2021年4月11日日曜日

《エディンバラ公 逝去関連》



連投です。

《エディンバラ公 逝去関連

4 / 10 (土)

'I will miss my dear papa': Prince Charles pays tribute to his 'very special' father as he praises him for his 'devoted service to Queen and country' and says that the royal family are 'deeply grateful' for moving tributes

  • The Prince of Wales issued a glowing tribute to his father in a recorded video message released on Saturday
  • He said Prince Philip would be 'deeply touched' by the sorrow felt by millions following news of his passing
  • Words followed tributes paid by brother Prince Edward and the younger man's wife the Countess of Wessex 

  • Prince Philip spent his final days at Windsor, enjoying the fresh air and spring sunshine, before becoming gravely ill on Thursday night. Her Majesty was with him when he died on Friday morning;
  • Royals are facing a dilemma over who to invite to the funeral due to Covid rules restricting numbers to 30;
  • Prince Harry has spoken to his father the Prince of Wales and cousins Beatrice and Eugenie after Philip's death and plans return to Britain - but pregnant Meghan Markle is expected to stay in California;
  • Philip's funeral could be Harry's chance to repair 'deep damage' caused by Oprah interview, royal experts say;
  • The Duke of Cambridge has withdrawn from this weekend's Bafta awards ceremony as he mourns his grandfather;
  • Stars of football, cricket and rugby wear black armbands and hold two-minute silences in memory of sports mad Duke of Edinburgh;

『エドワード王子&ソフィー夫人』

The Earl and Countess of Wessex arrive at Windsor Castle to join the Queen today. Prince Edward was the first to arrive


The Countess of Wessex was visibly emotional as she and her husband Edward thanked crowds for their best wishes




動画



The Duke of York drove himself (pictured) to support Her Majesty minutes, arriving shortly after his brother Edward 


Prince Andrew arrives at Windsor Castle to visit his mother the Queen, as she mourns her husband Prince Philip today


『チャールズ皇太子がコメント』



Prince Charles today paid tribute to his 'dear Papa' as he spoke for the first time following news of his father Prince Philip's death yesterday morning


The Mail understands that Philip's coffin was last night at the castle, where the Queen is in residence, most probably resting in her private chapel of worship. But over the weekend it is likely be moved to the Albert Memorial Chapel, which was built by Henry VII as a royal mausoleum. Philip's coffin is likely to lie there with little ceremony – resting on two simple wooden platforms called catafalques



Who could be invited to Prince Philip's funeral? 

  1. The Queen
  2. Prince of Wales
  3. Duchess of Cornwall
  4. Princess Royal
  5. Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence
  6. Duke of York
  7. Earl of Wessex
  8. Countess of Wessex
  9. Peter Phillips
  10. Zara Tindall
  11. Duke of Cambridge
  12. Duke of Sussex
  13. Princess Beatrice
  14. Princess Eugenie
  15. Lady Louise Windsor
  16. Viscount Severn
  17. Duchess of Cambridge
  18. Mike Tindall
  19. Jack Brooksbank
  20. Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi
  21. Princess Alexandra
  22. Duke of Gloucester
  23. Duchess of Gloucester
  24. Duke of Kent
  25. Duchess of Kent
  26. Prince Michael of Kent
  27. Princess Michael of Kent
  28. Earl of Snowdon
  29. Lady Sarah Chatto
  30. Boris Johnson/Chief of the Naval Staff Admiral Tony Radakin



Queen 'was at Philip's bedside when he died': Charles leaves Windsor, hours after father's death 

The Queen is thought to have been at the bedside of her 'beloved husband' of 73 years Prince Philip when he passed away 'peacefully' at Windsor Castle yesterday.

The Duke of Edinburgh, the nation's longest-serving consort, died in his private apartment just two months and a day before what would have been his 100th birthday.

Though palace officials declined to 'go into any specifics' about the nature of his passing, it is understood his frail condition worsened overnight on Thursday and that insiders had warned he was 'gravely ill'. However, any talk of whisking the elderly duke to hospital was reportedly quickly dismissed by the Queen.

