By Jack Wright and David Pilditch and Jamie Phillips and Nick Fagge In Edinburgh For Mailonline
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King Charles waited solemnly with all the Royal Family, including Harry and Meghan, as his mother made her final return to Buckingham Palace – after tens of thousands of well-wishers lined the streets to pay tribute to the Queen.
Mourners cheered and clapped in the rain as the new state hearse – which the late monarch helped to design – travelled down Constitution Hill and around the Queen Victoria Memorial, slowing on its approach, before driving through the gates of the palace and through the central arch into the quadrangle.
With a glass roof and large side windows, the hearse was designed to give members of the public a clear view, and featured interior lights that shone brightly in the gloomy London evening.
Outriders stopped with their heads bowed at the end of the journey, while a police officer at the gate saluted. People also cheered ‘hip hip hooray’ after the coffin drove under the arch, with many putting down their umbrellas as a sign of respect.
Others could be seen wiping tears from their eyes as phone camera lights lit up the crowds lining the streets in central London.
Meanwhile, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex were pictured standing behind the new King as he waited for his mother to return to Buckingham Palace for the final time.
The coffin will lie at rest in the palace’s bow room overnight before the monarch is handed to the nation to allow the public to pay their respects when she lies in state at the ancient Westminster Hall for four days.
The King will be joined by William and Harry as they walk behind the coffin as it is transported tomorrow.
Charles, William and Harry – along with the Duke of York, the Princess Royal and the Earl of Wessex – will follow the coffin on foot. Anne’s son Peter Phillips and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence will also walk in the procession, as well as the Duke of Gloucester and the Earl of Snowdon.
The Queen Consort, the Princess of Wales, the Countess of Wessex and the Duchess of Sussex will travel by car.
Earlier today, the RAF Globemaster C-17 plane carrying Her Majesty’s coffin from Edinburgh landed at RAF Northolt at 6.55pm after she spent 24 hours in St Giles’ Cathedral – where tens of thousands of mourners paid their respects to Britain’s longest-reigning monarch.
The Princess Royal, her husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, and the Lord Chamberlain disembarked the plane and walked in silence to join the Reception Party, including Prime Minister Liz Truss and Secretary of State for Defence Ben Wallace, on the airfield.
Moments after the aircraft landed, Princess Anne issued a poignant statement telling of how she was ‘fortunate to share the last 24 hours of my dearest Mother’s life’.
She said the love and respect shown to the Queen on her journey from Balmoral to Edinburgh and onto London had been ‘both humbling uplifting’.
Anne also thanked the nation for the ‘support and understanding offered to my dear brother Charles’ as he takes on his duties as King.
She ended her statement with the words: ‘To my mother, The Queen, thank you.’
Members of the Guard of Honour presented arms as officials slowly carried the Queen’s coffin down a ramp from the aircraft into the hearse, which has been designed by the Royal Household and Jaguar Land Rover. The guard then lowered the King’s Colour for The Royal Air Force in salute. They remained in position until the official hearse departed the airfield, as it began the journey by road along the A40 towards Buckingham Palace.
The Royal Standard is now draped over the coffin, instead of the Royal Standard of Scotland which adorned it before.
Upon arriving at the Grand Entrance of the palace, a further guard of honour was formed by the King’s Guard. She was received by all her children and grandchildren, including the King and Queen, the Prince and Princess of Wales and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. Shortly after witnessing the arrival of the coffin, Charles and Camilla left Buckingham Palace.
The Queen will stay in the Bow Room in the palace overnight before she is transported to the Palace of Westminster, where she will lie in state until Monday, September 19 – the day of her state funeral at Westminster Abbey and burial at St George’s Chapel in Windsor.
The state hearse carries the Queen’s coffin through the gates of the palace as the crowd erupted in cheers and applause
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II arrives in the Royal Hearse at Buckingham Palace
The Queen’s coffin arriving at Buckingham Palace as thousands of mourners applauded the late monarch
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth arrives at Buckingham Palace
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth arrives at Buckingham Palace
The cortege carrying the coffin of the late Queen Elizabeth II heading towards Buckingham Palace
The state hearse drives to Buckingham Palace, carrying the Queen’s coffin
The state hearse carried the Queen’s coffin into Buckingham Palace, where it will be received by the whole Royal Family
Thousands of mourners are drenched in rain as the coffin arrives at Buckingham Palace
The state hearse carrying the Queen’s coffin as the late monarch arrives at Buckingham Palace for the final time
The Queen’s coffin was lit inside the state hearse as it was driven from RAF Northolt to Buckingham Palace
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II passes along the A40 in west London
Seen from the top of the Wellington Arch, the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken in the Royal Hearse to Buckingham Palace
The cortege carrying the coffin of late Queen Elizabeth II heads towards Buckingham Palace
The royal hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II drives towards Buckingham Palace
People by Marble Arch watch the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth in London
People gather near the Marble Arch as the State Hearse carrying the coffin drives from RAF Northolt to Buckingham Palace
People get out of their cars to watch as the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II passes along the A40
Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron (63 Squadron RAF Regiment) carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II to the Royal Hearse having removed it from the C-17 at RAF Northolt
The Queen’s coffin has arrived at RAF Northolt in west London
The RAF Globemaster C-17 plane carrying Her Majesty’s coffin from Edinburgh landed at around 6.55pm
The Queen’s Colour Squadron carrying Her Majesty the Queen’s coffin off the plane at RAF Northolt
Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron place the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II into the Royal Hearse
The coffin in the state hearse, before taking the Queen to Buckingham Palace
Raindrops run down the window of the Royal Hearse as it departs
People watch the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth, following her death, after leaving RAF Northolt
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leaves RAF Northolt in west London
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II passes through Perivale
King Charles and Queen Consort Camilla arriving at Buckingham Palace
The car carrying Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex driving towards Buckingham Palace
The Prince and Princess of Wales arriving at Buckingham Palace
William, Prince of Wales and Catherine, Princess of Wales heading towards Buckingham Palace
Members of The Household Division march outside Buckingham Palace
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II is taken from RAF Northolt to Buckingham Palace
Liverpool fans have impeccably observed tonight’s minute’s silence held in memory of Queen Elizabeth II at the club’s Champions League game against Ajaz at Anfield, despite the history of anti-royalist sentiment among some supporters, which has included booing the national anthem in the past.
Liverpool made a request to UEFA for the tribute to be held following the late monarch’s death on Thursday at the age of 96, with their manager Jurgen Klopp insisting it was the right thing for the club to do in this momentous period and a Hillsborough Survivors group earier today urging fans to show ‘respect’.
There is antipathy towards the monarchy in some quarters on Merseyside and there was a furore before the FA Cup final in May when Prince William, the new Prince of Wales, was booed by Liverpool fans.
Sections of Liverpool supporters also booed the national anthem, as had been the case before the Carabao Cup final in February, while others sang along at Wembley.
The same occurred prior to the Community Shield victory over Manchester City at Leicester’s King Power Stadium in July, where Prince William was also jeered as he shook the hands of the players.
Consequently, all the attention has been on Liverpool fans at Anfield and whether they would show their respects to the longest-reigning monarch in the country’s history.
Supporters did honour the one minute’s silence in the end. The tribute was held just before the match kicked off at 8pm tonight, with minimal noise or disruption from the crowds.
The game against the Dutch team is Liverpool’s first Champions League home match of the 2022/23 season, with pressure already mounting after the club’s defeat against Napoli in Naples last week.
It came after the sound of pipes filled the streets as Her Majesty’s coffin was carried out of St Giles’ Cathedral by pallbearers at 4.15pm into a hearse then up the Royal Mile.
Thousands of people lined the streets around a west London military airbase tonight as Queen Elizabeth II made her final journey home.
