Mourners coming to pay tribute to the late Queen Elizabeth II from all around the world have been asked to stop bringing gifts and artefacts other than flowers. The gifts in question? Paddington teddy bears and marmalade sandwiches.
In the wake of the Queen’s death, many people have flocked to Buckingham Palace and other royal landmarks to pay their respects to the long-reigning monarch.
Although some have gone for flowers or vigil candles, others have left Paddington stuffed toys and marmalade sandwiches as a nod to the special Platinum Jubilee sketch Her Majesty appeared in alongside the beloved fictional bear.
Party pooper—that is, The Royal Parks charity—has now asked that mourners stop bringing gifts and “artefacts,” saying only floral tributes should be left. “Any form of floral tribute is acceptable,” a message on the charity’s website reads. “In the interests of sustainability, we ask visitors to only lay organic or compostable material,” it continues.
That being said, it further notes that “cards and labels will be accepted and will be periodically removed by The Royal Parks’ staff and contractors for storage offsite.”
When it comes to flowers, visitors are asked to remove any plastic wrappings from floral tributes. Sadly, it turns out that even lit candles will not be accepted. “Lit candles will be extinguished and periodically removed,” states The Royal Parks’ website.
Like the rest of the Queen’s life, it seems everything has been perfectly organised for those wishing to pay their respects. The principal location for laying flowers is the Green Park Floral Tribute Garden—any flowers left at Buckingham Palace will be “sensitively moved” to the appropriate tribute site, the charity explains.
The news even made it onto BBC Breakfast yesterday morning, Monday 12 September 2022, where reporter Sally Nugent told viewers: “I just want to bring you a little bit of advice that’s come from The Royal Parks this morning. They are suggesting that there are enough Paddingtons and marmalade sandwiches in the parks at the moment, so please feel free to bring flowers, but maybe don’t bring anymore Paddingtons or marmalade sandwiches for now.”
Commenting on Twitter, one person wrote: “I imagine her Majesty having a little giggle at this,” while others suggested people could donate said sandwiches to a food bank or even give money to charity in the Queen’s honour instead.
I imagine her Majesty having a little giggle at this.
Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth II’s husband, has died aged 99, Buckingham Palace has announced today, 9 April 2021. “It is with deep sorrow that Her Majesty The Queen has announced the death of her beloved husband, His Royal Highness The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. His Royal Highness passed away peacefully this morning at Windsor Castle,” said Buckingham Palace.
Speaking at Downing Street, the UK’s prime minister Boris Johnson added: “He helped to steer the Royal Family and the monarchy so that it remains an institution indisputably vital to the balance and happiness of our national life.”
Whether you’re looking to remember the Duke of Edinburgh’s great achievements or are simply here to learn more about him, here are 5 facts you should know about the Queen’s husband of 73 years.
Une publication partagée par BBC News (@bbcnews)
Although best known as a member of the British royal family, Prince Philip had considerable royal connections long before his marriage to the Queen in 1947. The son of Princess Alice of Battenberg, a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria, and her husband Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark, Prince Philip was also a nephew of King Constantine of Greece and sixth in line to the Greek throne at birth.
In fact, through his parents’ long lineages, he is also related to Kings of Prussia and the Russian Romanov dynasty.
Prince Philip was born at the summer retreat of the Greek royal family, Mon Repos, on the island of Corfu off the west coast of Greece, in 1921. At the time, Greece was still using the Julian calendar—and wouldn’t adopt the Gregorian calendar until 1923. The difference between the two means that in his home country, he was actually born on 28 May, not 10 June.
The Greco-Turkish War of 1919 to 1922 eventually led to the abdication of Prince Philip’s uncle, Constantine I, and forced his entire family into exile while he was only one. Through his family’s connections to the Mountbatten dynasty in England, a British vessel—the HMS Calypso—was sent to Greece to evacuate the family, with Prince Philip reportedly carried from the country in a wooden fruit crate. They eventually settled in France, and the young prince grew up in Saint-Cloud, just outside of Paris, with his aunt, Marie Bonaparte, Princess George of Greece and Denmark.
In 1930, Prince Philip’s mother, Princess Alice, was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. The diagnosis led to her being removed from the family and institutionalised, first in Berlin and then in a sanatorium in Switzerland, where she underwent years of awful treatment. Sigmund Freud—who was a friend of Prince Philip’s aunt, Princess George—believed that Alice’s condition was caused by sexual frustration, and recommended her ovaries be repeatedly X-rayed in what he said was an attempt to “cool her down.”
During World War II, Alice sheltered some Greek Jews from the Nazis, saving their lives. Yad Vashem bestowed on her the title of Righteous Among the Nations in 1993. Then, in 1937, Prince Philip’s heavily pregnant sister Cecilie was killed in a plane crash along with her husband and most of their children. The following year, his uncle and guardian George Mountbatten, 2nd Marquess of Milford Haven, died of cancer at the age of 45.
After his school studies were over, Prince Philip enrolled as a naval cadet at the Royal Naval College at Dartmouth. During a royal visit to Dartmouth in 1939, Queen Elizabeth (the present queen’s mother, the wife of George VI) asked if Philip would chaperone her two young daughters, princesses Elizabeth and Margaret, for the duration of the visit. Prince Philip and Elizabeth had first met at a wedding in 1934, but after this, the pair began exchanging letters, and a romance quickly bloomed.
Both the Queen and Prince Philip are great-great-grandchildren of Queen Victoria. Elizabeth through Victoria’s eldest son, the British king Edward VII, and Prince Philip through Victoria’s second-eldest daughter, Princess Alice.
Philip’s great-grandfather, Christian IX of Denmark, was also the grandfather of the Queen’s grandfather, George V. So depending on how you look at it, they are either third cousins, or second cousins once removed. But let’s just move on.
Prince Philip’s life had a great impact on both the people that surrounded him and the rest of the world. As a result, many political figures have already paid their tribute in speeches. But his greatest impact has been on Queen Elizabeth II herself, who he married five years before she became Queen, making it the longest-serving royal consort in British history.
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