Tag: Charles

  • King Charles attends church service commemorating Windrush’s 75th anniversary

    King Charles attends church service commemorating Windrush’s 75th anniversary

    At a church service honouring the ‘immeasurable’ contribution of the ‘Windrush pioneers’ to Britain, the King was joined by the young offspring of those immigrants.

    The 75th anniversary of the HMT Empire Windrush’s landing was commemorated with the event.

    In 1948, it brought Caribbean residents who heeded Britain’s plea for assistance in addressing post-war manpower shortages.

    Charles sat amid a group of 300 specially invited attendees, who also included students from several English schools, officials, and representatives of many charities and community initiatives.

    Reverend Rose Hudson-Wilkin, the Bishop of Dover, told the congregation at the service they had gathered at a time of particular ‘poignancy’ because it was a day of celebration and thanksgiving for the hardworking good citizens she refers to as the ‘Windrush pioneers’.

    She told the congregation: ‘They are pioneers who paved the way for generations who came after them, not merely to survive but to thrive.

    ‘The significant contributions made by them in the United Kingdom to the National Health Service, the transport network, to the arts, sports, religion and life is second to none.’

    The King said it is ‘crucially important’ to recognise the ‘immeasurable’ difference the Windrush generation has made to Britain.

    His comments were made in the foreword of a book which accompanies a display of portraits that celebrate the Windrush generation in the week marking the anniversary of the crossing.

    He added: ‘Those pioneers, who arrived in a land they had learned about from afar, left behind all that was familiar to them.

    ‘Many served with distinction in the British Armed Forces during the Second World War, just as their fathers and grandfathers had in the First World War.

    ‘Once in Britain, they worked hard, offering their skills to rebuild a country during peacetime and seeking opportunities to forge a better future for themselves and their families.

    ‘When they arrived on our shores with little more than what they were able to carry with them, few could hardly have imagined then how they, and those that followed them, would make such a profound and permanent contribution to British life.’

    The Prince of Wales said the Windrush generation’s contributions to Britain ‘cannot be overstated’.

    In a video posted on social media, William said: ‘They and the generation of Commonwealth citizens who followed in their footsteps, chose this country to start new lives. We know they experienced hardships.

    ‘But they also experienced joy; and life did indeed change for them and their families.

    ‘But these voyagers also gave to our nation, helping to rebuild our country and adding to our culture. Their contributions to the Britain we know now cannot be overstated.

    ‘We are a better people today because the children and the grandchildren of those who came in 1948 have stayed and become part of who we are in 2023. And for that we are forever grateful.’

  • Charles and Camilla make first public appearance as new King and Queen at Royal Ascot

    Charles and Camilla make first public appearance as new King and Queen at Royal Ascot

    Charles and Camilla attended Royal Ascot for the first time since ascending to the throne, paying a heartfelt homage to the Queen and her passion for horses.

    The Royal couple visited the athletic event for the first time in their new roles, wishing racegoers success, and ushering in a new era for Ascot.

    In a joint foreword for the official programme, they acknowledged Queen Elizabeth‘s “lifelong interest” in the racing event as they rushed onto the Berkshire course in the customary carriage parade.

    The pair waved to the crowds who filled the grandstand on the first of five days of racing and were joined by the Duke and Duchess of Wellington in their carriage.

    Behind them travelled the Princess Royal with Camilla’s younger sister Annabel Elliot, the Queen’s nephew Sir Ben Elliot, former co-chair of the Conservative Party knighted in Boris Johnson’s resignation honours list, and his wife Lady Elliot, daughter of musician Steve Winwood.

    The late Queen was a passionate racehorse breeder and had more than 20 Royal Ascot winners during her 70-year reign.

    In memory of her commitment to the event the race – Platinum Jubilee Stakes- has been renamed the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee stakes.

    Before the carriage rides old footage from the Queen’s most memorable Royal Ascot moments was played on the big screens and was applauded by the crowds at the end.

    Charles and his wife, who have taken on the late monarch’s thoroughbreds, will be carrying on her tradition and have entered a string of horses over the next five days.