Huge crowds gathered at RAF Northolt to witness the arrival of Her Majesty’s coffin.
Workers left offices early while parents brought their children straight from school to be present at the poignant moment the RAF Globemaster C-17 carrying the Queen’s body swooped in through the clouds before touching down on the runway shortly before 7pm.
Many told how the arrival of the Queen’s coffin would be their one and only opportunity to pay tribute to the much loved monarch.
Some stood for hours in the pouring rain in a bid to catch a glimpse of the coffin as it began the journey to Buckingham Palace where almost the entire Royal Family gathered for the first time since the Queen died last Thursday.
Mourners stood six deep behind metal barriers on the pavements outside the airbase.
Many held up umbrellas while others took shelter under bus stops and the forecourt of a nearby petrol station.
There was a respectful silence in the moments before and after the jet carrying the coffin, which was accompanied by Princess Anne, roared in.
Because of the overcast skies and unusual flight path of the jet, it was the sound of the engines that signalled the arrival for many of those who had gathered.
When the coffin was driven out of the base around 25 minutes later there was a huge round of spontaneous applause.
It rippled along the route to the A40 as the cortège made its way up to the A40.
Three police outriders with their lights flashing led the jaguar hearse with glass windows.
The Queen’s coffin could be clearly seen with the Royal Standard draped over it and a white wreath on top.
The hearse was followed by four black Range Rovers and an old Rolls Royce carrying Princess Anne.
A marked police followed at the back of the courtage.
It came amid a massive security operation which with hundreds of police officers drafted in to ensure the arrival went smoothly.
Soldiers and security guards were also brought in to help in the operation.
Teaching assistant Emma Keech told how she rushed from school with her mother Pat, sister Claire and two great-nephews Codey, eight, and Caleb, six, to make the 50-mile drive from Bedford.
She said: ‘I literally finished work and drive up the M1 to get here.
‘We made it two hours before the arrival. There were hundreds of people here already.
‘I knew this was our only chance to say goodbye. We don’t want to take the little ones into Lindon for the ceremonies because there will be so many more people then.
‘I’ve got work commitments as well apart from the day of the funeral itself.’
Emma said: ‘I rang at 7am and said ‘We need to do this for the boys’. This is a moment of history. There are three generations of us and it is something we will never again see in our lifetimes.’
The Queen’s coffin arriving at Buckingham Palace after being flown from Edinburgh to RAF Northolt
Onlookers watch as the hearse transporting the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II arrives at Buckingham Palace
The hearse carrying the coffin of the late Queen arriving at Buckingham Palace
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II arrives in the Royal Hearse at Buckingham Palace
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II passes Wellington Arch
Grenadier Guards, a unit of the Household Division Foot Guards, take part in a rehearsal of the ceremonial procession of Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin from Buckingham Palace to the Palace of Westminster
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II passes Wellington Arch
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth arrives at Buckingham Palace
Seen from the top of the Wellington Arch, the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken in the Royal Hearse to Buckingham Palace
People gather to pay respects as the cortege carrying the coffin arrives at Buckingham Palace
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leaving RAF Northolt
Her Majesty’s coffin was carried off the plane on the runway at RAF Northolt in west London this evening
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is carried off a plane by the Queen’s Colour Squadron at RAF Northolt
The RAF jet in the background as the state hearse carries the Queen to Buckingham Palace
The RAF jet making its final descent on its flight from Edinburgh to RAF Northolt in London
Princess Anne arrives by plane carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at RAF Northolt
Princess Anne arrives by plane carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at RAF Northolt
Prime Minister Liz Truss awaits the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II to arrive at RAF Northolt
The Queen’s Colour Squadron, RAF, prepare for the arrival of the Royal Air Force (RAF) C17 aircraft
The bearer party from the Queen’s Colour Squadron (63 Squadron RAF Regiment) march into position as they await the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II to arrive at RAF Northolt
The C-17 carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II lands at RAF Northolt
Mourners caught a glimpse of the RAF jet landing at Northolt in west London this evening
The Queen’s Colour Squadron, RAF, stand by as the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken away in the Royal Hearse
People line the A40 next to the exit for RAF Northolt
King Charles and Queen Camilla arrive at Buckingham Palace
King Charles III, and Camilla, the Queen Consort arrive at Buckingham Palace
King Charles with Camilla, Queen Consort leave RAF Northolt following a visit to Belfast
Crowds gather outside Buckingham Palace ahead of the arrival of the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II
Crowds gather outside Buckingham Palace, waiting to catch a glimpse of the Queen’s coffin
A young girl wearing a crown waits for the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II to arrive in London
King Charles III arrives back in London after visiting Northern Ireland
King Charles car turns into Constitution Hill near Buckingham Palace
Handout photo issued by Buckingham Palace of the statement by the Princess Royal on the death of her mother
The Princess Royal has paid tribute to the Queen saying it was an ‘honour and a privilege’ to accompany her on her ‘final journeys’.
Anne, the late monarch’s only daughter, told how she was ‘fortunate to share the last 24 hours of my dearest Mother’s life’.
She said the love and respect shown to the Queen on her journey from Balmoral to Edinburgh and onto London had been ‘both humbling uplifting’.
Anne also thanked the nation for the ‘support and understanding offered to my dear brother Charles’ as he takes on his duties as King.
She ended her statement with the words: ‘To my mother, The Queen, thank you.’
The princess was in Scotland when the Queen was taken ill, and stayed at her bedside at Balmoral Castle, as senior royals rushed to say their final farewells.
Elizabeth II – the nation’s longest reigning monarch – died peacefully on Thursday September 8.
Anne has taken on the duty of accompanying her mother’s body back to London, with the Queen leaving Scotland for the last time bound for RAF Northolt on Tuesday.
The Queen’s oak coffin, accompanied by Anne and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, will travel to Buckingham Palace where the King, the Queen Consort, the Prince and Princess of Wales and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will be waiting to receive it.
Also there will be the Earl and Countess of Wessex, the Duke of York, Princess Beatrice and husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, Princess Eugenie and husband Jack Brooksbank, Zara and Mike Tindall, Lady Louise Windsor and Viscount Severn, and Princess Margaret’s children Lady Sarah Chatto and Earl Snowdon.
Anne said: ‘I was fortunate to share the last 24 hours of my dearest Mother’s life.
‘It has been an honour and a privilege to accompany her on her final journeys.
‘Witnessing the love and respect shown by so many on these journeys has been both humbling and uplifting.
‘We will all share unique memories. I offer my thanks to each and every one who share our sense of loss.
‘We may have been reminded how much of her presence and contribution to our national identity we took for granted.
‘I am also so grateful for the support and understanding offered to my dear brother Charles as he accepts the added responsibilities of The Monarch.
‘To my mother, The Queen, thank you.’
Janet Price, 70, brought her six-year-old granddaughter Sophie, six, to mark the historic moment.
Janet, from Ruislip, said: ‘I stood in this very spot 25 years ago after Princess Diana died. Her body was flown into RAF Northolt. That was a day I will never forget – like this one.
‘I’m sure Sophie will feel the same in years to come. We got here two hours before the flight came in. It was something we just had to come and see. It was very emotional.’
Nurse Kristina Carter, 47, watched from the roadside with husband Robert, 49, who works for the government. She said: ‘We wanted to see the Queen come home. It’s a moment in history. We knew there would be many people here but we live close by so we thought we had to try.’
A guard of honour by the King’s Bodyguard for Scotland and pipers followed the Cortege towards Edinburgh Castle and on to Edinburgh Airport.
A sea of thousands of mourners – including young schoolgirls wearing tartan and waving Union flags – packed into the capital’s tiny streets broke out into applause, while the Scottish flag, the Saltaire, flew at half-mask from the top of a building. The enormous crowd of men, women and children continued to clap for the monarch as the last company of soldiers followed the procession.
