At 6.30pm on 8 September 2022, the now discredited Huw Edwards announced on the BBC the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96.
At 1:30 p.m., Buckingham Palace issued a statement saying doctors expressed concern about the king’s health.
“The Queen is under medical supervision at Balmoral and doctors are concerned about her health.”, the note read. The message alerted editorial offices halfway around the world to that
began broadcasting live information from the UK. It was later learned that the queen died at 3:10 p.m. (an hour away in Spain) surrounded by her family except
of her most wayward grandson, Prince Harry. At that time the second Elizabethan era ended and the third Carolina era began.
The nation then started a duel in which hundreds of thousands of people waited hours to see the coffin longest serving monarch on the British throne.
A new chapter begins in England and The other 14 countries that make up the Commonwealth where the king is the head of state. Death to the queen! Long live the King!
At the age of 73, the Prince of Wales, the oldest heir to the British royal family, was promoted to lathe and became Charles III.
A year later, Britain is yet to plan a major public event to commemorate these changing times. The king and his wife, Queen Camila, will celebrate a private ceremony
in a small church near Crathie Kirk along with a small group of friends from Balmoral. It’s no coincidence that the king chose Balmoral Castle, his residence
The summer of Windsor, and the place where Elizabeth II died came together on this very important day.
It was planned that way Prince Williamthe heir to the throne, and his wife Catherine, attended private mass in Wales, in the town of St Davids, which the late Queen visited in 1955.
And then they would talk to people on the street to get a feel for the mood of their fellow citizens. Cannon fire will echo across London from Hyde Park and the Tower of London.
The Rishi Sunak government recently revealed that they are working on a project for that “permanent warning” to commemorate the centenary of the birth of Elizabeth II. “We remember with great fondness his long life, his devoted service and all that he meant to so many of us,” Charles III said in a recorded message for the anniversary and which graced many newspaper front pages.
“I am very grateful“Also, for the love and support you have shown my wife and I this year, as we do everything we can to serve you all,” he added.
The late queen was such a revered figure, and having reigned for seven decades, there was anxiety among Charles III’s entourage about how England would react to the new king.
The coronation of British sovereignty was a resounding success inside and outside Great Britain. Britain switches to a new king as confirmed by opinion polls. A recent YouGov poll showed that 59% of the public think the king is doing a good job.
In the Buckingham Palace team they breathe easier. As “The Times” put it this week, a close friend of the king summed up his state of mind this way: “He looked ten years younger and had real goals.”
“Internet trailblazer. Troublemaker. Passionate alcohol lover. Beer advocate. Zombie ninja.”