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| Why Queen Elizabeth Won't Celebrate When She Marks Her 67th Year on the Throne This Week Kayleigh Roberts 1 day ago | |
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Dr.Hannani Maya المشرف العام
الدولة : الجنس : عدد المساهمات : 61368 مزاجي : تاريخ التسجيل : 21/09/2009 الابراج : العمل/الترفيه : الأنترنيت والرياضة والكتابة والمطالعة
| موضوع: Why Queen Elizabeth Won't Celebrate When She Marks Her 67th Year on the Throne This Week Kayleigh Roberts 1 day ago الإثنين 4 فبراير 2019 - 20:08 | |
| [size=36] Why Queen Elizabeth Won't Celebrate When She Marks Her 67th Year on the Throne This Week [/size]
Kayleigh Roberts 1 day ago Last dog left in shelter finally smiles when he goes home
[size] [/size] [size] Photographic proof that Princess Margaret was the most fashionable royal[/size] [size] © Photo: Getty Images/Stuart C. Wilson "Elizabeth: Our Queen"revealed the only time Princess Margaret saw Queen Elizabeth II cried. Pictured: : Queen Elizabeth II is seen at the Chichester Theatre while visiting West Sussex on Nov. 30, 2017 in Chichester, United Kingdom.Later this week, on February 6, Queen Elizabeth II will officially mark her 67th year as Queen of England. It's an accomplishment for the Queen, who is the longest-reigning monarch in British history, but it's not an occasion she's likely to celebrate. Why wouldn't she celebrate, you ask? Well, let's dig in. If you know much about British history (or just the way monarchies work), then you know that Elizabeth's accession day, February 6, 1952, was actually a devastatingly sad day for the Queen. That's because February 6, 1952 marks the day that Elizabeth's father, King George VI, died at the relatively-young age of 56. Why did Queen Elizabeth II become the Queen of England? Even though she's an accomplished monarch, Elizabeth wasn't actually born into a prominent place in the line of succession. In fact, her impressively-long reign is the result of an unexpected curveball that changed the course of history. To put Elizabeth's place in the line of succession in context, when she was born, Elizabeth was basically the early 20th century equivalent of Princess Beatrice. Her father, George VI (who was known publicly as Albert until his own accession, when he took the regnal name "George VI") wasn't the direct heir to the throne. In modern terms, he was Prince Harry. Albert/George VI's older brother, Prince Edward (regnal name Edward VIII) , was next in the line of succession, but ruled England for less than a year before abdicating to marry his mistress, an American divorcée named Wallis Simpson. When Edward bowed out as monarch, Albert became George VI and his oldest daughter, Elizabeth, was suddenly the heir apparent to the British crown. When did Queen Elizabeth become Queen of England? Elizabeth went from Princess Elizabeth to Queen Elizabeth on February 6, 1952, when George VI died of a coronary thrombosis after battling health problems stemming from, among other things, a lifetime of heavy smoking. Elizabeth was on a royal visit to Kenya at the time and received the news after it broke to the public. Her husband, Prince Philip, reportedly delivered the news to her personally after hearing of the BBC's radio report of the news. When Elizabeth flew back to England, she was Queen Elizabeth II (she opted to keep her birth name as her regnal name, meaning all she had to change was the addition of the "II" to distinguish her from Queen Elizabeth I, who famously ruled from 1558-1603). Her coronation took place on June 2, 1953. © Mirrorpix - Getty Images Elizabeth, returning home as Queen.What's the difference between an accession and a coronation? If the wide gap between Elizabeth's accession and coronation is a head-scratcher for you, know that the date of accession is the one that matters-it's the official beginning of a monarch's reign. © Ron Case - Getty Images Elizabeth and her mother mourning King George VI at his funeral.The coronation is more of a formality and generally occurs months after accession (Elizabeth's coronation was almost a year and a half after her accession) for a very practical and respectful reason: The coronation is a celebratory event and, since a monarch's accession is often marked by the death of a parent, they're given time to mourn before they're asked to celebrate their new position. RELATED VIDEO: Queen Makes Rare Statement Amid Brexit Tensions [Provided by Newsy][/size] | |
| | | | Why Queen Elizabeth Won't Celebrate When She Marks Her 67th Year on the Throne This Week Kayleigh Roberts 1 day ago | |
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