Wednesday, December 22, 2010

[United-Kingdom] Zara Phillips and Mike Tindall are engaged


Prince William is not the only British royal with a wedding to plan. It has been announced that his cousin Zara Phillips is engaged to her long-term boyfriend Mike Tindall.
"The Princess Royal and Captain Mark Phillips are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter Zara Phillips to Mr Mike Tindall," a notice read on the British Monarchy Twitter page.
And a Buckingham Palace spokeswoman has confirmed the happy news, revealing that Mike proposed to Zara on Monday night at the couple's Gloucestershire home.
The Queen and Prince Philip are said to be "delighted". The 29-year-old equestrian and her rugby player love have been dating for around seven years since first meeting during England's Rugby World Cup winning campaign in 2003. Speaking to HELLO! last year, Mike, 32, confirmed that long-term commitment was on the cards, saying: "I don’t think it's about whether we will get married but when."
"There's no doubt that I love Zara but it has to be the right time… And yes it probably will be a white wedding, although sometimes I can see the attraction of sneaking away without telling anyone."
The couple have yet to set a date for their wedding, but are unlikely to pick one too close to April 29, which has been chosen by William and Kate.


from Hellomagazine.com

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Can you guess which royal couple this is?


Tuesday, November 23, 2010

"The revenge of the commoners" from Montreal Gazette - really nice article about princes and their brides

In Hans Christian Andersen's The Princess and the Pea, the prince has a little problem. He searches far and wide for a real princess to wed, but can't find one who meets his royal expectations. Which are, admittedly, very vague, except that he wants a real princess. The genuine article. One dark and stormy night, a drenched young woman arrives at the doorstep of the palace claiming to be a real princess. The queen — like astute prospective mothers-in-law everywhere — takes this opportunity to test the credentials of her potential replacement. She puts the young woman in a bed of 20 mattresses and 20 feather comforters, under which there is a single pea.
The next morning the young woman complains that she has been bruised by something in the bed. Everyone rejoices. The young woman's hypersensitivity proves — to the prince and his discerning mother, at least — that this girl is royal marriage material.
Andersen's little story, a relatively minor contribution to the fairy-tale canon, was first published in 1835. The story doesn't tell us anything else about what it takes to make a real princess besides a propensity to gripe about palace hospitality. Is she beautiful, is she kind, is she smart as a whip with the kind of diplomatic skills and good judgment it takes to be a good royal consort? All Andersen tells us about princesses is that they are not like the rest of us.
The prince marries his real princess, the pea is placed in a museum for posterity, and Andersen doesn't even bother to let us know if the royal couple lived happily ever after.
Fast forward 175 years, and princesses are more like commoners and far less like that elusive real princess. And observers are delighted.

Want to read more of this article, click here.

CP Felipe and Letizia's official visit to Peru > very nice photos

The Prince and Princess of Asturias, Felipe de Borbon and his wife Leticia, initiated their official activities in Lima by placing a floral wreath before the Monument to the Heroes of Independence in the district of Jesus Maria in Lima.
Members from Peru’s Foreign Ministry and Spain’s Embassy to Peru were also present at the ceremony.
The Prince and Princess were greeted by President Alan Garcia at the Government Palace following the ceremony. Afterwards, they will visit the Congress, where its president and members of the Committee of Foreign Relations will officially welcome them.
In the afternoon, they will visit the University of San Marcos, the oldest university in America. They are both set to attend an official dinner hosted by President Alan Garcia this evening.
On Wednesday, the royal couple will meet representatives from the main Spanish companies in Peru and, later, they will hold a business meeting with entrepreneurs from both countries.
On Thursday, the Prince and Princess will visit the southern city of Arequipa, home town of Nobel literature laureate Mario Vargas Llosa, to check on cooperation projects and visit the Monastery of Santa Catalina.

text from andina.com.pe
photos from Princess Letizia's Facebook Fan Page

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Royal Wedding will see Britain enjoy a three-day week - and lots of partying

Prince William and Kate Middleton announced they would marry in Westminster Abbey on Friday, April 29, in a ceremony the couple said they wanted to share with the nation.
Their wedding day would be a bank holiday, Downing Street said. With Easter the weekend before and the May bank holiday on the Monday after, workers will be buoyed by consecutive four-day weekends.
It means those who want to get away from all the hoopla can take an 11-day holiday and use only three days of their annual leave. Elaine Wichall, 65, a retired receptionist, from Kent, said: ‘I think we Brits deserve it after all the bad news we’ve had recently.’
April 29 was one of the favourite dates amid the flurry of speculation
after the couple announced last week they were to be married.
Ministers caught the mood by telling councils they wanted it to be easy for people to organise street parties Instead of confusing guidelines on food licences, road closures and insurance – councils are being urged to ask organisers to complete one simple form.
Communities secretary Eric Pickles said: ‘Royal wedding street parties are a great British tradition.’
Publicans’ groups called for a loosening of licensing laws to ‘help deliver the down-to-earth celeb ration and feelgood factor the royal family has said it wants’.
Businesses grudgingly backed the extra day off but pointed out it would cost them £6billion. ‘The royal wedding is a day for national celeb ration and, under these unique circum stances, a one-off additional bank holiday is appropriate,’ the CBI said.

