Queen Elizabeth II has Died

Queen Elizabeth II has Died

Queen Elizabeth II 
 
I cannot lead you into battle, I do not give you laws or administer justice, but I can do something else: I can give you my heart and my devotion.”
–  Queen Elizabeth II, during her first televised broadcast, 1957
Queen Elizabeth II_1926_to_2022_milao_haath

UK’s Queen Elizabeth II – 1926 to 2022-Milao Haath

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Queen Elizabeth II, Britain’s longest-serving monarch, died at Balmoral aged 96 after reigning for 70 years.

Queen Elizabeth II has Died

The official notice read: "The Queen died peacefully at Balmoral this afternoon. The King and Queen Consort will remain at Balmoral this evening and will return to London tomorrow."-milao haath

The official notice read: “The Queen died peacefully at Balmoral this afternoon. The King and Queen Consort will remain at Balmoral this evening and will return to London tomorrow.”-milao haath

She died peacefully on Thursday afternoon at her Scottish estate, where she had spent much of the summer.
The Queen ascended the throne in 1952 and underwent an enormous social change.

Her son, King Charles III, said the death of his beloved mother was a “moment of great sadness” for him and his family and that her loss was “deeply felt” around the world.

He said: We deeply mourn the loss of a beloved sovereign and a well-loved mother.
“I know her loss is deeply felt across the land, kingdoms, and commonwealth will be used by countless people around the world.”

During the upcoming period of mourning, he said he and his family would be “comforted and strengthened by our knowledge of the respect and deep affection bestowed upon the Queen.”

The Duke of Edinburgh was at the Queen's side for more than six decades of reign, becoming the longest-serving consort in British history in 2009- milao haath

The Duke of Edinburgh was at the Queen’s side for more than six decades of reign, becoming the longest-serving consort in British history in 2009- milao haath

The King and his wife Camilla, now the Queen consort, will return to London on Friday, Buckingham Palace has said.

The royals had gathered in Balm oral after the Queen’s doctors enlisted they had taken care of health earlier in the day.

All the Queen’s children traveled to Balm oral near Aberdeen in
after doctors placed the Queen under medical supervision.

His grandson and now Heir to the throne Prince William and his brother Prince Harry also met there.

Prime Minister Liz Truss, who was appointed by the Queen on Tuesday, said the monarch was the rock on which modern Britain was built, who had “provided us with the stability and strength that we needed”.

Speaking about the new King, she said: “We offer him our loyalty and devotion, just as his mother devoted so much, to so many, for so long.

“And with the passing of the second Elizabethan age, we usher in a new era in the magnificent history of our great country, exactly as Her Majesty would have wished, by saying the words ‘God save the King’.”

Charles, as the Prince of Wales, delivered the Queen's speech on behalf of his mother for the first time in May

Charles, as the Prince of Wales, delivered the Queen’s speech on behalf of his mother for the first time in May – Milao Haath

Queen Elizabeth II’s tenure as head of state spanned post-war austerity, the transition from empire to Commonwealth, the end of the Cold War and the UK’s entry into – and withdrawal from – the European Union.

Her reign spanned 15 prime ministers starting with Winston Churchill, born in 1874, and including Ms Truss, born 101 years later in 1975.

She held weekly audiences with her prime minister throughout her reign.

At Buckingham Palace in London, crowds awaiting updates on the Queen’s condition began crying as they heard of her death.

The Union flag on top of the palace was lowered to half-mast at 18:30 BST and an official notice announcing the death was posted outside.

On the Queen’s death, Prince William and his wife, Catherine, became the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Cornwall.

The Queen was born Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor, in Mayfair, London, on 21 April 1926.

Few could have foreseen she would become monarch but in December 1936 her uncle, Edward VIII, abdicated from the throne to marry the twice-divorced American, Wallis Simpson.

Elizabeth’s father became King George VI and, at age 10, Lilibet, as she was known in the family, became heir to the throne.

Within three years, Britain was at war with Nazi Germany. Elizabeth and her younger sister, Princess Margaret, spent much of wartime at Windsor Castle after their parents rejected suggestions they be evacuated to Canada.

After turning 18, Elizabeth spent five months with the Auxiliary Territorial Service and learned basic motor mechanic and driving skills. “I began to understand the esprit de corps that flourishes in the face of adversity,” she recalled later.

Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor was born in Mayfair, London, on 21 April 1926, the first child of the Duke and Duchess of York

Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor was born in Mayfair, London, on 21 April 1926, the first child of the Duke and Duchess of York-Milao Haath

Through the war, she exchanged letters with her third cousin, Philip, Prince of Greece, who was serving in the Royal Navy. Their romance blossomed and the couple married at Westminster Abbey on 20 November 1947, with the prince taking the title of Duke of Edinburgh.