Philip, who recently spent a month being treated for an infection and a pre-existing heart condition, is thought to have died suddenly and unexpectedly, but peacefully in the company of his dear 'Lilibet'. The Telegraph reported that the duke had wanted to pass away 'in his own bed' and 'on his own terms'.

One well-placed source told the paper: 'He spent most of the four weeks he was in hospital trying to get home. They operated on his heart in a bid to give him a little longer, maybe with the 100th birthday in mind. But he didn't really care about that.' They added: 'There is no way he would have wanted to die in hospital.'

In a short but poignant statement at noon, Buckingham Palace said: 'It is with deep sorrow that Her Majesty The Queen announces 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. Further announcements will be made in due course. The Royal Family join with people around the world in mourning his loss.'

As tributes poured in from around the world, the Palace's focus was on the royal family's aching personal bereavement. 'They are a family in mourning,' one official said last night.

Prince Charles, the heir to the throne, was seen leaving Windsor Castle hours after the news of his father's passing. The Prince of Wales, 72, drove from his Highgrove Estate in Gloucestershire to the 94-year-old monarch's Berkshire residence ahead of the public announcement of the duke's passing.

Sitting in the front passenger seat of a silver Tesla, the prince looked on as he pulled away. It is not known whether Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, had accompanied him on what is their 16th wedding anniversary.

A source close to Charles said he was 'comforted' by the fact he and his father had been in touch more regularly than ever in recent weeks and months - and that they 'had said all the things that needed to be said'.

 


パレスが、かつての女王のお言葉を投稿


'He has been my strength and stay all these years': Queen's touching words about Prince Philip from her 1997 golden wedding anniversary speech

The Queen has shared a touching tribute to the Duke of Edinburgh - a day after her husband of 73 years died at Windsor Castle at the age of 99.

A portrait, which shows Her Majesty, 94, sitting next to Prince Philip, was posted on the Royal Family’s social media along with a moving quote from the monarch about her husband from a speech she made celebrating their golden wedding anniversary in 1997.

The image, which shows Her Majesty, 94, sitting next to Prince Philip, was posted on the Royal Family’s social media along with a moving quote (above) from the monarch about her husband from a speech she made celebrating their golden wedding anniversary in 1997

The image, which shows Her Majesty, 94, sitting next to Prince Philip, was posted on the Royal Family’s social media along with a moving quote (above) from the monarch about her husband from a speech she made celebrating their golden wedding anniversary in 1997

She said: ‘He has, quite simply, been my strength and stay all these years, and I, and his whole family, and this and many other countries, owe him a debt greater than he would ever claim, or we shall ever know.’

The Queen was speaking in November 1997 during a lunch at Banqueting House in London, in which she looked back on ‘a remarkable fifty years’.

Her Majesty announced her husband's death at midday on Friday as the Union Flag was lowered to half-mast outside Buckingham Palace.

The touching portrait and quote were shared to Instagram today, alongside the caption: 'At The Queen’s Coronation in 1953, The Duke of Edinburgh swore to be Her Majesty’s "liege man of life and limb."

'The Duke was a devoted consort (companion to the Sovereign) for almost 70 years, from Her Majesty’s Accession in 1952 until his death.'

The image of the royal couple was first released on the day of Philip's 95th birthday in 2016. 




動画



The Queen's speech on her golden wedding anniversary in full

'Prime Minister, Ladies and Gentlemen

When Prince Philip and I were married on this day fifty years ago, Britain had just endured six years of war, emerging battered but victorious. Prince Philip had served in the Royal Navy in the Far East, while I was grappling, in the ATS, with the complexities of the combustion engine and learning to drive an ambulance with care.

Today, Prime Minister, we accept your generous hospitality in a very different Britain. The Cold War is over and our country is at peace. The economy in your charge, and which you inherited, is soundly based and growing. And, during these last fifty years, the mass-media culture has transformed our lives in any number of ways, allowing us to learn more about our fellow human beings than, in 1947, we would have thought possible.

What a remarkable fifty years they have been: for the world, for the Commonwealth and for Britain. Think what we would have missed if we had never heard the Beatles or seen Margot Fonteyn dance: never have watched television, used a mobile telephone or surfed the Net (or, to be honest, listened to other people talking about surfing the Net).