from Metro.co.uk

During official visit to the Latin country, Prince of Asturias highlights Peru-Spain's “fruitful relationship”

Felipe de Borbón, Prince of Asturias, said Peru and Spain have a “fruitful relationship”, especially in these last years.
The prince expressed his gratitude for the warm welcoming him and his wife, Princess Letizia, have received so far since their arrival to Lima last night. “For us it is a matter of pride and gratitude that we have been received in such a way,” he said, reaffirming that the bilateral relationship between Spain and Peru will consolidate.
The royal couple visited Peru’s Congress today, as part of their official visit.
During his visit, Felipe de Borbón made emphasis on the special interest of Spanish entrepreneurs to invest in Peru.
“Spain is the first donor in cooperation and aide to Peru, not only because there is a state to state help, but also a lot of social support,” he said.
Prince Felipe met Peru’s president, Alan García, this morning. Parallel to this meeting, Princess Letizia was hosted by the president’s daughter, Josefina García Nores.

text from: livinginperu.com
images from: Princess Letizia's Facebook Fan Page


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The most stunning photo I have seen today

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CP Letizia in Peru

Monday, November 22, 2010

Prince William helps saving a life just 48 hours after engagement announcement

Prince William went back to work after announcing his engagement to Kate Middleton on 16 November - and saved a man's life. The Prince, a flight lieutenant with the RAF Search and Rescue Force, co-piloted a Sea King helicopter through a storm and thick fog to save dad-of-two Greg Watkins, who suffered a heart attack 3,000ft up Mount Snowdon in North Wales. ‘If it wasn't for him and the rest of his crew, I'd be dead,' says Greg.
On Thursday, just 48 hours after facing the cameras with his bride-to-be, Wills helped perform the daring manoeuvre so that a member of the crew could be winched down to help the 45-year-old walker.
‘The winchman helped me out and on to a stretcher and whispered, "Prince William's just flown you here",' Greg tells the Sunday Mirror.
‘I looked up at him and just said: "Oh. Tell him thank you."'
Prince William and Kate's wedding is expected to be as early as March, after which Wills plans to continue serving with the Royal Air Force.

from Nowmagazine.co.uk

Prince Albert's fiancée Charlene Wittstock attends Monaco National Day service and celebrations

A little over 50 years ago a glamorous blonde arrived at Saint Nicholas Cathedral in Monte Carlo to marry Prince Rainier, thus becoming a princess of Monaco. That bride was Grace Kelly. This week, another ice-cool blonde, Charlene Wittstock was on the steps of the 19th-century cathedral, attending Monaco's National Day, with Princess Grace's son in what almost seemed like a dress rehearsal for their lavish nuptials set for next July. Dipping a low curtsy before Monaco's Archbishop, Charlene, a former Olympic swimmer, who represented her native South Africa, seemed to have mastered her future role as Prince Albert's consort perfectly. From her elegant headgear and nip-waisted suit to her court shoes, the 32–year-old looked very much the part of the princess-to-be. Inside the cathedral, she took her place alongside her future sisters-in-law, Princesses Caroline and Stephanie, in a pew decorated with flowers in the principality's colours - red and white. Caroline's husband Ernst of Hanover was not present – his absence appearing to confirm speculation that the couple's marriage has broken down. Despite her own marital difficulties, the princess has shown herself to be delighted at her brother's happiness and seemed at ease with Charlene's inclusion for the first time on such a key occasion. Also brightening her day was the fact that her children, Charlotte, Alexandra, Pierre and Andrea, joined the senior royals on the balcony of the palace to greet wellwishers. Although the House of Grimaldi has ruled Monaco since 1297, the November 19 holiday celebrates the date when the state's sovereignty was officially recognized by the Franco-Monegasque Treaty of 1861.

from Hellomagazine.com

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

But who will pay for Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding? #royalwedding

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Prince Charles is expected to fork out millions of pounds for his son’s wedding, royal aides said last night. But Prince William and Kate Middleton’s ceremony will still leave the taxpayer with a security tab of tens of millions of pounds as the rest of recession-hit Britain tightens its belt. Last night it was looking increasingly likely that the Prince of Wales, with possible assistance from his mother the Queen, will fund the ceremony and reception.
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Kate’s parents, Michael and Carole, will not be asked to make a contribution. Charles would fund the wedding by digging into his wealth from the Duchy of Cornwall estate, estimated to be worth £1billion.
St James’s Palace, which represents William and Kate, said they will have an austere ceremony that will not weigh too heavily on taxpayers.
Plans are being drawn up in the knowledge that an ostentatious display would sit uneasily alongside cuts unveiled in last month’s Comprehensive Spending Review, which could see half a million lose their jobs in the next five years.
But even Charles and Camilla’s ‘modest’ register officer wedding five years ago cost £5million, while Charles and Diana’s ceremony at St Paul’s Cathedral cost £4million back in 1981.
Next year’s event will dwarf these figures, with some estimates suggesting it could reach between £20million and £40million.

