{"id":134173,"date":"2023-11-25T00:46:33","date_gmt":"2023-11-25T00:46:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/bluemull.com\/?p=134173"},"modified":"2023-11-25T00:46:33","modified_gmt":"2023-11-25T00:46:33","slug":"queen-elizabeth-and-prince-philips-fairytale-wedding-from-1947","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/bluemull.com\/lifestyle\/queen-elizabeth-and-prince-philips-fairytale-wedding-from-1947\/","title":{"rendered":"Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip's fairytale wedding\u00a0from 1947"},"content":{"rendered":"
Like all great love stories, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip’s had a beautiful beginning and is one for the ages.<\/p>\n
Princess Elizabeth was eight when she met 13-year-old Philip, Prince of Greece and Denmark, at Prince George, Duke of Kent, and Princess Marina’s wedding in 1934.\u00a0<\/p>\n
However, it was at Dartmouth when the Princess visited the naval college in July 1939\u00a0that Philip, then 18, and Elizabeth, then thirteen, began to fall for one another.<\/p>\n
While the pair were still too young for a relationship, Marion Crawford, Elizabeth’s nanny, wrote that the young princess ‘never took her eyes off’ Philip during the visit.<\/p>\n
From that time, they maintained regular correspondence and became pen pals while Philip was stationed around Europe, Canada and Japan throughout the Second World War.<\/p>\n
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Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip were married at Westminster Abbey on November 20, 1947<\/p>\n
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Elizabeth’s gown was made by British designer Norman Hartnell and\u00a0was paid for with clothing ration coupons in the aftermath of the Second World War<\/p>\n
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The Royal Family at Buckingham Palace to mark the engagement of Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) and Philip Mountbatten (later Duke of Edinburgh), in July 1947<\/p>\n
While some disapproved of the Princess’ match with the foreign Prince,\u00a0Philip and Elizabeth were already madly in love.<\/p>\n
Shortly after his return to the UK, Prince Philip visited Princess Elizabeth’s father, King George VI, to ask for his eldest daughter’s hand in marriage.<\/p>\n
After spending a month in Balmoral with Elizabeth and her family, Philip reportedly the question with a ring designed by London Jeweler Philip Antrobus,\u00a0using diamonds from a tiara belonging to his mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg.<\/p>\n
Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten announced their engagement to the world the following year after\u00a0reaching the age of 21, according to King George VI’s wishes.<\/p>\n
The day before his marriage to Princess Elizabeth, Philip assumed the title of Duke of Edinburgh and was also given the titles Earl of Merioneth and Baron Greenwich of Greenwich in the County of London.<\/p>\n
Although post-war Britain was burdened by rationing and fuel shortages, most believed their wedding on November 20, 1947, just four months later, would give the nation a well-needed boost.\u00a0<\/p>\n
The young couple, who were dubbed the Fairy Princess and Prince Charming,\u00a0tied the knot at Westminster Abbey, marking the beginning of what would become the longest royal marriage in history.<\/p>\n
The then Princess Elizabeth became the tenth member of the British Royal Family to marry at the Abbey – the same venue her father was crowned 11 years earlier and where Queen Elizabeth herself would be just five years after her nuptials.<\/p>\n
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Elizabeth arrived at\u00a0Westminster Abbey with her father King George VI\u00a0in the Irish State Coach<\/p>\n
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Elizabeth received a wedding ring made from the same Welsh gold as her mother’s ring<\/p>\n
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Most believed their wedding, just four months after the Second World War had concluded, would give the nation a well-needed boost<\/p>\n
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The Princess became the tenth member of the British Royal Family to marry at the Abbey – the same venue her father was crowned 11 years earlier<\/p>\n
And while the royals were reportedly advised to keep the ceremony ‘simple’ in the aftermath of the war, the guest list included a staggering 2,000 people.<\/p>\n
Among those in attendance were\u00a0Prince Philip’s uncle, Earl Louis Mountbatten,\u00a0King Frederik IX and Queen Ingrid of Denmark, and the Hereditary Grand Duke of Luxembourg and Princess Elisabeth of Luxembourg.<\/p>\n
The 21-year-old Princess arrived at the ceremony with her father in the Irish State Coach\u00a0with the British Life Guards regiment as their escorts.<\/p>\n
Elizabeth’s gown was made by British designer Norman Hartnell just three months before the wedding – and took him and a\u00a0team of 350 seamstresses seven weeks to create.<\/p>\n
Due to rationing measures in place following the war, her dress was paid for with\u00a0clothing ration coupons. Hundreds from across the country\u00a0sent The Princess their coupons to help with the dress, although they were eventually returned.<\/p>\n
The gown, which was made of Duchesse satin from Scotland and silk, was inspired by\u00a0Botticelli’s famous painting Primavera, which symbolises the coming of spring.<\/p>\n