At Edinburgh Airport, the Queen was received by the Royal Regiment of Scotland with a royal salute, before a bearer party from the Royal Air Force carried the coffin onto the aircraft accompanied by her daughter the Princess Royal. As the plane took off at around 5.40pm, the national anthem was played.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and Secretary of State for Scotland Alister Jack were among the dignitaries present at the airport, including Scottish Parliament Presiding Officer Alison Johnstone and Police Scotland Chief Constable Iain Livingstone.
The body of Elizabeth II had been lying in rest in its oak coffin overnight in the city’s St Giles’ Cathedral. Tens of thousands of people had paid their last respects there, with demand to come so high that the queue had to be closed after noon.
Meanwhile, people packed into the historic streets of the city for the third day in a row to see the coffin leave the cathedral.
Carried out of the church to the sound of a lone piper, the hearse carrying the Queen’s coffin then departed for Edinburgh Airport. As it did, the crowd, who had gathered in numbers in the late afternoon sunshine, burst into applause.
The Princess Royal, accompanied by her husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, travelled behind her late mother in a separate car. Her journey mirrored that she made on Sunday, when she again travelled behind her mother as the Queen was brought down to the capital from Balmoral – where she had died peacefully on Thursday.
Honeymooners Steven and Elizabeth McCrite, from Orlando, Florida, were among those who paid their respects to the Queen during the period of lying in rest.
Mrs McCrite, 22, commented: ‘It’s a once-in-a-lifetime thing, we’re not going to be able to do it again.’
Support worker Bethany Walker, 21, said she came straight from her nightshift to queue to pay her respects to the Queen.
‘It’s a historic event and we want to be there. It’s part of the history books,’ she said.
Duncan Wilson Paisley came from Stirlingshire wearing full Highland dress to pay his respects.
Mr Wilson Paisley served in the Royal Highlanders for 25 years and said he felt a particular ‘gratitude’to the Queen.
‘She was a wonderful lady for whom everybody has the utmost respect,’ he said.
Following the monarch’s death last Thursday, her body was transported to the Scottish capital on Sunday, lying at the Palace of Holyroodhouse before being taken to St Giles’ Cathedral on Monday.
There was a thanksgiving service at the church on Monday, attended by the King and other members of the royal family, before a motion of condolence was taken in the Scottish Parliament.
The new King then returned to St Giles’ together with the Princess Royal, the Duke of York and the Earl of Wessex, where they stood in silence in a vigil beside their mother’s coffin.
People gathered in the rain along the A40 in hope of paying their respects to the Queen as she made her ‘last journey’ to Buckingham Palace.
On the roadside in Perivale, Beryl Dixon, 76, of Ealing, west London, arrived at about 5pm.
She said: ‘I’m here to pay my respects on her last journey before she gets to Westminster. There was no way I was going to stand for 30 hours to walk passed the coffin.
‘It was more important for me to see it, so this was the best for me. I did exactly the same thing for Diana.’
An 82-year-old man who watched the Queen’s coronation at a cinema as a boy was among scores of people standing in the lashing rain waiting to catch site of the state hearse.
People watch the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken away in the Royal Hearse
The bearer party from the Queen’s Colour Squadron (63 Squadron RAF Regiment)
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is carried off a plane by the Queen’s Colour Squadron
People watch the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leaves RAF Northolt, west London
The Queen’s Colour Squadron, RAF, stand by as the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken away in the Royal Hearse
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leaves RAF Northolt
Princess Anne, Princess Royal, and Vice Admiral Timothy Laurence are greeted after disembarking from the C-17 carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at Northolt
Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron (63 Squadron RAF Regiment) carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II
Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron (63 Squadron RAF Regiment) carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II to the Royal Hearse having removed it from the C-17 at Northolt
Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron place the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II into the Royal Hearse
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is carried off a plane by the Queen’s Colour Squa
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is carried to the waiting hearse at RAF Northolt
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II departs RAF Northolt
Princess Royal and her husband Sir Tim Laurence at RAF Northolt
The C-17 carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II arrives at RAF Northolt
Members of the public queue in the rain along the south bank of the River Thames, opposite the Palace of Westminster
The bearer party carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II to a hearse as they prepare to depart from St Giles Cathedral
The Queen’s coffin being carried into the hearse by pallbearers outside St Giles’ Cathedral
The Princess Royal watches as the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken to a hearse as it departs St Giles’ Cathedral
The Queen’s coffin is taken in a hearse from St Giles’ Cathedral to Edinburgh Airport
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II makes its way up the Royal Mile
Princess Anne, Princess Royal looks from the window of a car following the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II
An RAF Globemaster C-17 carrying the Queen’s coffin takes off from Edinburgh Airport
An RAF Globemaster C-17 carrying the Queen’s coffin taking off
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh Airport from where it will be flown by the RAF on its journey from Edinburgh to Buckingham Palace
Pallbearers carry the Queen’s coffin onto an RAF jet sitting on the runway at Edinburgh Airport
Pallbearers lift the Queen’s coffin out of the hearse and carry it across the runway at Edinburgh Airport
The Queen’s coffin being driven to Edinburgh Airport, where an RAF plane is sitting on the runway
An RAF Globemaster C-17 jet sitting on the runway at Edinburgh Airport
The Queen’s coffin arriving at Edinburgh Airport after being driven from St Giles’ Cathedral
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the Royal Standard of Scotland, waits to be carried into a RAF C17 aircraft at Edinburgh airport on its journey from Edinburgh to Buckingham Palace
Dignitaries, including Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon (second left) and Scottish Secretary Alister Jack (centre) prepare for the arrival of the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh Airport where it will be flown by plane on its journey to Buckingham Palace
A Royal Air Force bearer party prepare for the arrival of the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh Airport
Princess Anne and her husband Sir Tim Laurence arrive at St Giles’ Cathedral
Princess Anne watches as the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken to a hearse as it departs St Giles’ Cathedral
Princess Anne, Princess Royal and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence watch as pallbearers carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II from St Giles’ Cathedral
The Queen’s coffin is taken in a hearse from St Giles’ Cathedral to Edinburgh Airport
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth in Edinburgh
Princess Anne, Princess Royal, arrives at St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh
The Royal Company of Archers, The King’s Bodyguard for Scotland, stand on guard outside St Giles’ Cathedral
The Queen’s coffin being carried by pallbearers outside St Giles’ Cathedral today
A member of honour guard marches at St Giles’ Cathedral
Crowds wave ahead of the coffin carrying Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II leaving St Giles Church
King Charles III waves as he leaves St Anne’s Cathedral in Belfast, during his visit to Northern Ireland
Official details of the route for the lying-in-state queue will be published at 10pm tonight, but this is the predicted route
King Charles III enjoyed an emotional first trip to Northern Ireland as the new monarch after he and the Queen Consort inspected a remarkable show of flowers and were met with roars of approval as the people of Belfast greeted their new sovereign with open arms.
The royals trip began with deafening chants of ‘God Save the King’ as they exited their blacked-out BMW to meet adoring crowds on the latest leg of their royal tour of the United Kingdom on Tuesday.
From official dignitaries to GirlGuides and Scouts to local residents, Charles and Camilla charmed all in their path; warmly grabbing onto outstretched hands, accepting bouquets of flowers and speaking with those who had patiently waited hours to meet them.
A local corgi, famously his late mother’s favourite breed of dog, was even seen snuggling up to King Charles as he shook hands with well-wishers, before he received a 21-gun salute as they entered the grounds of Hillsborough Castle – the province’s official residence of the reigning monarch and members of the Royal Family.