    The official programme featured Charles and Camilla’s intertwined cyphers on the cover and in their joint foreword said: ‘We are happy in the knowledge that this historic race meeting continues to be a key influence on the global racing and breeding industries.

    ‘The royal meeting always played a central role in her late majesty Queen Elizabeth’s calendar and the naming of the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes will be a most appropriate way to mark this lifelong interest.

    ‘A photographic exhibition in the Grandstand will also celebrate the late Queen’s close association with Royal Ascot, including images of some of her 24 winners.

    ‘We are sure that this exhibition will prompt many happy memories.’

    They went on to say: ‘Finally, we wish the very best of good fortune to all the owners, breeders, trainers, jockeys and hardworking stable staff with runners this week.

    ‘It is a huge and rare achievement to have a runner at Royal Ascot and we very much hope that you all enjoy the experience.’

  • The King and Queen depart in diamond coach to Westminster Abbey

    The King and Queen depart in diamond coach to Westminster Abbey

    Charles and Camilla, the future king and queen, have departed Buckingham Palace and are making their way to Westminster Abbey, where they will be installed.

    Their majesties departed the palace in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach for the brief trip across London, guarded by The Sovereign’s Escort of the Household Cavalry.

    The King and Camilla turned out of the Palace and walked down the Mall to the cheers of the crowd.

    Royal fans had been waiting for days to see the King and despite the rain that started to fall as the couple headed down the Mall didn’t let it dampen their spirits.

    The Diamond Jubilee state coach is the most modern of the royal carriages and has electric windows and air conditioning.

    The coach was originally meant to commemorate Queen Elizabeth II’s 80th birthday, but its construction was delayed.

    LONDON, ENGLAND - MAY 06: King Charles III and Camilla, Queen Consort travelling in the Diamond Jubilee Coach built in 2012 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the reign of Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace ahead of the Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla on May 06, 2023 in London, England. The Coronation of Charles III and his wife, Camilla, as King and Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and the other Commonwealth realms takes place at Westminster Abbey today. Charles acceded to the throne on 8 September 2022, upon the death of his mother, Elizabeth II. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
    The King dressed in a velvet robe, complete with gold lace looked on nervously as he went past thousands of fans dressed in red, white and blue (Picture: Getty)
    King Charles III and Queen Camilla are carried in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach in the King's Procession from Buckingham Palace to their coronation ceremony London. Picture date: Saturday May 6, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story ROYAL Coronation. Photo credit should read: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire
    Queen Camilla wore a fantastic white jacket with gold embellishing as she embodied the lavish sentiments of the coronation in her attire (Picture: PA)
    Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla sit in Diamond Jubilee State Coach at Buckingham Palace on the day of coronation ceremony, in London, Britain May 6, 2023. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
    The King waved to the crowds as he headed down the Mall (Picture: REUTERS)
    Coronation Grabs
    Huge crowds have been waiting patiently for days to get the best spot of the coronation (Picture: Sky News)
    A light bit of rain didn’t let spirits down (Picture: Sky News)
    A light bit of rain didn’t let spirits down (Picture: Sky News)
    Coronation Grabs
    The carriage was pulled by six horses as it left Buckingham Palace (Picture: Sky News)
    Coronation Grabs
    The King looked on nervously in the moments before the biggest moment of his life (Picture: Sky)

    Coronation of King Charles III latest

    Britain's King Charles sits in Diamond Jubilee State Coach at Buckingham Palace on the day of coronation ceremony, in London, Britain May 6, 2023. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
    The air-conditioned carriage will be the setting for the King and Camilla as they make their trip towards Westminster Abbey (Picture: REUTERS)
    Britain's King Charles' arrives at Buckingham Palace on the day of his coronation ceremony, in London, Britain May 6, 2023. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
    The King and Camilla arriving at Buckingham Palace earlier this morning (Picture: REUTERS)

    Instead, it was made to mark 60 years of her reign in 2012. The coach is more than 16 feet (five metres) long and weighs more than three tons, needing six horses to pull it.

    The King’s Guard turned out the forecourt and gave a Royal Salute as The King, The Queen Consort and other Members of the Royal family also left the palace.

    The trip is less than a mile, and the route will be filled with pomp and grandeur.

