- Patrick Thelwell, an Extinction Rebellion activist who once stood as a Green Party candidate, is the suspect
- Couple were being welcomed to York by city leaders when man threw three eggs at them, all of which missed
- Protester shouted 'this country was built on the blood of slaves' as he was being bundled to ground by police
- Other people in the crowd started chanting 'God save the King' and 'shame on you' as the man was led away
the King unveiled the first statue of his mother since her death in September.
Weighing 1.1 tonnes and made from French limestone, it shows the Queen in the robes of the Order of the Garter.
It was intended to celebrate the Queen’s platinum jubilee and was completed in August, the month before she died.
York will also get its first new public square in 200 years with the development of the area in front of the statue, which will be named in the Queen’s honour.
Before unveiling the statue, which is raised above street level, Charles said: “The late Queen was always vigilant for the welfare of her people during her life.”
He said her “image will watch over what will become Queen Elizabeth Square for centuries to come”.
Earlier, the Charles and his wife Camilla, the Queen Consort, joined the Archbishop of York and other dignitaries for a service at the minster and looked at a new exhibition explaining how the statue was made.
They saw a scaled model of the final sculpture as well as a maquette used in the design process.
shown a scaled replica of the statue of Queen Elizabeth II that they will unveil later
He said: “I hope everybody likes it. It is the best I could pull out of myself. Hopefully I have done justice to the Queen and the King likes it and I have done justice to the front of the building.”
Mr Bossons, who has done caricatures or grotesques for cathedral gargoyles before, said there were some nerve-wracking moments during the sculpting, which involved a three-tonne piece of Lepine limestone being cut by machines to his design and six months’ work with his chisel to refine the stone.
He said: “I am hugely relieved and it will be nice now to go back to my bread-and-butter work.”
The design was created to give a sense of potential movement, with the Queen looking down the main approach to the minster and her left hand pulling in her robe to brace against the winds which frequently buffet the west front
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