The new sovereign today looked solemn as he vowed to follow the ‘shining example’ of his late mother as he and his wife were met with raucous applause and joyful cries after arriving in Northern Ireland.
In a powerful speech praising Queen Elizabeth II’s ‘long life of public service’, King Charles remarked on the ‘momentous and historic’ changes she witnessed in the province throughout her illustrious life, and said she had ‘never ceased to pray for the best of times for this place and its people’.
Speaking to the assembled guests in the official royal household, the new monarch, addressing the province as King for the first time, pledged to uphold his late mother’s ‘steadfast faith’ and ‘seek the welfare of all the inhabitants of Northern Ireland’.
Earlier in the day, King Charles and Queen Consort, both clad in black, shook the hands of official dignitaries before departing for the historic village of Hillsborough, where they greeted mourners outside the royal residence.
The jet carrying His Majesty touched down at the George Best Belfast City Airport shortly before midday for his 40th visit to the province – but his first as King, and his saddest.
David Stringer, a retired bus driver, of nearby Greenford, who was standing by the A40 outside the Hoover Building in Perivale, west London, said: ‘I saw her get coronated and now I am seeing her get buried. I lived in Epsom then and watched it at the Pathe News, as it was then, at the cinema.
‘The thing I remember more than anything else was the state coach because afterwards my dad brought me a model of it. The other outstanding memory was when I was at school and the headmaster came in and said ‘the King is dead’, I remember that like it was yesterday.
‘It’s a great shame. I mean, I didn’t think about her (the Queen) every day but I always knew she was there, and my life’s coming to a close now and her time has finished. But it will be interesting to see what Charles will be like, this is my third monarch now.’
Around 26,000 people filed past the late monarch’s coffin at St Giles’ Cathedral in the 24 hours since it was carried 1,200 yards up the Royal Mile from the Palace of Holyroodhouse during a solemn military procession led by King Charles III and his grief-stricken siblings.
The Scottish Government said that the queue to view the late monarch – which wound down the Royal Mile, up George IV Bridge and past the National Museum of Scotland on Chambers Street – had closed at around 1pm and that further efforts were made to ensure all those already waiting would be able to pay their respects before the lying at rest in Edinburgh ended at 3pm.
Mourners described being ‘overwhelmed with the power and emotion of the occasion’ with many wiping away tears as they briefly stood in prayer looking at the coffin. Most bowed or curtseyed when they arrived. Dozens came to queue after travelling from England. Some came from London, believing that it would be easier to see her in Scotland with 30-hour queues predicted in the English capital.
Corey Burgher joined the very back of the queue with his stepdaughter Giovanna Giambastiani at 2.30am. He said: ‘We wanted to say our goodbyes to the boss. I’m in the military, I work on the submarines. Was surprised how much the news hit me. I didn’t know her personally, but I met her when I was a kid. I got quite emotional about it, it was quite a shock.’
Dawn Legge, from Manchester said: ‘I needed to come. We needed to pay our respects and mourn our Queen before we want to celebrate our King’. Catherine Gray, from London, said with tears in her eyes that she had made the 800-mile round trip because she felt ‘weird’ without Her Majesty in her life. She said seeing the coffin was ‘surreal’ and ‘one of the most emotional moments of my life’.
And one man in the Edinburgh queue said this morning: ‘If she could do 70 years, I can do 12 hours’.
Hundreds filed past the casket last night when King Charles III and his three siblings staged a silent 10-minute vigil at the four corners of Her Majesty’s oak coffin.
Mitch Stevenson, who queued for just under five hours with his sister, made it into the cathedral at just after 1am. He said: ‘It was a very important occasion for us – we lost our mum earlier this year and she would have loved to have been able to go, so we went for her memory also’.
Luke McIlwain, 34, joined the queue with his partner Felicity Baines, 31, at just after 3am. He said: ‘It’s a once in a lifetime opportunity. We might never see another Queen’. He said it was very cold, adding: ‘We wanted to join the line overnight to avoid the crowds – unsuccessfully’.
Mourners raced to central Edinburgh early this morning to pay their respects.
Those wanting to see the Queen’s coffin must first obtain a coloured wristband in George Square before they join the queue.
At 7am numbers had dwindled overnight so members of the public were able to walk to the cathedral doors almost uninterrupted.
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken to a hearse as it departs St Giles’ Cathedral
The Princess Royal and Vice Admiral Timothy Laurence after the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken to a hearse as it departs St Giles’ Cathedral, for Edinburgh Airport
The Princess Royal and Vice Admiral Timothy Laurence watch as the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II is taken to a hearse as it departs St Giles’ Cathedral
Members of the public wait to see the hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, leave from from St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II travels up the Royal Mile
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leaves St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II crossing The Dean Bridge
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II on its way to Edinburgh Airport
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II crossing The Dean Bridge
The Queen’s coffin is carried in a hearse up the Royal Mile to Edinburgh Airport as a sea of mourners watches
Thousands of mourners packed Edinburgh’s small streets as the Queen leaves Scotland for the final time
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth is seen on the Royal Mile
The Queen’s cortege with the hearse carrying Her Majesty’s coffin
Members of the public gather to see the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leave from St Giles’ Cathedral
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II from St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leaves St Giles’ Cathedral
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Elizabeth II from St Giles’ Cathedral before it travels to Edinburgh Airport
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II from St Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh
People take photos with their mobile phones as the Queen’s hearse is driven to Edinburgh Airport
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II departs St Giles’ Cathedral
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II makes its way to Edinburgh Airport from St Giles’ Cathedral
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II
The Princess Royal and Vice Admiral Tim Laurence leave St Giles’ Cathedral
The queue to view the Queen’s lying in state in London could be cut off if it gets too long, it emerged today amid warnings mourners could have to wait for up to 35 hours as the capital faces an extraordinary surge in visitors.
Royal fans are already sleeping on pavements before the line even opens, with Downing Street admitting some people could be turned away if the queue becomes too big. The Prime Minister’s spokesman said organisers on the ground will make a decision on any ‘cut-off point’ once they see the ‘scale of people who are attending’.
Officials expect Westminster Hall has capacity for nearly 350,000 people to view the Queen’s coffin despite the venue opening for 24 hours a day from 5pm tomorrow until 6.30am next Monday – the day of the state funeral.
But with between 750,000 and one million people expected to want to pay tribute, up to 650,000 could miss out – while others could struggle to even get to London given the strain set to be placed on transport networks.
Whitehall chiefs in charge of logistics for the historic five-night vigil have estimated mourner numbers could be close to the million people who turned up to view Pope John Paul II when he lay in state in Vatican City in 2005.
And with one million people estimated to want to view the funeral itself, which is comparable with the numbers for Princess Diana’s service in 1997, rail bosses are rapidly drawing up plans for 24-hour trains into the capital.
Rail capacity is set to be boosted by up to 50 per cent on some lines, Network Rail warned of ‘unprecedented travel demand’ and Transport for London said some stations could be shut if there are crowd control issues.
With some royal fans already camping on The Mall, industry body UKHospitality said hotels had seen a major spike in bookings since the Queen’s death last Thursday, with block bookings for accommodation for extra police and other personnel contributing to this.
Hotel prices are now up to four times higher for this Sunday – the night before the funeral – compared with a week later, and demand to stay in London over the next fortnight is now at its highest since the 2012 Olympics.
Some 10,000 police officers will be on duty daily this week – with Simon Morgan, a former Metropolitan Police personal protection officer for the Queen, saying that Met protection teams will be ‘stretched’.
Officials are preparing for 3,000 people an hour to file past the coffin, meaning around 328,000 in total over the 109 hours between tomorrow and Monday– with the line expected to stretch back an astonishing five miles.