    The 33-minute journey to Westminster Abbey began with the tri-service Guard of Honour outside Buckingham Palace’s gates giving a royal salute, as the King and Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Coach first emerged, and the national anthem was played by a military band.

    Huge Union flags and others from Commonwealth nations flew from poles in The Mall and Charles and Camilla’s route was lined by guardsmen in their distinctive red tunics and bearskins.

    The Sovereign’s Escort was led by the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment band, 48 horses and musicians with two drum horses Atlas and Apollo leading the way, playing eight marches along the route.

    Following were four divisions from the Household Cavalry with the King’s coach in the middle – two from the Blues and Royals taking the lead and Life Guards behind the carriage with the farriers carrying their axes at the rear.

    Crowds had been building up in the capital since dawn with the streets around the procession route – The Mall, Admiralty Arch, Trafalgar Square, Whitehall and Parliament Square – thronged with people.

    Earlier, the King and Queen made their first appearance of coronation day when they travelled the short distance from their Clarence House home for final preparations at Buckingham Palace.

    Princess Anne defends idea of working royals upholding the monarchy

  • The revised royal family website refers to Camilla as ‘Queen’

    The revised royal family website refers to Camilla as ‘Queen’

    Prior to Camilla’s coronation, the royal family revised her position title on its website.

    She will henceforth be referred to as the “Queen,” dropping the “Queen Consort” moniker.

    On her way to being crowned at Westminster Abbey in a historic ceremony is Camilla, who served as the Duchess of Cornwall when Charles was the Prince of Wales.

    It was the late Queen Elizabeth II’s “sincere wish” that Camilla would be Charles‘ queen consort when he became king, she said at her Platinum Jubilee.

    Camilla’s future title was previously unclear, as she was not called a princess due to Charles’s divorce from Diana, Princess of Wales, who died in 1997.

    Experts at the time branded Elizabeth’s message ‘extraordinary’ and said it showed her determination to ‘future-proof’ a monarchy spent 70 years serving.

    Despite her title of ‘Queen’, Camilla will never be a reigning queen like Elizabeth II was.

    King Charles III and Queen Camilla are carried in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach in the King's Procession from Buckingham Palace to their coronation ceremony London. Picture date: Saturday May 6, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story ROYAL Coronation. Photo credit should read: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire
    Camilla is currently on her way to Westminster Abbey to be crowned (Picture: PA)
    OXFORD, ENGLAND - MAY 16: Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall visits Maggie's Oxford to see how the Centre supports people with cancer on May 16, 2017 in Oxford, England. During her visit HRH will meet people living with cancer and observe Maggie??s programme of support in action including a Talking Heads session and a yoga class. (Photo by Chris Jackson/Getty Images)
    Queen Camilla has no ruling power and is simply the wife of King Charles (Picture: Getty Images)

    Camilla is not a monarch and is instead a queen consort, which is the name given to a wife of a king.

    They have no ruling power as they are not blood relatives, and their role is merely to provide support to the monarch.

    The queen consort title is given to wives of ruling kings, but in this country the husbands of ruling queens are known as prince consorts rather than kings.

    This is because the title of queen is generally considered to be lower in rank than king, which can only ever refer to a reigning monarch. But ‘queen’ can refer either to either a female monarch, or the wife of the king.

    Coronation of King Charles III latest

    Therefore Prince Philip was known as prince consort so he didn’t outrank her position as queen. He is so far the longest-serving royal consort in history.

    As a result of this, Camilla will be mostly known as just Queen Camilla from now onwards, in the same way as Philip was known simply as Prince Philip.

    She was previously carefully referred to as Queen Consort Camilla, likely out of respect to the late Queen Elizabeth II and also a nod to the legacy of Diana.

    Former BBC royal correspondent Peter Hunt previously said it was all ‘semantics’.

    He said: ‘Despite all of the progress so far, royal officials – perhaps mindful of the Diana legacy – continue to be cautious about the precise nature of Camilla’s new status.

    ‘They prefer to focus on the fact she’s the consort of a king. The reality is that… Queen Camilla will be crowned at her husband’s coronation.’