Hartnell’s creation\u00a0had a simple cut with a fitted bodice, heart-shaped neckline with a low v-pointed waist and a floor-length panelled skirt.\u00a0\u00a0It also featured a 15-foot silk tulle full court train, which was attached at the shoulders, is embroidered in pearl, crystal and transparent applique tulle embroidery.<\/p>\n
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The event was recorded and broadcast by radio to 200 million people all around the world<\/p>\n
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Princess Elizabeth\u00a0 and Prince Philip on the balcony at Buckingham Palace waving at the crowds after their wedding ceremony<\/p>\n
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They were later joined by the Royal Family and members of the wedding party, including\u00a0King George VI, The Queen Mother, Queen Mary, and Princess Margaret and Lady Mary Cambridge<\/p>\n
Along with her stunning gown, Elizabeth donned the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara as her ‘something borrowed’\u00a0from her grandmother, Mary of Teck.<\/p>\n
Though the piece was originally a fringe necklace, Mary had it recreated as a tiara in 1893, but on Elizabeth’s wedding day, it seemingly snapped. Thankfully a\u00a0jeweller at Garrard\u00a0was able to send it back to the princess by police escort\u00a0in record time.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Elizabeth also\u00a0wore two pearl necklaces for her big day – the Queen Anne necklace and the Queen Caroline necklace – after receiving both baubles as a wedding present from King George VI.<\/p>\n She was joined by eight bridesmaids, including her sister, Princess Margaret, her cousins, Princess Alexandra of Kent and Margaret Elpinstone, Philip’s cousin, Pamela Mountbatten and her niece, Diana Bowes-Lyon.<\/p>\n Each one wore a gown by Hartnell of tulle with small satin flowers – a reverse of Elizabeth’s dress.<\/p>\n The historic event was recorded and broadcast by BBC Radio to 200 million people all around the world.<\/p>\n During the ceremony, Elizabeth received a wedding ring made from the same Welsh gold as her mother’s ring, which came from the Clogau St David’s mine.\u00a0<\/p>\n In the book, Prince Philip: Revealed, author Ingrid Seward claimed it was engraved with a secret message that only the bride, the groom and the engraver knew of.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n This was the official portrait taken of\u00a0Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh after their wedding ceremony<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Following the ceremony, the bride rode with her new husband in the Glass Coach<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Philip and Elizabeth pictured showered with confetti as they depart for their honeymoon\u00a0<\/p>\n Following the ceremony, the bride rode with her new husband in the Glass Coach that was purchased for King George VI’s coronation in 1911.<\/p>\n Once they had arrived at Buckingham Palace, they famously waved to the crowd of roughly 100,000 gathered outside from the balcony before heading inside where they enjoyed an intimate wedding breakfast for just 150 guests.<\/p>\n At their breakfast, the newlyweds served a whopping 11 cakes, even though their main cake was huge. Created by McVitie & Price, the 9-foot-tall cake boasted four tiers and weighed 900 pounds, according to the Royal Collection Trust.<\/p>\n Nicknamed the 10,000-mile cake for its internationally sourced\u00a0ingredients, it was so big that it was cut with the groom’s naval sword – a present from King George VI.<\/p>\n As the couple left for their honeymoon in an open-drawn carriage, they were showered with rose petals by the Queen Mother.\u00a0Elizabeth also had her corgi Susan on her lap, peeking out from under a rug.<\/p>\n After honeymooning at Broadlands, Hampshire, home of Lord Mountbatten, and at Birkhall on the Balmoral estate in Scotland, Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh stayed at Buckingham Palace until the renovation of their new home, nearby Clarence House, was completed in 1949.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh enjoying a walk during their honeymoon at Broadlands, Romsey in Hampshire<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Their first child, Charles, was born at Buckingham Palace in November 1948. Anne was born at Clarence House in August 1950. Ten years later, Andrew was born at Buckingham Palace in February 1960, as was Edward in March 1964. This picture was taken in\u00a01968 at Windsor Castle<\/p>\n \u00a0In a letter to his new mother-in-law after their wedding, Philip wrote: ‘Lilibet is the only ‘thing’ in this world which is absolutely real to me.’<\/p>\n Philip’s devotion to his wife was clear. His first ever private secretary Michael Parker, a friend from the Navy, revealed: ‘He told me the first day he offered me my job that his job, first, second and last was never to let her down.’<\/p>\n This deep, unwavering love formed the foundation of a marriage that lasted 73 years and was at the heart of the modern British monarchy.<\/p>\n They were together until the very end when Prince Philip died, aged 99, on April 8, 2021 and they had four children, King Charles, Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward, eight grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren.<\/p>\n