Operation Feather – the exercise for managing the queues – is now underway with portable toilets and water stations being set up, while Whitehall insiders fear London could actually become ‘full’ for the first time.
Churches along the route will be asked to provide support to those waiting, with the Government’s Cobra emergency planning committee told that the estimate of queueing times is currently 17 to 35 hours.
The queue is likely to snake along the south bank of the Thames, past Tower Bridge, and as far as Southwark Park – a route 4.9 miles long. There will also be a ‘special access’ queue set up from Tate Britain for those with disabilities, and licensing rules could be varied so that restaurants and cafes can open through the night.
But by 9am a steady flow footfall had grown but mourners had to wait no more than an hour.
Among those queuing were Tom and Jane Baker from York. Tom, 42, a security guard, explained: ‘We really wanted to pay our respects and it’s not that much longer to drive to Edinburgh than it is to London so we drove up last night. We stayed in a little hotel outside the city but we’re here now and hopefully we’ll get to take part in the vigil shortly.
‘The Queen has always been there for me. I was a Cub Scout, a Scout and I served in the British Army. This is the least I can do to serve my Queen.’
Jane, 38, added: ‘The Queen was a wonderful woman. Christmas Day will not be the same without the Queen’s Speech.’
People traveled from across Scotland, the UK and the Commonwealth to offer prayers to the Queen as she lay at rest.
Council workers Janet Mattheson and Danielle Gartland-Quinn got up early to did the monarch farewell before going to work this morning.
Janet, 55, from Edinburgh told MailOnline: ‘It felt very peaceful to be so close to the Queen and to see her for the last time.
‘There is a feeling of quiet serenity in the church. It was very moving to see her coffin with the crown.’
Danielle, 29, from Edinburgh, added: ‘It was very peaceful.’
Friends Jenny Baker and Cathie Paterson had traveled from the west coast of Scotland to pay their respects for the last time.
Jenny, 74, from Loch Lomond told MailOnline: ‘We are royalists and have always supported the monarchy.
‘So we decided to get up early this morning and vibe to pay our respects. She has been such a constant presence in our lives we wanted to say goodbye. She is being really well looked after and that was great to see.’
Cathie, 82, from the Isle of Lewis, said: ‘I have always followed the royal family and do I felt I had to come and pay my respects to the Queen. We are in Scotland but we will always fly the Union Jack.’
Amanda Rawlins and her family learned of the Queen’s death as the flew to London from Melbourne, Australia.
Amanda, 52, told MailOnline: ‘We were on the plane to London when we learned that the Queen had died. So we decided we wanted to come to Edinburgh to pay our respects to our monarch. We felt that this was a moment in history and we wanted to witness it first hand.
‘I was very impressed by the vigil – the sense of tradition, respect and love. It was so moving.’
Amanda was accompanied by her husband Shaun Kempton, 49 and children Ruby, 14, and Max, 12.
Sharon Baum, 53, and her partner Alison Evans, 50, were at the front of the queue yesterday, as members of the public paid personal tributes to the beloved monarch.
The couple queued up for nearly 11 hours and told MailOnline of their extraordinary experience on an historic day at St Giles’ Cathedral.
Mrs Baum, from Chesterfield, Derbyshire said: ‘It was really serene and peaceful and solemn.
‘We feel so privileged to be allowed to see it and do what we did.
‘We felt like we were involved in a little bit of history.
‘You can’t prepare yourself for how you are going to feel when you go through the door. I knew I would be upset.
‘As soon as you are there it brings it all home. We are really big Royalists. I shed a tear – several. I said a little prayer and bowed my head. We probably could have stayed a little bit longer. There was nobody rushing you but there were so many people waiting.
‘It was one of the most memorable and sad experiences of my life. I will remember it until my dying day. It was so emotional.’
The couple set off from their home at 10pm on Saturday and drove through to travel to Ballater near Balmoral at 5am as the Queen made her final journey from the castle.
Last night the couple were returning home but are hoping to be in London for the Queen’s funeral.
Eleanor Wardrop, 72, and her twin sister Jennifer Davis were among the first in the queue arriving at 8am yesterday.
Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron of the Royal Air Force (RAF) carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the Royal Standard of Scotland, into a RAF C17 aircraft at Edinburgh airport
Princess Anne watches the coffin of her mother Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh Airport
Princess Anne, Princess Royal and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence watch as Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron of the Royal Air Force (RAF) carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh Airport
Pallbearers carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II at Edinburgh Airport
Pallbearers from the Queen’s Colour Squadron of the Royal Air Force (RAF) carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the Royal Standard of Scotland, into a RAF C17 aircraft
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II makes its way to Edinburgh Airport
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II leaving St Giles’ Cathedral
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Queen Elizabeth in Edinburgh
Members of the public queue outside St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburg
The hearse carrying the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II travels up the Royal Mile after departing St Giles’ Cathedral, for Edinburgh Airport, where it will be flown by the Royal Air Force to RAF Northolt, then travel onward to Buckingham Palace
Pallbearers carry the coffin of Elizabeth II from St Giles’ Cathedral before it travels to Edinburgh Airport
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth II crossing The Dean Bridge
A Royal Archer takes a moment as the Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin leaves
People queue to enter St Giles Cathedral, following the death of Queen Elizabeth, in Edinburgh
Members of the public queue to pay their respects as Queen Elizabeth II lies in state in St Giles’ Cathedral
People queue to enter St Giles’ Cathedral, following the death of Queen Elizabeth, in Edinburgh
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin lying at rest at St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh
Mourners queue to pay their respects as Queen Elizabeth II lies in state in St Giles’ Cathedral
Police officers on duty as people queue to view the Queen’s coffin at St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh
People queue to view the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II as she lies at rest at St Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh
At her Coronation, the Queen wore a crown glittering with jewels and wielded a sceptre boasting the world’s largest white diamond.
But a royal expert has predicted that Her Majesty will be buried with just two pieces of jewellery.
She added that her engagement ring, which contains diamonds taken from a tiara owned by Prince Philip’s mother Alice of Battenberg, will likely be given to her daughter Princess Anne.
The Queen’s wedding ring was passed to her after being given to her parents for their wedding in 1923. It began a royal tradition of having wedding rings made from Welsh gold. It was made from the Clogau St. David’s gold mine.
Her Majesty’s private jewellery collection holds around 300 pieces, including 98 brooches, 34 pairs of earrings and 15 rings. When not worn by the monarch, they were stored in the Queen’s Gallery at Buckingham Palace.
The official Crown Jewels are held in the Tower of London. Dating back to the 17th-century, the collection includes more than 23,000 diamonds, sapphires and rubies.
Her Majesty’s state funeral will take place in Westminster Abbey next Monday, after she lies in state in her oak coffin for four days at Westminster Hall nearby.
The former executive PA said: ‘It was a priceless moment. It really was very, very special. It was completely serene, just so dignified and quiet. It was just so beautiful. Absolutely beautiful.
‘People were taking their time, walking slowly. Men were saluting to the Queen, bowing to the Queen and the women were curtseying.
‘I did a little curtsy as I went past. I was so glad that I was able to honour her in that way.
‘It was very quiet. There were two ministers on duty saying prayers as we walked through. It was very dignified.
‘There were the archers standing there with their heads bowed and there were police guards as well.’
Describing the experience Eleanor said: ‘We wanted to come to the vigil to pay a personal tribute. We grew up with the Queen. She has been a constant in our lives. She was our true north.
‘She took an oath and she stood by it her whole life. As a young woman she promised to do her duty and she did that right to the end.
‘She was a remarkable woman and nobody else will ever be like her. She has been a role model to us all.’
Peter Binder, 60, travelled down with wife Georgina from the north of Scotland arriving at 7am.
