A lovely English 🏴 Christmas Eve topper for you @dflogerzi - have a wonderful Christmas Day tomorrow dear friend 🏴💕🎅🙏🥳
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A lovely English 🏴 Christmas Eve topper for you @dflogerzi - have a wonderful Christmas Day tomorrow dear friend 🏴💕🎅🙏🥳

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The Sydney Mail Magazine. Coronation Special. May 12, 1937.
Love this drawing of them ❤️
As Captain General of the elite Navy regiment, the late Duke of Edinburgh attended a parade at Buckingham Palace to mark the final of the 16
With a cheeky quip and a tip of his bowler hat, Prince Philip bowed out from royal duties seven years ago today: Duke of Edinburgh told Marines at Palace engagement, 'You should all be locked up'
By ALESIA FIDDLER PUBLISHED: 07:14, 2 August 2024 | UPDATED: 09:24, 2 August 2024
After more than 65 years of service to the country, Prince Philip stepped down from royal duties seven years ago today. In a stoic last act, the then 96-year-old tipped his bowler hat, waved to the crowds and walked away as For He's a Jolly Good Fellow was played by the band of the Royal Marines. As Captain General of the elite Navy regiment, the late Duke of Edinburgh attended a parade at Buckingham Palace to mark the final of the 1664 Global Challenge, which raises money for charity. Looking at the group of marines he made them laugh with the characteristically mischievous quip: 'You all should be locked up.'
It was a fitting way to end his decades of dedicated work as both the husband of Queen Elizabeth II and as a Royal Navy sailor before that. When he died on April 9, 2021 aged 99, the outpouring of grief reflected his beloved status both among family members and in the eyes of millions across the world.
Prince Philip pictured bowing out after his final engagement, August 2, 2017. As Captain General of the elite Navy regiment, the late Duke of Edinburgh attended a parade at Buckingham Palace to mark the final of the 1664 Global Challenge, which raises money for charity
The Duke pictured with Queen Elizabeth on his last official duty with his wife on July 12, 2017. He joined her as she welcomed the King and Queen of Spain at a ceremony on Horseguards Parade
Philip is said to have made made the decision to retire because he feared becoming increasingly frail in public. His life-long friend and relative, Lady Myra Butter, who died in 2022, told the Mail: 'He always used to say, quite openly, "I'm past my sell-by date"'.
The end of his career was announced in a statement by Buckingham Palace in May 2017. It read: 'The Duke of Edinburgh has decided that he will no longer carry out public engagements from the autumn of this year. 'In taking this decision, The Duke has the full support of The Queen. 'The Duke of Edinburgh is Patron, President or a member of over 780 organisations, with which he will continue to be associated, although he will no longer play an active role by attending engagements'.
On the day of the announcement, Philip was attending an engagement at St James' Palace. When a guest told him how sorry he was to hear he was standing down, Philip joked: 'Well I can't stand up for much longer.' Before the official announcement, Philip said to celebrity cook Prue Leith, 'I'm discovering what it's like to be on your last legs'.
During his final Trooping the Colour, on June 17, 2017, Philip was pictured smiling with Catherine, then the Duchess of Cambridge
Prince Philip outside Buckingham Palace during his final engagement, August 2, 2017
The Duke, who was the Captain General of the Royal Marines, cheekily said to a group of troops, 'You should all be locked up'
Philip pictured talking to marines during his final engagement in 2017
By the time he stepped down, he had carried out around 22,220 solo engagements, gone on 637 foreign trips and given 5,493 speeches since 1947. Known for his no-nonsense approach, he was the longest-serving consort in British history and also the oldest serving partner of a reigning monarch.
Philip ended his active naval career in July 1951 and then started to focus on his work in supporting the Queen following her accession to the throne in 1952. He thus became defined by his relationship with the Queen, and the devoted support he gave her throughout her reign. The Duke was a constant companion to the Queen on engagements, state visits and in private.
His devotion never went unnoticed and in a touching but rare personal tribute during a speech to mark the couple's 50th wedding anniversary in 1997, the Queen described Philip as her 'strength and stay'. Recalling the pair's five decades serving the country together, she said: 'I have done my best, with Prince Philip's constant love and help. '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.'
Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip pictured together on their wedding day in 1947
Prince Philip and the Queen pictured together before they were married, at the wedding of Elizabeth's lady-in-waiting in 1946
Prince Philip was associated with 992 organisations over his decades-long career and The Duke of Edinburgh Award, which he founded in 1956, proved to be perhaps his greatest legacy. It now operates in more than 140 countries.