  • Photo gallery: Life of King Charles III

    Photo gallery: Life of King Charles III

    74-year-old, King Charles III, who will be installed on Saturday, was the oldest royal to ascend the throne in a1,000-year-old lineage when he replaced his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, following her death in September. The late Queen ruled ruled for 70 years.

    Charles does not enjoy the same support as his widely admired mother, but his public approval ratings are generally positive. An opinion poll last week showed many more people hold favourable views of him than negative although there is also a wide segment expressing indifference.

    Republican sentiment – which was almost entirely absent publicly during Elizabeth’s reign – has become visible with eggs thrown at the king and his wife, Camilla, on one trip and small groups of protesters voicing opposition at others.

    Buckingham Palace has supported research into the monarchy’s links to slavery as calls grow for apologies and reparations, not least from some of the 14 Commonwealth realms, where Charles is also king.

    The Guardian newspaper has run a series of articles raising questions about the opaque nature of the wealth and finances of the institution and the royal family, an issue that resonates at a time when Britons are facing a cost of living crisis.

    A 7-year-old Charles sits with his mother and younger sister, Princess Anne, as they watch the final match of the Smith’s lawn polo cup in Windsor, England, on June 23, 1956. [File: AP]

    Coronation Preparations
    In this July 27, 1958, photo, Prince Charles wears his school uniform. He became the first heir apparent to the British throne to attend school rather than have a private tutor. [File: AP]
    Coronation Preparations
    Prince Charles arrives at London Airport from Glasgow on April 2, 1964, at a time when he was a student at Gordonstoun School in northeast Scotland, which his father, Prince Philip, also attended. [File: AP]
    Coronation Preparations
    An 18-year-old Prince Charles leaves Buckingham Palace with Queen Elizabeth in a state coach on October 31, 1967, for the opening of parliament. It was the first time the prince took part in the ceremony. [File: AP]
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    Queen Elizabeth II crowns her son the Prince of Wales during his investiture ceremony on July 1, 1969, at Caernarfon Castle in Wales. Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, is seated at the right, and British Home Secretary James Callaghan stands next to the prince. [File: AP]
    Coronation Preparations
    Prince Charles and Tricia Nixon, daughter of US President Richard Nixon, discuss baseball at RFK Stadium in Washington, DC, on July 18, 1970, during a trip the prince made to the US capital with his sister, Princess Anne, after they had visited Canada with their parents. [File: AP]
    Coronation Preparations
    Prince Charles walks with Imelda Marcos, first lady of the Philippines, in Katmandu on February 24, 1975, at the coronation ceremony for Nepal’s King Birendra. [File: AP]
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    Prince Charles drinks from a freshly cut green coconut at Haripur village, which he visited during a one-day trip to Bhubaneswar, India, on December 4, 1980. The prince is wearing a marigold garland, which was given to him by villagers. [File: Santosh Basak/AP]
    Coronation Preparations
    Prince Charles wed Diana, Princess of Wales, on July 29, 1981. The couple appeared with his parents, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip, on the balcony of Buckingham Palace in London after their marriage at St Paul’s Cathedral. [File: AP]
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    Charles and Diana take home their firstborn son, Prince William, from St Mary’s Hospital in London on June 22, 1982, the day after his birth. [File: John Redman/AP]
    Coronation Preparations
    Charles and Diana made their second trip to Australia together in 1985 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the state of Victoria, named after Charles’s great-great-great-grandmother. [File: AP]
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    Charles greets models wearing clothing from a local designer during a tour of Soweto, South Africa, on November 3, 2011. [File: Kim Lubbrook/pool/AP]
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    Charles speaks after a performance by the Australian Chamber Orchestra at St James Palace in central London on December 12, 2011. [File: Lefteris Pitarakis/pool/AP]
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    After preparing for the crown his entire life, Charles was king on April 28, 2023, when the Royal Canadian Mounted Police presented him with a horse named Noble as he accepted the role of commissioner-in-chief of the police force at Windsor Castle. At the age of 73, he had become the oldest person to ever assume the British throne when Queen Elizabeth died on September 8, 2022. [File: Andrew Matthews/pool/AP]