He said: ‘There were literally half a dozen people but that changed very quickly. It’s been a very long day but it has certainly been worthwhile.
‘There has been a very good spirit in the crowd. Everyone has got to know each other. We have been supporting each other and there has been a good camaraderie. I suppose we are proud British monarchists. It has been a very moving experience.’
It comes as King Charles III pledged to ‘seek the welfare’ of all Northern Ireland’s people and described how his family have felt their ‘sorrows’ as he praised his mother’s relationship with Northern Ireland.
Charles, who in 2015 made a pilgrimage to the site of his great-uncle Lord Mountbatten’s murder in an IRA bombing, said the Queen had ‘never ceased to pray for the best of times for this place and its people’.
Speaking at Hillsborough Castle in Co Down, the royal residence in Northern Ireland, the new monarch said the late Queen was aware of her position in bringing together divided communities ‘whom history had separated’.
Later, the King shook hands with the President of Ireland Michael D Higgins following a memorial service for the late Queen at St Anne’s Cathedral in Belfast.
The King, responding at Hillsborough Castle to a message of condolence on behalf of the people of Northern Ireland from Stormont Assembly speaker Alex Maskey, said: ‘Through all those years, she never ceased to pray for the best of times for this place and for its people, whose stories she knew, whose sorrows our family had felt, and for whom she had a great affection and regard.
King Charles III and the Queen Consort greet President Michael D Higgins (centre right) as they attend a Service of Reflection at St Anne’s Cathedral in Belfast
King Charles III and the Queen Consort depart Belfast City Airport at the end of their visit to Northern Ireland
The King and Queen Consort about to leave Belfast City Airport
The King shakes hands with dignitaries before he and the Queen Consort fly from Belfast back to London
The plane that will transport King Charles III and the Queen Consort when they depart Belfast City Airport at the end of their visit to Northern Ireland
King Charles III waves to the public as he departs St Anne’s Cathedral
King Charles III and the Queen Consort meet members of the public on a walkabout in Writer’s Square
King Charles III meets Noah workman from Ballynafeigh Orange Lodge
King Charles III and the Queen Consort meet members of the public on a walkabout in Writer’s Square, Belfast
King Charles III and the Queen Consort meet members of the public on a walkabout in Writer’s Square, Belfast, during their visit to Northern Ireland
Mourners in London queue to see the Queen as her coffin is driven to Buckingham Palace
Well-wishers mingle as they queue to see the Queen’s coffin
Prince Harry today said his ‘decade of service is not determined by the uniform he wears’ after he was ‘banned’ from donning a military outfit at the Queen’s funeral or the events leading up to it.
The Duke of Sussex, who saw action on the front line during two tours of duty in Afghanistan, revealed he will wear a morning suit during the official commemorations.
Harry has allegedly been prevented from wearing his military uniform at the late monarch’s state funeral even though his disgraced uncle the Duke of York will be permitted to do so at the Vigil of the Princes in Westminster Hall.
Following a series of reports about the issue, the Duke of Sussex’s spokesman said today: ‘[Prince Harry] will wear a morning suit throughout events honouring his grandmother.
‘His decade of military service is not determined by the uniform he wears and we respectfully ask that focus remain on the life and legacy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.’
Only working royals – which Harry and Andrew are not – are being permitted to dress in uniform at five ceremonial occasions.
These are the St Giles’ Cathedral service in Edinburgh, which took place on Monday, and the coffin’s procession to Westminster Hall, the vigil at the lying in state, the funeral in Westminster Abbey and the committal service in Windsor.
‘My mother felt deeply, I know, the significance of the role she herself played in bringing together those whom history had separated, and in extending a hand to make possible the healing of long-held hurts.’
With his Queen Consort, Prime Minister Liz Truss and significant figures from Northern Ireland watching, the King said about the late Queen: ‘Now, with that shining example before me, and with God’s help, I take up my new duties resolved to seek the welfare of all the inhabitants of Northern Ireland.’
A momentous step forward in Anglo-Irish relations came in 2012 when the Queen shook hands with Martin McGuinness, the then-deputy first minister of Northern Ireland and a former IRA commander.
The late monarch had lost a member of her family in the Troubles, her cousin Lord Mountbatten, who had a close relationship with Charles.
The 79-year-old Lord Mountbatten was murdered on August 27 1979, when a bomb blew apart a boat at Mullaghmore in Co Sligo, on one of the most violent days in the history of the Troubles that saw 18 British troops die in an IRA ambush.
The Queen’s historic state visit to the Republic of Ireland in 2011 – the first by a British monarch since the Republic’s independence – was another milestone.
She visited significant locations such as Dublin’s Croke Park – the site of the 1920 Bloody Sunday massacre where British forces fired into the crowd at a football match, killing 14 spectators and players – and surprised and delighted the nation by speaking a few words of Gaelic at the start of her state dinner speech.
The speaker of the Stormont Assembly described how the Queen had been part of efforts to build peace in Ireland.
Mr Maskey said she had not been ‘a distant observer’ in the transformation and progress of relationships among the people of the country.
He said the monarch had ‘demonstrated how individual acts of positive leadership can help break down barriers and encourage reconciliation’.
Mr Maskey added: ‘She showed that a small and insignificant gesture – a visit, a handshake, crossing the street or speaking a few words of Irish – can make a huge difference in changing attitudes and building relationships.’
The Queen’s recognition of both British and Irish traditions, as well as the wider diversity of the community, was ‘exceptionally significant’, he said.
Mr Maskey added: ‘In all of this she personally underlined that one tradition is not diminished by reaching out to show respect to another.’
The controversial rulers heading to London to mourn the Queen: Brazil’s far-right populist leader Bolsonaro and Turkey’s Erdogan WILL go to funeral but Putin’s not invited…amid questions over if MBS, Dubai’s Sheikh Mohammed or China’s Xi will attend
World leaders including Joe Biden, Emmanuel Macron, Justin Trudeau and Jacinda Ardern will be joined at the Queen’s funeral by Europe’s royals, Japan’s emperor and a cast of controversial statesmen including Jair Bolsonaro and Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The presence of Brazil’s right-wing populist President and Turkey’s authoritarian leader in London could spark protests that would widen if Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud and Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum are also invited to Britain.
As the world mourns Her Majesty’s death at the age of 96, the globe’s most powerful men and women are scrambling for seats on Monday amid limits on who can join the congregation of 2,000 VIPs.
500 world leaders, foreign dignitaries and heads of state including Mr Biden, Mr Macron and Emperor Naruhito will be at the historic service honouring Britain’s longest-reigning monarch – the first full State Funeral that Britain has hosted since Winston Churchill died in 1965.
But Vladimir Putin has been snubbed along with his ally, Belarus’ Aleksandr Lukashenko. Min Aung Hlaing of Myanmar will also not be asked with no official stance yet on Syria’s Bashar al-Assad or North Korea’s Kim Jong-un – although they are highly unlikely to make the guest list because they rarely go abroad.
Iran’s Ayatollah and President won’t be asked to be in London – but an ambassador from the rogue state will be invited.
Buckingham Palace declined to comment on who is on the guest list and when it will be finalised.
It is not thought the trip will be made by Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky, who took time out from organising his country’s fightback against Putin’s forces to sign a book of condolence for the Queen.
China’s President Xi and India’s Narendra Modi are yet to confirm. Xi is considered unlikely to accept given he has not left the country for more than three years.
The leaders of Russia, Belarus and Myanmar won’t get an invite to the Queen’s funeral but a number of controversial figures including Erdogan and Bolsonaro are coming to London and other world leaders are yet to confirm including President Xi
The octogenarian King of Saudi Arabia Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud will have received an invite but would be highly unlikely to attend due to his age and health.