After his retirement, Philip lived at Wood Farm, the cottage on the Queen's Sandringham Estate in Norfolk. According to the Daily Mail, Philip 'loved' his time there, as he spent his time reading, painting watercolours, writing letters and having friends to stay. When the Coronavirus pandemic struck, he moved back to Windsor to be with the Queen. But he was able to return to his beloved Wood Farm once again and even spent three weeks there with the Queen in the summer of 2020.
He died at Windsor just days after a final stay in hospital.

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Queen Elizabeth II, Canada, 1970
Princess Elizabeth of York, future Queen Elizabeth II; in 1934.

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New political strategy just dropped.
Taiwanese parliament member stole a Bill before it could get passed. 
@NFL Someone sign this man as a running back.
HAPPY 63 rd BIRTHDAY IN HEAVEN OUR BELOVED PRINCESS - NEVER FORGOTTEN 💜
Speaking to the nation from Cape Town on her 21st birthday in 1947, Princess Elizabeth promised Britons that her 'whole life whether it be l
The speech that made the Queen cry: How Princess Elizabeth's famous 1947 broadcast where she made solemn vow was written by a journalist - before draft was misplaced in a Cape Town bar
By HARRY HOWARD, HISTORY CORRESPONDENT PUBLISHED: 08:31, 30 June 2024 | UPDATED: 10:09, 30 June 2024
It was the speech that came to define the late Queen's 70 years on the throne.Speaking to the nation from Cape Town on her 21st birthday in 1947, Princess Elizabeth promised Britons that her 'whole life whether it be long or short' would be devoted to their service. Royal writer Valentine Low revealed in his 2022 book Courtiers: The Hidden Power Behind the Throne that the future Queen was made so emotional by the stirring words that she cried.
Alan Lascelles, private secretary to her father King George VI, said to her in response: 'Good, for if it makes you cry now, it will make 200million other people cry when you deliver it, and that is what we want.' Incredibly, a draft of the speech was briefly lost in a bar in Cape Town the month before Elizabeth uttered the words. When it was found, Lascelles wrote to Dermot Morrah, the journalist who wrote the speech, to tell him: ‘The missing letter has now turned up. The steward in the Protea diner had put it in the bar, among his bottles, little knowing that it was itself of premier cru.’
It was the speech that came to define the late Queen's 70 years on the throne. Speaking to the nation from Cape Town on her 21st birthday in 1947, Princess Elizabeth promised Britons that her 'whole life whether it be long or short' would be devoted to their service. Above: Elizabeth delivering her speech
Elizabeth made her speech during a six-month tour of South Africa. Above: The Princess inspects a guard of honour in the country during the trip
He went on to praise Morrah for the quality of the speech. Lascelles said: 'I have been reading drafts for many years now, but I cannot recall one that has so completely satisfied me and left me feeling that no single word should be altered. 'Moreover, dusty cynic though I am, it moved me greatly. It has the trumpet ring of the other Elizabeth's Tilbury speech, combined with the immortal simplicity of Victoria's “I will be good”.
Elizabeth spent six months in South Africa with her father, mother Queen Elizabeth and sister Princess Margaret. The tour came just two years after the end of the Second World War, at a time when the British Empire was being dismantled. Low reveals how, in describing the success of the tour, Lascelles wrote in his diary: 'The most satisfactory feature of the whole visit is the remarkable development of Princess Elizabeth. 'She has come on in the most surprising way, and all in the right direction.' He added that she had a 'good, healthy sense of fun' but could also 'tale on the old bores with much of her mother's skill.'
Princess Elizabeth sits in front of a BBC microphone as she delivers her speech to Britain and the Commonwealth from Government House in Cape Town
Morrah, who had previously penned speeches for George VI during the Second World War, also published a book about Elizabeth to mark her birthday. Elizabeth began her birthday speech, which was delivered from Government House in Cape Town, by saying: 'On my twenty-first birthday I welcome the opportunity to speak to all the peoples of the British Commonwealth and Empire, wherever they live, whatever race they come from, and whatever language they speak. 'Let me begin by saying “thank you” to all the thousands of kind people who have sent me messages of good will. This is a happy day for me; but it is also one that brings serious thoughts, thoughts of life looming ahead with all its challenges and with all its opportunity. 'At such a time it is a great help to know that there are multitudes of friends all round the world who are thinking of me and who wish me well. I am grateful and I am deeply moved.’She went on to mention the five-year conflict with Nazi Germany, saying: 'We must not be daunted by the anxieties and hardships that the war has left behind for every nation of our commonwealth. ‘We know that these things are the price we cheerfully undertook to pay for the high honour of standing alone, seven years ago, in defence of the liberty of the world. ‘Let us say with Rupert Brooke: "Now God be thanked who has matched us with this hour".
Princess Elizabeth (right) with her sister Princess Margaret on the Royal Train in South Africa
Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret in South Africa. Behind them is Group Captain Peter Townsend, then King George VI's equerry. He and Margaret became close on the trip. Their wish to marry was thwarted
But it was her prophetic concluding words that made the speech so historic.