She would later describe him as “my strength and stay” through 74 years of marriage, before his death in 2021, aged 99.

Their first son, Charles, was born in 1948, followed by Princess Anne, in 1950, Prince Andrew, in 1960, and Prince Edward, in 1964. Between them, they gave their parents eight grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.

Princess Elizabeth was in Kenya in 1952, representing the ailing King, when Philip broke the news that her father had died. She immediately returned to London as the new Queen.

“It was all a very sudden kind of taking on and making the best job you can,” she later recalled.

Elizabeth was crowned at Westminster Abbey on 2 June 1953, aged 27, in front of a then-record TV audience estimated at more than 20 million people.

On her Platinum Jubilee, the Queen delighted crowds by appearing on the balcony with three generations of her family-Milao Haath

On her Platinum Jubilee, the Queen delighted crowds by appearing on the balcony with three generations of her family-Milao Haath

Subsequent decades would see great change, with the end of the British Empire overseas and the swinging ’60s sweeping away social norms at home.

Elizabeth reformed the monarchy for this less deferential age, engaging with the public through walkabouts, royal visits and attendance at public events.

Her commitment to the Commonwealth was a constant – she visited every Commonwealth country at least once.

But there were periods of private and public pain.

In 1992, the Queen’s “annus horribilis”, fire devastated Windsor Castle – a private residence as well as working palace – and three of her children’s marriages broke down.

After the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, in a car accident in Paris in 1997, the Queen drew criticism for appearing reluctant to respond publicly.

There were questions about the monarchy’s relevance in modern society.

“No institution… should expect to be free from the scrutiny of those who give it their loyalty and support, not to mention those who don’t,” she acknowledged.

As a 21-year-old princess, Elizabeth had vowed to devote her life to service.

Reflecting on those words decades later, during her Silver Jubilee in 1977, she declared: “Although that vow was made in my salad days, when I was green in judgment, I do not regret nor retract one word of it.”

That same commitment to serving was made 45 years later in a thank you letter to the nation on the weekend of her Platinum Jubilee in June.

The milestone was celebrated with a mix of state ceremonies and a colourful festival of all things British, as well as lively street parties.

Although the Queen’s health kept her from some events, she said: “My heart has been with you all.”

In a moment met with cheers from huge crowds in the Mall, she was joined by three generations of her family on the Buckingham Palace balcony for the finale of a pageant.

King Charles, aged 73, becomes head of state in 14 Commonwealth realms.

He and his wife, Camilla, are at Balmoral alongside his siblings, Princess Anne, and Princes Andrew and Edward.

They are accompanied by Edward’s wife, Sophie, as well as Princes William and Harry.

William’s wife, Catherine, remained at Windsor with their children – George, Charlotte and Louis – as it has been their first full day at a new school.

The Royal Family has now entered a period of mourning.

In the coming days, much of national life will be put on hold.

Official engagements will be cancelled and Union flags will be flown at half-mast on royal residences, government buildings, across the Armed Forces and on UK posts overseas.

Members of Parliament will pay tribute to the Queen and take an oath to King Charles.

There will be church bells tolling and gun salutes as local and national organisations and charities organise ways to pay their respects, with commemorative events and books of condolence.

Queen's death a huge shock to the nation and the world - Prime Minister Truss-Milao Haath

Queen’s death a huge shock to the nation and the world – Prime Minister Truss-Milao Haath

A state funeral for the Queen is expected in the next two weeks.

Foreign leaders have paid tribute to the Queen, with US President Joe Biden recalling how she stood in solidarity with the US in their “darkest days” after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

To France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, she was a “kind-hearted Queen” and “friend of France”.

For Justin Trudeau, Canada’s prime minister, the Queen was a constant in Canadians’ lives and one of his “favourite people in the world”.

Respected source:- Reporting by George Bowden, Marie Jackson and Sean Coughlan, royal correspondent.

The Subtle Power Of Queen Elizabeth II’s Reign

The longest reigning monarch in British history kept a “blank slate” for her subjects, fellow politicians and the world to project themselves on.

Elizabeth II is the Queen of the United Kingdom and 14 other Commonwealth realms. Elizabeth was born in Mayfair, London, as the first child of the Duke and Duchess of York. Her father acceded to the throne in 1936 upon the abdication of his brother, King Edward VIII, making Elizabeth the heir presumptive

Queen Elizabeth II, the longest reigning monarch in British history, died at Balmoral Castle on her Scottish estate on September 8th. He was 96 years old and had sat on the throne since he was 25. His death marked the end of one of the most prosperous reigns of any contemporary monarchy. In the 20th century monarchs were deposed or exiled and executed across Europe.