His son Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud, the nation’s de facto leader who mixed with world leaders at the G20, could head to Britain in his place – a decision that would likely spark protests.
MBS is accused of ordering the murder journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Turkey. He vehemently denies the claims and said recently that that the journalist would not be among his top 1,000 targets to kill, ‘if that was how we did things’.
Major world leaders will not be forced to take a bus to the Queen‘s funeral on Monday, it has been revealed.
Joe Biden, Emmanuel Macron, and Japanese Emperor Naruhito are among those expected to be granted exemptions from the coach ride for ‘security reasons’.
German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Italian president Sergio Matarella, Canada’s Justin Trudeau and Israel’s Isaac Herzog may also be exempted.
It comes after a leaked document suggested all foreign leaders would be forced to take coaches from a secret location in west London to Westminster Abbey due to ‘tight security and road restrictions.’
But a government source has since clarified the situation to The Times, saying it clearly would not be appropriate to ask G7 leaders to ‘take a bus’.
Dignitaries are being asked to be as flexible as possible, the source added.
But US intelligence agencies concluded in a declassified intelligence report that the Saudi crown prince had approved the 2018 murder.
Her Majesty’s close friend Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the billionaire ruler of Dubai, is yet to confirm if he will attend.
Before her death, Her Majesty was under pressure to ditch him after the High Court found he was responsible for illegal UK phone hacking.
A senior judge concluded that Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the horse race-loving friend of the Royal Family and prime minister of the United Arab Emirates, committed a ‘total abuse of trust and indeed an abuse of power’.
He previously orchestrated the armed kidnap of his runaway daughter Princess Shamsa from Cambridgeshire in 2000, persuading Tony Blair’s government to hush it up, the High Court heard. He also allegedly abducted her sister Princess Latifa when she too tried to flee.
But with the limit on numbers, it could be he is not asked because he is not technically a head of state – Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan is leader of the United Arab Emirates and Sheikh Mohammed is his deputy.
Brazilian right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro has accepted an invitation to attend the funeral, the country’s foreign ministry said, as has Turkey’s controversial president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Heads of state and presidents, European royals and key figures from public life will be invited to gather in the abbey. Leading figures in Britain’s public life are set to attend her funeral next week, including Liz Truss and all her living predecessors.
But with so many people wanting to go, invites are limited to one per VIP plus their spouse if they have one, but there is an ongoing row after the Government urged them to fly commercially and pool jets to get to the UK. There is also upset that many will be asked to jump on shuttle buses to the abbey rather than use state limousines or carriages.
All of Europe’s kings and queens, as well as minor royals from the continent related to Her Majesty and Prince Philip, will be there, including King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands, King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia of Spain, King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway and Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene of Monaco.
Spain’s former king Juan Carlos will pause his self-imposed exile in Abu Dhabi to attend Queen Elizabeth’s funeral. Outside of Europe, Japan’s Emperor Naruhito will travel to London alongside Empress Masako and Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.
The leaders of most Commonwealth countries are expected to attend, including New Zealand’s prime minister Jacinda Ardern – whose journey across the world will take almost 24 hours – and her Australian counterpart, Anthony Albanese.
Australia and New Zealand are also offering to share flights to allow Pacific leaders to travel together to London with Mr Albanese bring 10 ‘ordinary Aussies’ with him on the plane to the UK.
US President Joe Biden has confirmed he will attend the Queen’s funeral alongside First Lady Jill Biden in Britain’s first state funeral since Sir Winston Churchill’s death
Russian President Vladimir Putin has been invited to the funeral. Chinese President Xi Jinping has been invited, but is not likely to leave China for the first time in two years
Belarus’ Aleksandr Lukashenko is not invited. But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and The President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, will fly to London
Pictured: The Queen attends an unveiling of a design For the Shiekh Zayed National Museum accompanied By Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum during a state visit to Abu Dhabi. Sheikh Mohammed was slammed by a High Court ruling recently. Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends the G20 Leaders’ Summit for Saudi Arabia and could be asked to the funeral
French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron will be in London
Princess Charlene of Monaco and Prince Albert II of Monaco will be in London
King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima of the Netherlands were the first foreign royals to confirm their attendance at Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral next Monday
King Felipe VI, Queen Letizia of Spain recently paid tribute to their distant relative with a heartfelt statement. They have also confirmed their attendance to the Queen’s funeral
Japan’s Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako pictured in Tokyo shortly after his enthronement in November 2019 may also attend
New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern (pictured) has been confirmed as one of the attendees of The Queen’s funeral next week. Australian PM, Anthony Albanese, pictured with his partner Jodie Haydon, will come to Britain from Down Under. Australia and New Zealand are also offering to share flights to allow Pacific leaders to travel together to London.
The hearse carrying the coffin of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth, following the queen’s death, departs St Giles’ Cathedral, in Edinburgh as she is flown to London
Not invited
Russia’s Vladimir Putin
Belarus’ Aleksandr Lukashenko
Min Aung Hlaing of Myanmar
Supreme Leader of Iran Ali Khamenei/President Ebrahim Raisi – but the ambassador to the UK will be asked
Not confirmed
Indian prime minister Narendra Modi
China’s Xi Jinping
Ruler of Dubai, Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud or his son, de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud
Confirmed
Joe Biden and Jill Biden, President and first lady of the United States
Emmanuel Macron, President of France
President Isaac Herzog of Israel
Alexander Van der Bellen, President of Austria
Jacinda Ardern, Prime Minister of New Zealand
Anthony Albanese, Australian Prime Minister
Gitanas Nauseda, President of Lithuania
Ranil Wickremesinghe, Sri Lankan President
Frank-Walter Steinmeier, President of Germany
Yoon Suk-yeol, South Korean President
Jair Bolsonaro, President of Brazil
Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan
King Philip and Queen Mathilde of Belgium
Andrzej Duda, President of Poland
Sergio Mattarella, President of Italy
Justin Trudeau, Canadian Prime Minister
Charles Michel, President of the European Council
Egils Levits, President of Latvia
Paula-Mae Weekes, President of Trinidad and Tobago
Mohammad Shtayyeh, Palestinian Prime Minister
Sauli Niinisto, President of Finland
Katalin Novak, Hungarian President
Michael D Higgins, Irish President and Micheál Martin, Irish Prime Minister
Confirmed
King Charles III
Anne, the Princess Royal,
Prince Andrew
Prince Edward
Camilla, the Queen Consort
Sophie, the Countess of Wessex,
Prince William
Prince Harry
Peter Phillips
Zara and Mike Tindall
Princesses Beatrice and Jack Brooksbank
Lady Louise Windsor and James, Viscount Severn.
The Duke of Kent, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, Princess Alexandra, and Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester.
Catherine, the Princess of Wales, and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex.
King Philip and Queen Mathilde of Belgium
King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands
King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia of Spain
King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia of Sweden
King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway
Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duchess Maria Theresa of Luxembourg
Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene of Monaco.
King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie of Greece
Japan’s Emperor Naruhito
Spain’s former king Juan Carlos
Joe Biden was the first to confirm his attendance yesterday – and the majority of world leaders from the King’s realms and the Commonwealth will be there.
Russian President Vladimir Putin is certain not to be there. Invites to the Queen’s funeral have not been sent to Moscow, Belarus and Myanmar, while Iran will only be represented at an ambassadorial level, Whitehall sources said.
Invitations to other leaders, including former heads of state, will be at the discretion of Buckingham Palace. This means that the Obamas and Donald Trump may miss out.
The Queen’s state funeral will take place at Westminster Abbey in central London at 11am on Monday. Senior members of the family are expected to follow behind – just like they did for the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales and the Duke of Edinburgh.
The military will line the streets and also join the procession. The service will be televised in the UK and around the globe.