We would never have heard someone speak from the Moon: never have watched England win the World Cup or Red Rum three Grand Nationals. We would never have heard that Everest had been scaled, DNA unravelled, the Channel tunnel built, hip replacements become commonplace. Above all, speaking personally, we would never have known the joys of having children and grandchildren.

As you say Prime Minister, since I came to the throne in 1952, ten Prime Ministers have served the British people and have come to see me each week at Buckingham Palace. The first, Winston Churchill, had charged with the cavalry at Omdurman. You, Prime Minister, were born in the year of my Coronation.

You have all had, however, one thing in common. Your advice to me has been invaluable, as has that from your counterparts, past and present, in the other countries of which I am Queen. I have listened carefully to it all. I say, most sincerely, that I could not have done my job without it.

For I know that, despite the huge constitutional difference between a hereditary monarchy and an elected government, in reality the gulf is not so wide. They are complementary institutions, each with its own role to play. And each, in its different way, exists only with the support and consent of the people. That consent, or the lack of it, is expressed for you, Prime Minister, through the ballot box. It is a tough, even brutal, system but at least the message is a clear one for all to read.

For us, a Royal Family, however, the message is often harder to read, obscured as it can be by deference, rhetoric or the conflicting currents of public opinion. But read it we must. I have done my best, with Prince Philip's constant love and help, to interpret it correctly through the years of our marriage and of my reign as your Queen. And we shall, as a family, try together to do so in the future.

It often falls to the Prime Minister, and the Government of the day, to be the bearer of the messages sent from people to Sovereign. Prime Minister, I know that you, like your predecessors, will always pass such messages, as you read them, without fear or favour. I shall value that, and am grateful for your assurances of the loyalty and support of your Government in years to come.

I wish you wisdom and God's help in your determination that Britain should remain a country to be proud of. And, as one working couple to another, Prince Philip and I hope that on 29 March 2030 you and your wife will be celebrating your own Golden Wedding.

And talking of the future, I believe that there is an air of confidence in this country of ours just now. I pray that we, people, Government and Royal Family, for we are one, can prove it to be justified and that Britain will enter the next millennium, glad, confident and a truly United Kingdom.

This, too, is an opportunity for Prince Philip and me to offer, in the words of one of the most beautiful prayers in the English language, our "humble and hearty thanks" to all those in Britain and around the world who have welcomed us and sustained us and our family, in the good times and the bad, so unstintingly over many years.

This has given us strength, most recently during the sad days after the tragedy of Diana's death. It is you, if I may now speak to all of you directly, who have seen us through, and helped us to make our duty fun. We are deeply grateful to you, each and every one.

Yesterday I listened as Prince Philip spoke at the Guildhall, and I then proposed our host's health. Today the roles are reversed.

All too often, I fear, Prince Philip has had to listen to me speaking. Frequently we have discussed my intended speech beforehand and, as you will imagine, his views have been expressed in a forthright manner.

He is someone who doesn't take easily to compliments but he has, quite simply, been my strength and stay all these years, and I, and his whole family, and this and many other countries, owe him a debt greater than he would ever claim, or we shall ever know.

Prime Minister, thank you for helping us to celebrate a very special day in our lives.'



『葬儀についてのアナウンスメント』

葬儀は
エディンバラ公の個人的な希望に沿って計画され

公爵の人生、70年以上に及ぶ女王、英国、コモンウェルスへのサービスに対する認知、そして祝すものとなるでしょう。

葬儀の詳細は

4月17日(土)
3pm 〜
@聖ジョージズ礼拝堂、ウィンザー城



https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4074042/Prince-Philip-dies.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9456371/The-man-say-Queen-Shut-World-media-mourns-Prince-Philip.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9455511/Royals-family-mourning-Prince-Philip-dies-aged-99.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9457035/Prince-Philips-funeral-Saturday-Meghan-advised-doctors-not-travel.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9456305/Defiant-mourners-continue-travel-Buckingham-Palace-pay-respects-Prince-Philip.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9454923/PIERS-MORGAN-Thank-Prince-Philip-greatest-Britons.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9457055/Prince-Charles-says-dear-papa-Prince-Philip-deeply-touched-sorrow-death.html


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