Elizabeth grew up surrounded by royal relatives fleeing their homelands from the chaos of World War II, fleeing to England in But under his rule, the British monarchy not only survived. He continued to be extremely popular, and so did she in particular.

A recent survey in the UK showed that the Queen was delighted with a positive rating of 75%. Supporters of a British republic often cite the Queen’s popularity as the reason England remains a monarchy. In his biography Queen of Our Times, Robert Hardman quotes Labor Republican Neville Wran as saying: “The biggest problem we have is the Queen! Everyone loves her.”

The Queen’s popularity comes from a source that may seem somewhat remarkable for the United States and its policy of complacency. She has been loved for decades, not for her radiant charisma or great rhetorical flair, but for her unwavering, superhuman ability to reveal absolutely nothing.

“Never complain, never explain” is the motto of the royal family, and the Queen herself served as a living embodiment. Elizabeth lived her life with fierce discipline, molding herself into the form of a blank slate onto which viewers could project just about anything. She made an art form of being a little boring and became the best practitioner in the world.

As such, she provided her monarchy with its greatest asset: Queen Elizabeth II was whoever her people wanted as she is.

“Because she’s spent her whole life being a closed book, people project onto her what they want from her” says a former royal aide of the Queen in the current report Tine Braun. all documents of the palace. “Because it doesn’t show any emotion at all, it doesn’t divide the audience. She is neither on one side nor on the other. And that must be exhausting for her.

The Queen and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh

The Queen and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh – Milao Haath

“She sees the relevance of what she’s doing in a wider context.”

Elizabeth was born on April 21, 1926. Television as technology was three months old. The Great Depression in the United States was three years away. The Russian tsars had been executed just eight years earlier. When Elizabeth was born, a politically charged miners’ strike had royalists fearing that England’s Windsors would be next.

Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and Cambridge on Instagram_ “Captured by The Duchess of Cambridge 📷 The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh surrounded by seven of their great-grandchildren at Balmoral…”- Milao Haath

Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and Cambridge on Instagram_ “Captured by The Duchess of Cambridge 📷 The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh surrounded by seven of their great-grandchildren at Balmoral…”- Milao Haath

At the time Elizabeth was third in line to the throne and an unlikely target for anyone’s revolutionary zeal.

She was the eldest daughter of a second son, and her uncle Eduardo was the heir apparent. Nevertheless, she seems to have been endowed with a pronounced sense of duty, orderliness, and thrift from the very beginning. When she cried during her christening at Buckingham Palace, Sarah Bradford wrote in her 1996 biography Elizabeth.

It was “the last time Elizabeth made a public scene”. Hardman reports that one of Elizabeth’s favorite toys in the nursery was a dustpan and brush and that she kept a special box in which to keep her wrapping paper and ribbons for reuse.

In 1936, Edward abdicated and Elizabeth’s father ascended to become George VI. Elizabeth was now the abrupt heir to the throne and a major diplomatic asset. According to Hardman, the shy young princess found the change difficult, but she applied her signature work ethic to her new life. British colleague Fitzalan Howard wrote in his diary that he had met “Lilibet” Elizabeth’s childhood nickname, at a drinking bout in 1941 and was proud of her. “Lilibet finds it very difficult to have a conversation like mine; but he did very well,” Howard wrote.

Elizabeth had already found her favorite conversational strategy: “She insisted on bringing the dogs,” Howard’s journal entry continued, “because she said they were the best salvation for the conversation when it ended.”
In 1952, Elizabeth’s father died and the 25-year-old ascended the throne.

She was reportedly initially overwhelmed by the brutal routine of life as a hard-working monarch. On a tour of Australia in 1954, Hardman writes: “The Queen was heard wearily (but uncharacteristically) complaining in that this endless diet of bourgeois platitudes was ‘boring, boring, boring’.”

Queen Elizabeth II: World leaders remember a 'kind-hearted Queen'-Milao Haath

Queen Elizabeth II: World leaders remember a ‘kind-hearted Queen’-Milao Haath

No one would ever catch you saying something like that later in the Queen’s reign. Instead, he tended to berate those who had ever suggested his royal duties might be uninteresting. Hardman quotes a former private secretary as telling the Queen about a reception for the Commonwealth Auditors Association would be “pretty boring”.

“‘He ripped me to pieces,’ said the secretary. The Queen said: “It’s not boring. This is interesting and important because these are the people who are raising standards and fighting corruption in some really tough countries. They need the support and encouragement they get from me and this operation.” In other words, she sees the relevance of her work in a larger context.