It came as the Government, which is in charge of travel arrangements for the funeral, was forced to clarify its security arrangements for visiting world leaders.
Leaked documents suggested world leaders would be asked to travel to the funeral by bus for security reasons. The President usually travels in a limo nicknamed ‘the Beast’, which is bulletproof, bomb-proof and resistant to chemical attacks.
Yesterday Number 10 said that its directions were guidance, adding: ‘The arrangements for leaders and how they travel will vary depending on individual circumstances. Arrangements for different leaders will vary depending on things like security risks.’
The Foreign Office also encouraged leaders to use commercial flights, warning that Heathrow is ‘not available for private flight arrangements or aircraft parking’.
Those that insist on travelling by private jet should head for ‘less busy airports’ around London, it said. Helicopters have also been banned ‘due to the number of flights operating at this time’.
After the funeral, the Queen’s coffin will be taken to St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle for a televised committal service.
Later in the evening, there will be a private interment service with senior members of the royal family.
The Queen’s final resting place will be the King George VI memorial chapel, an annexe to the main chapel – where her mother and father were buried, along with the ashes of her sister, Princess Margaret. Philip’s coffin will move from the Royal Vault to the memorial chapel to join the Queen’s.
But there is a backlash over foreign leaders being ordered to travel to the ceremony by bus.
Invitations will be issued to heads of state and their wives – but invitations to other leaders, including former heads of state, will be at the discretion of Buckingham Palace.
Yesterday Number 10 said that the Government is taking the lead on travel arrangements, while the guest list is a matter for Buckingham Palace.
When asked if there was space for former heads of state such as Mr Trump, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said ‘space will be limited’.
The funeral is being held in Westminster Abbey at 11am on Monday, which has also been designated a bank holiday.
Leaders who have already confirmed their attendance include the prime ministers of Canada, Australia and New Zealand, as well as the heads of state of Japan and South Korea.
US President Joe Biden said he will attend with his wife Jill, catching his White House staff off-guard as his predecessors declined to attend the last two state funerals in the UK – Winston Churchill’s in 1965 and George VI’s in 1952.
His attendance is expected to create an awkward decision for the Palace, who may wish to invite Mr Trump’s predecessors Michelle and Barack Obama.
Mrs Obama and the Queen developed a strong bond, despite the former president’s wife breaking royal protocol by placing her arm on the monarch’s back during their first meeting in 2009.
In a touching tribute to the Queen, the Obamas said her reign was ‘defined by grace, elegance, and a tireless work ethic’, adding she meant ‘a great deal’ to them, and remembered how she ‘welcomed them to the world stage with open arms and extraordinary generosity’.
Former Tory leader Lord Hague said ‘of course’ there will be diplomacy at the Queen’s funeral.
But he said world leaders are coming to pay their respects to an ‘extraordinary head of state’ – and that is what ‘90% of it will be about’.
Asked if there will be politics at the funeral, he told Times Radio: ‘Of course there is some diplomacy – you can’t have that number of people together from around the world without them starting to say, ‘well, what do you think is happening in Ukraine?’ – of course there is going to be some of that.
‘Nevertheless, they’re coming because they want to pay their respects to this extraordinary head of state. And that is what 90% of it will be about.’
Yesterday Irish premier Micheal Martin confirmed he will travel to attend the Queen’s funeral, as well as a memorial service for the Queen in Belfast today.
European royal families are expected to be present, including King Felipe of Spain and his wife, Queen Letizia.
Emperor Naruhito, the Oxford-educated leader of Japan, is expected to make the trip to the UK despite not usually attending funerals.
President Yoon of South Korea, President Steinmeier of Germany, President Bolsonaro, the right-wing leader of Brazil, and Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, have also confirmed their attendance.
Other likely attendees will include President Macron of France and President Erdogan of Turkey.
Number 10 said there will be no bi-lateral meetings granted to visiting dignitaries, but King Charles III will host a reception for overseas leaders at Buckingham Palace on Sunday evening.
After the state funeral service the following day, Foreign Secretary James Cleverly will host a reception for political leaders in Dean’s Yard, in the grounds of the abbey.
King Charles III, Anne, the Princess Royal, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward each stood on one of the four corners of the coffin in a ceremony known as the Vigil of the Princes last night. They will lead the mourning at the state funeral
Sophie, Countess of Wessex, guest the Duke of Buccleuch and Camilla, Queen Consort, will support their spouses
Catherine, Princess of Wales, Prince William, Prince of Wales, Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex on the long Walk at Windsor Castle on Saturday
Peter Phillips (left) and Zara Tindall and Mike Tindall (right) are expected to be attending the service
Princess Eugenie and Jack Brooksbank (left) and Princess Beatrice and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi (right) will all be at the funeral
James Viscount Severn (left) and Lady Louise Windsor (right), the Earl and Countess of Wessex’s children, will both be going
The Queen and Prince Philip with their great-grandchildren, from left, George, Louis, Charlotte, Savannah Phillips, Isla Phillips, Lena Tindall and Mia Tindall. This picture was taken by the Princess of Wales in 2018
European royals have confirmed their attendance at the Queen‘s funeral on Monday.
King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands, King Felipe and Queen Letizia of Spain and King Philippe and Queen Mathilde of Belgium will be among the 2,000 mourners expected at Westminster Abbey.
Representatives from the Swedish, Danish and Monegasque royal families are also expected, according to royal blogger Gert’s Royals.
Unlike the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral in 2021 – which was restricted to just 30 people – it is likely Westminster Abbey’s 2,000 capacity will be filled to capacity in honour Britain’s longest-reigning monarch.
The funeral congregation will be headed by the new King Charles III and Queen Consort Camilla, while William, Prince of Wales, and Catherine, Princess of Wales, will follow closely.
The Queen’s other three children, Princess Anne and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence, Prince Andrew, and Princess Edward and his wife Sophie, Countess of Wessex, will also be among the chief mourners.
The King’s mother, Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands, has also confirmed that she will be in attendance at Westminster Abbey next Monday
King Philippe and Queen Mathilde of Belgium will also join the congregation at Westminster Abbey next week
Denmark’s Queen Margrethe II, 81, described as a close friend of the late Queen and now Europe’s longest-reigning monarch celebrating her 50th Jubilee – will almost certainly be prominent among the European heads of state
King Harald V of Norway (right) is pictured with Queen Sonja (left) at a museum in Oslo on June 16, 2022
King Carl XVI Gustav and Queen Silvia of Sweden are highly likely to be among the mourners at the Queen’s funeral
Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duchess Maria Theresa of Luxembourg
It is expected all eight of the Queen’s grandchildren will be present, including Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Peter Phillips, Zara Tindall and her husband Mike Tindall, Princess Beatrice and her husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, Princess Eugenie and her spouse Jack Brooksbank, Lady Louise Windsor and James, Viscount Severn.
The Queen’s nephew Lord Snowdon and niece Lady Sarah Chatto and her husband Daniel Chatto are also anticipated to be there.
Other monarchs likely to be in attendance at the Queen’s funeral include King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia of Sweden, King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway, Grand Duke Henri and Grand Duchess Maria Theresa of Luxembourg, and Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene of Monaco.
Other possible guests are the former King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie of Greece – who was deposed in 1973.
The confirmation of foreign royals at the Queen’s funeral comes shortly after they paid tribute to the monarch online.
Following her death King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia of Spain paid tribute to their distant relative with a heartfelt statement.
The Spanish Royal Family echoed sentiments from the Dutch and Swedish royals in praising the Queen’s sense of duty to her country throughout her historic 70-year reign.Posting a letter to King Charles III on the Casa Real Twitter account, King Felipe said he would ‘dearly’ miss his Aunt Lilibet, a figure he held close.
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