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The Palace insisted details of the arrangement are still being worked out, as William and Kate sat down for intense planning meetings with staff.
But a senior courtier said: ‘Both the Prince of Wales and the Queen will contribute towards the cost of the wedding. It will be a family contribution. In particular, if the reception is held at Buckingham Palace, the Queen will pay for that.’
Traditionally, the father of the bride pays for his daughter’s wedding. But in this case it is thought Mr Middleton will not be pressured to pitch in.
Well-heeled: Michael and Carole Middleton are not expected to be asked to contribute
Sources suggested his family, which runs a small party planning business, are likely to offer to pay for Kate’s dress or the pair’s honeymoon, but this would be of their own volition.
A bespoke dress can be bought for as little as £6,000 but would reach five figures for a designer label and could end up costing as much as £100,000.
Professor Gary Slapper, a constitutional expert at the Open University, said: ‘Funding for the wedding could of course come from public funds, as the monarchy is a key part of our constitution.
‘But the monarchy is dependent on public goodwill, and with all the talk of austerity, it will be difficult to suggest that a particularly extravagant wedding should be borne by the public. I would think their private wealth would be a more intelligent source of money. It would be much more likely to come from Prince Charles.’

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Prince Charles' wedding to Diana in 1981 was extravagant and William is under pressure to rein his in Charles is expected to offer to pay for the venue – Westminster Abbey – and the private wedding breakfast out of his private funds. But the source of the funding for a banquet for visiting heads of state remains unclear. The wedding will not be classed as a state occasion because William is not yet a direct heir to the throne, another reason why his family will be expected to pay out. But taxpayers will still have to pay the enormous police bill. The G20 protests in London last year ran up a £7.4million bill for the Metropolitan Police.
A two-day lock-down in the centre of the capital and the involvement of dignitaries from the around the world could triple that figure to £20million.
A well-placed security source told the Mail: ‘It all depends on how big it will be and how many world leaders and VIPs will be invited. The more there are the more it will cost.’

from DailyMail.co.uk

Prince William attended Remembrance day in Afghanistan while his family was back home

As the Last Post sounded at the Remembrance Day service in London, Prince William was thousands of miles away in Afghanistan remembering those killed in combat there. In what was described by the Royal Legion as a "huge gesture of respect and fellowship" he joined a military congregation in Helmand Province.

The Prince, a search and rescue pilot, laid a wreath at Camp Bastion. Attached was a note reading: "For Jo, Lex and all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our country". He was a personal friend of 2nd Lt Joanna Dyer who was killed in the Afghan conflict three years ago. Major Lex Roberts, his platoon commander, died in Iraq in May 2007.
Back in Britain, under skies heavy with rain, the Queen led the nation's tributes to past and present servicemen, leaving her wreath at the Cenotaph in Whitehall. Young and old joined medalled war veterans, as well as political leaders and their wives, in the traditional two-minute silence that began at 11am on the first stroke of Big Ben.
They watched as 8,000 soldiers, sailors and airmen paraded solemnly through the streets in honour of their fallen comrades.

from Hellomagazine.com



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Caroline of Monaco at Princess Grace Awards in New York

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Hollywood royalty met the real thing at the Princess Grace Awards this week. The annual ceremony, which champions the arts, saw a host of famous faces join presenter Princess Caroline of Monaco in New York. Attending on her own – and fuelling speculation of a definitive split with husband Ernst of of Hannover – the glamorous royal shares a laugh with with winners Denzel and Pauletta Washington.

from Hellomagazine.com

[United-Kingdom] Prince Harry honours fallen comrades


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Opening the first ever remembrance field dedicated to the men and women killed in the Afghan war, Prince Harry, was joined by a four-year-old called Melanie. The little girl was there with her father Lance Corporal Ram Patten, 31, who devised the March for Honour, which Harry launched following the Wiltshire ceremony. This involves servicemen walking a mile for every life lost in Afghanistan, eventually converging on London's Royal Albert Hall on Remembrance Day.
The march began on November 4, and included a stop at the Field of Remembrance in Lydiard Park, Wootton Bassett so that the Prince could launch it officially. Melanie hadn't seen her father since he set out on last week and jumped into his arms, refusing to leave his side all day. To her excitement, this meant she got to spend lots of time with the dashing royal who told her: "You look pretty" and complimented her on her coat.
Among those that Harry was there to remember was L/Cpl Jonathan Woodgate, 26, of the Household Cavalry, the Prince's own regiment, who was killed in Helmand province in March this year.
His father Tony said the Queen's grandson told him his son would be remembered as a "special chap". "I shall remember this moment forever," said Mr Woodgate. "It was very emotional."

from Hellomagazine.com