This rigorous focus on the larger context, this insistence that her work is interesting because it is necessary, is part of the sense of discipline the Queen brought to the royal family. Such a procedure is necessary in the monarchy, for the work is endless. Being a king means living your life in the public eye, not just like movie stars for decades, but always and forever.

“Celebrities burst and burn. The monarchy plays the long game,” writes Brown in The Palace Papers.

“There is no timestamp of public interest in you as long as it is clear that your interest is in the public interest. As the Queen’s grandmother, Queen Mary, once said to a relative, “You are a member of the British Royal Family. We never tire and we all love hospitals.”
Elizabeth’s reluctance came as a natural consequence of this Discipline. She was “trained,” Brown writes, “a lifetime to erect inflexible barriers around her private thoughts and feelings.”

” Those barriers would serve him well throughout his decades of work. His refusal to allow a single interview during his reign, Brown writes, “only increased his mystique.”

“The Queen has the instincts of a performer.”

Elizabeth’s mystique was real. From the earliest days of her reign, those who knew the Queen were struck by her tangible skills as a performer. In particular, what she did was not charm but majesty.

Hardman quotes The Economist about the Queen during her visit to France in 1971 when Britain was attempting to join the European Economic Community. “She remains an icon in Europe in a way that the British are scarcely able to appreciate,” wrote The Economist.

A symbol for what exactly? “This very difficult mix of democracy and stability,” the French foreign minister told the magazine.

In 2015, President Obama compared the Queen to Nelson Mandela. Both were, he said, leaders who have seen so much, whose lives span such momentous times, who see no need to represent or trade what is popular at the moment; People who speak with depth and knowledge, not in short sentences. They don’t care about polls or fads.

UK's Queen Elizabeth II - 1926 to 2022-Milao Haath

UK’s Queen Elizabeth II – 1926 to 2022-Milao Haath

Addressing the Queen during her guest appearance at the London 2012 Olympic Games Opening Ceremony, Danny Boyle put it more simply. “The Queen has an artist’s instinct,” she says in The Palace Papers, “after all, she’s ‘on stage’ all the time.”

Elizabeth’s insistence on being on stage all the time, meant that it could literally be anything for everyone.

“She is meant to be as infallible as the Pope and as neutral as Switzerland,” Hardman writes, “while also being human, interesting, largely positive, and always likeable.” In a frankly amazing feat, the only one of those job requirements the Queen consistently failed at was being interesting. During her reign, her greatest political weakness was a vague feeling that she was a bit boring. “She didn’t do or say anything that anyone can remember,” historian David Starkey told the Radio Times in 2015.

For the Queen, whose reign included more than a royal scandal, it would be in itself already be a memorable win. But Elizabeth was smarter than that. During the past decade’s spate of royal weddings, gossip and scandal, the Queen’s blank slate has allowed viewers to imaginatively ally her with any side they please.

In Lifetime’s Harry and Meghan film series, the Queen is a staunch ally of her grandson and his multiracial wife. Meanwhile, the anti-Meghan camp has plenty of room to reconcile her with the behind-the-scenes traditionalists of “The Firm” who run the palace machinery. In The Crown and The Queen, Peter Morgan envisions Elizabeth as charged, contradictory, but ultimately lovable in the face of each successive scandal. In the 2021 Diana biopic, Spencer envisions the Queen as a luminous Enigma: the only member of the royal family who seems to admire Diana, but she always stays away, adding to Diana’s isolation.

The only notable exception The Queen’s ability to walk through a scandal without comment came with her engagement to her second son, Andrew. In 2011, Andrew was accused of sex trafficking with the famous Jeffrey Epstein. Brown reports that the Queen immediately called Andrew to ask if it was true, and when Andrew denied all the allegations, “he made it clear to the press that his second son had his full protection.” She awarded him the insignia of the Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order – “their highest gong,” as Brown put it.

Even after her support for Andrew failed, the Queen refused to fully withdraw him. In 2019, he gave the BBC a widely criticized interview on the allegations, in which he struggled to defend his longtime friendship with Epstein. Days later, he announced that he was leaving real life. Two days later, he and the Queen were seen together at Windsor Castle. The queen, Brown writes, believed that after some time she could bring him back into her lap.

Queen Elizabeth II_1926_to_2022_milao_haath

FILE – In this April 10, 1949 file photo, Prince Charles of Edinburgh, left, sits for a photo with his mother, Princess Elizabeth, in Buckingham Palace, London. Prince Charles has been preparing for the crown his entire life. Now, that moment has finally arrived. Charles, the oldest person to ever assume the British throne, became king on Thursday Sept. 8, 2022, following the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. (AP Photo, File)

Anyway, the lady played for a long time. Aside from Andrew, his enigmatic presence enabled him to carry out a much more important task than surviving a few decades of scandal.