Elizabeth said: 'I declare before you all that my whole life whether it be long or short shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong. 'But I shall not have strength to carry out this resolution alone unless you join in it with me, as I now invite you to do: I know that your support will be unfailingly given. ‘God help me to make good my vow, and God bless all of you who are willing to share in it.'
The full speech by Princess Elizabeth on her 21st birthday
'On my twenty-first birthday I welcome the opportunity to speak to all the peoples of the British Commonwealth and Empire, wherever they live, whatever race they come from, and whatever language they speak.
'Let me begin by saying 'thank you' to all the thousands of kind people who have sent me messages of good will. This is a happy day for me; but it is also one that brings serious thoughts, thoughts of life looming ahead with all its challenges and with all its opportunity.
'At such a time it is a great help to know that there are multitudes of friends all round the world who are thinking of me and who wish me well. I am grateful and I am deeply moved.
'As I speak to you today from Cape Town I am six thousand miles from the country where I was born. But I am certainly not six thousand miles from home. Everywhere I have travelled in these lovely lands of South Africa and Rhodesia my parents, my sister and I have been taken to the heart of their people and made to feel that we are just as much at home here as if we had lived among them all our lives.
'That is the great privilege belonging to our place in the world-wide commonwealth - that there are homes ready to welcome us in every continent of the earth. Before I am much older I hope I shall come to know many of them.
'Although there is none of my father's subjects from the oldest to the youngest whom I do not wish to greet, I am thinking especially today of all the young men and women who were born about the same time as myself and have grown up like me in terrible and glorious years of the second world war.
'Will you, the youth of the British family of nations, let me speak on my birthday as your representative? Now that we are coming to manhood and womanhood it is surely a great joy to us all to think that we shall be able to take some of the burden off the shoulders of our elders who have fought and worked and suffered to protect our childhood.
'We must not be daunted by the anxieties and hardships that the war has left behind for every nation of our commonwealth. We know that these things are the price we cheerfully undertook to pay for the high honour of standing alone, seven years ago, in defence of the liberty of the world. Let us say with Rupert Brooke: "Now God be thanked who has matched us with this hour".
'I am sure that you will see our difficulties, in the light that I see them, as the great opportunity for you and me. Most of you have read in the history books the proud saying of William Pitt that England had saved herself by her exertions and would save Europe by her example. But in our time we may say that the British Empire has saved the world first, and has now to save itself after the battle is won.
'I think that is an even finer thing than was done in the days of Pitt; and it is for us, who have grown up in these years of danger and glory, to see that it is accomplished in the long years of peace that we all hope stretch ahead.
'If we all go forward together with an unwavering faith, a high courage, and a quiet heart, we shall be able to make of this ancient commonwealth, which we all love so dearly, an even grander thing - more free, more prosperous, more happy and a more powerful influence for good in the world - than it has been in the greatest days of our forefathers.
'To accomplish that we must give nothing less than the whole of ourselves. There is a motto which has been borne by many of my ancestors - a noble motto, "I serve". Those words were an inspiration to many bygone heirs to the Throne when they made their knightly dedication as they came to manhood. I cannot do quite as they did.
'But through the inventions of science I can do what was not possible for any of them. I can make my solemn act of dedication with a whole Empire listening. I should like to make that dedication now. It is very simple.
'I declare before you all that my whole life whether it be long or short shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong.
'But I shall not have strength to carry out this resolution alone unless you join in it with me, as I now invite you to do: I know that your support will be unfailingly given. God help me to make good my vow, and God bless all of you who are willing to share in it.'
Princess Anne Injured
Princess Anne, 73, 'is unable to recall exactly what happened' as she recovers after a 'horse hit her on the head' and left her concussed - with all engagements cancelled as she faces up to several days in hospital
Princess Anne has been recovering in hospital with concussion after it was thought she was struck on the head by a horse.
The King’s sister, 73, was walking around her Gatcombe Park estate in Gloucestershire on Sunday evening when the incident occurred.
But, because of the injuries she sustained, she appears unable to recall exactly what happened.
An air ambulance was called and she received treatment on the scene before being taken by road to hospital. Her husband Sir Tim Laurence accompanied her. She is also understood to have minor head wounds and will be kept in for observation for a number of days – meaning all her engagements have been cancelled, along with a working visit to Canada on Thursday.
She is, however, conscious and comfortable and expected to make a ‘full and swift recovery’.
The King's sister, 73, was walking around her Gatcombe Park estate in Gloucestershire on Sunday evening when the incident occurred.

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Princess Anne, Colonel in Chief of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment and President of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, will visit Canada from 30 June - 1 July 🇨🇦
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