — a title indicating she is the spouse of the reigning king. In everyday contexts, she will be known simply as Queen Camilla. Elizabeth’s statement had put to rest years of uncertaint­y about what role she would play.

But even more important, Camilla’s ascendancy was seen by many royal watchers and historians as a culminatio­n of years of careful image repair by the royal couple, who had often endured outright abuse, much of it directed disproport­ionately at Camilla by the British tabloids.

Arianne Chernock, an associate professor of history at Boston University and an expert on the modern British monarchy, said the images of both Charles and Camilla have been rehabilita­ted through the work of the queen and through the couple’s own efforts. But the two are also quite aware of the public perception of their past.

“If we think back to 1992, it’s actually quite difficult to imagine that they would be where they are today, with this kind of dignity about them, the sense of large public approval and a genuine desire for them to succeed in their roles,” she said.

On Friday, some of that public approval was on display when the new king and queen greeted the crowds that had gathered outside Buckingham Palace, as the royal couple made their first public appearance with their new titles.

Later in the day, in his first address to the nation as king, Charles spoke of his “darling wife Camilla,” who has now become queen, saying, “I know she will bring to the demands of her new role the steadfast devotion to duty which I have come to rely on so much.”

The public perception of their union has come a long way. During the 1990s, after the breakup of Charles’ marriage to Diana, who referred to Camilla as the “third person” in their failed marriage, the British tabloid press called Camilla “the most hated woman in Britain.”

Charles first met Camilla in the early 1970s, and they dated for some time, but Charles went abroad for military duty, and Camilla soon married Andrew Parker Bowles, an army cavalry officer. The pair would go on to have two children.

Charles later married Diana, but their marriage painfully dissolved in front of the whole world. Camilla seemed to bear much of the public disapprova­l of the prince’s separation from the much-loved Diana in 1991.

Then came the release in 1993 of an embarrassi­ng covert recording of a conversati­on between Charles and Camilla — which came to be known as the “Camillagat­e Tapes.” In the recording, Charles said he wanted to “live in her trousers.”

Charles’ subsequent admission of adultery, in a TV documentar­y that aired a year later and was intended as image repair, was a further blow to the couple’s standing.

Camilla and her first husband divorced in 1995, and Charles and Diana’s divorce was finalized in 1996. After Diana’s death in 1997, the relationsh­ip between Charles and Camilla was kept far from the public eye. But in 1999, they began to make their first public appearance­s as a couple, and in 2003, they moved into the royal residence at Clarence House together.

In early 2005, Charles and Camilla announced their engagement, and in April of that year, they were married in a civil ceremony. Prince William served as his father’s best man. Elizabeth was notably absent from the ceremony, though she did attend the reception afterward.

And with the marriage, Camilla was given the title Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cornwall.

While the monarch has a constituti­onal role to play as the head of state by approving bills before they become law, the queen consort does not hold a formal position in the government. But Camilla will be crowned in a ceremony and be at Charles’ side during his coronation.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP ?? Camilla, the wife of King Charles III now known as the queen consort, greets people mourning Queen Elizabeth II on Friday outside Buckingham Palace in London.
CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP Camilla, the wife of King Charles III now known as the queen consort, greets people mourning Queen Elizabeth II on Friday outside Buckingham Palace in London.

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