“That extraordinary ability she has to balance the mystique of the monarchy.”

Elizabeth had a unique role as queen. His five immediate predecessors were emperors or empresses. But by the time Elizabeth ascended the throne, the idea of ​​a British empress was out of the question: the British Empire no longer existed. Instead, Elizabeth would oversee the transition from Empire to Commonwealth, an entity in which she held much token power and absolutely no political power. Not that he had much hard political power elsewhere.

“It was his duty to relinquish power and transfer sovereignty with a smile and a friendly handshake,” writes Hardman. “At the beginning of her reign, she was still expected to personally elect prime ministers, decide when to dissolve parliament, even inspect her nation’s theatrical production, and sail around the world on a royal yacht. Not anymore.” Brown describes the queen as “mastering her entire reign in the art of graceful retreat while somehow retaining the aura of the sovereignty of.”
Because of that aura of sovereignty, the queen was Able to serve as an important active politician just as her royal power was waning.

Hardman argues that in the 1970s, as Britain’s economic and military power waned, the Queen’s popularity made Britain “beat above its weight on the world stage”. He cites his state visit to France in 1976, after which then-President Giscard no longer considered Britain “weak” and himself “non-Anglophile,” but described the Queen as “a perfect sovereign” and “excited the prospect.” “. a “new entente” between “the two oldest nations of Europe”.

In 1975, the newly independent Papua New Guinea asked Elizabeth to become its ceremonial head of state. “They liked her,” explains Hardman, “they wanted someone neutral, and they liked the honors and awards she could bestow.”

Elizabeth’s clean slate once again was her superpower: it made her seem so neutral that it would be safe to bestow her with enormous ceremonial powers. It was as if she could only embody the sovereign’s full powers if relinquished the right to express an opinion as to what should be done with it.

Antony Jay, the author of Elizabeth R., a biography that would have an enormous impact within the walls of Buckingham Palace, thought the Queen had two roles, roles unique to her and her reign.

Hardman explains the division as follows: “The queen was the head of state, a predetermined and defined role that applied to all monarchs. The second role was what Jay called “head of the nation”; This was more personal and less specific, encompassing her role as ‘the focus of loyalty, defender of continuity, obedient public service and so much more.”

The Queen was Head of State because the line of succession made her one, but she was head of state because her special political skills, her idiosyncratic recklessness and unwavering devotion to duty, and her longevity made her well suited for the task.

Hardman quotes Tony Blair on the Queen’s abilities. “The reason he’s been so successful is his uncanny ability to balance the mystique of monarchy while also moving with the culture of the country over time,” says Blair. “It’s his unique intelligence and he does it very well. Politically, with a small ‘p’, unrelated to partisan politics, she is almost a genius.”

Queen Elizabeth II passes away - Milao Haath

Queen Elizabeth II passes away – Milao Haath

After all signs of an odd personality had been ruthlessly eradicated in, the Queen was free to serve as a symbol: a symbol of anything that would please its viewers, sure, but also stronger than a symbol of stability. For seven decades, she served on the throne as the link between the end of the empire and the dawn of cosmopolitan liberal democracy.

“People care that she stands for sacrifice in wartime,” quoted Hardman Obama. As if to say, She represents the acceptance of decolonization. She represents victory in the Cold War and represents the values ​​of a good relationship.

Even Fidel Castro could see the political value that Isabel offered. Hardman tells an anecdote in which the prime minister of an unknown Caribbean island, the British, was pondering leaving the Commonwealth. Castro warned her that as long as Elizabeth didn’t interfere in day-to-day life, it would be a bad move. “You want to be a big tourist island and it’s good at showing your stability,” he said.

“Bring Elizabeth II out of the ordinary in the splendor of state dinners for visiting Presidents, the ceremonial funerals of fallen war heroes, and the glorious theater of the Opening of Parliament when you just catch a glimpse of his scarlet velvet ermine robe Even the most rebellious MPs stand tall, how is anyone supposed to know how to be British? Brown writes in The Palace Papers. “In a time when everyone has an opinion, she has maintained the discipline to never reveal hers. Her epic symbolizes the nation’s resistance.”

Queen Elizabeth II passes away - Milao Haath

Queen Elizabeth II passes away – Milao Haath

Over the course of her nearly 70 years on the throne, the Queen has served as a bridge between the past and the present, essential and present relentless as the concrete. Whatever brings his successor to the throne, it must be something else entirely.

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