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INTRODUCTION |
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HER
STORY |
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QUOTES |
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TRIVIA |
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NICKNAME |
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GALLERY |
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CURIOS |
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VOX
POPULI |
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SHOP |
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The
tragic death of Diana, Princess of Wales occurred on Sunday, 31 August
1997 following a car accident in Paris, France. The vehicle in which the
Princess was travelling was involved in a high-speed accident in the Place
de l'Alma underpass in central Paris shortly before midnight on Saturday,
30 August. The Princess was taken to the La Pitie Salpetriere Hospital,
where she underwent two hours of emergency surgery before being declared
dead at 0300 BST. The Princess's companion, Mr Dodi
Fayed, and the driver
of the vehicle died in the accident, whilst a bodyguard was seriously
injured.
The Princess's body was
subsequently repatriated to the United Kingdom in the evening of Sunday,
31 August by a BAe 146 aircraft of the Royal Squadron. The Prince of Wales
and the Princess's elder sisters, Lady Sarah McCorquodale and Lady Jane
Fellowes, accompanied the Princess's coffin on its return journey. Upon
arrival at RAF Northolt, the coffin, draped with a Royal Standard, was
removed from the aircraft and transferred to a waiting hearse by a bearer
party from The Queen's Colour Squadron of the RAF. The Prime Minister was
among those in the reception party.
From RAF Northolt the coffin
was taken to a private mortuary in London, so that the necessary legal
formalities could be completed. Shortly after midnight, it was moved to
the Chapel Royal in St
James's Palace, where it lay privately until the funeral
on Saturday, 6 September, in Westminster
Abbey. The Princess's family and friends visited the Chapel to pay
their respects.
Following the funeral service,
the coffin then was taken by road to the family estate at Althorp for a
private interment. The Princess was buried in sanctified ground on an
island in the centre of an ornamental lake.
Diana, Princess of Wales, formerly
Lady Diana Frances Spencer, was born on 1 July 1961 at Park House near
Sandringham, Norfolk. She was the youngest daughter of the then Viscount
and Viscountess Althorp, now the late (8th) Earl Spencer and the Hon. Mrs
Shand-Kydd, daughter of the 4th Baron Fermoy. Earl Spencer was Equerry to
George VI from 1950 to 1952, and to The Queen from 1952 to 1954. Lady
Diana's parents, who had married in 1954, separated in 1967 and the
marriage was dissolved in 1969. Earl Spencer later married Raine, Countess
of Dartmouth in 1976.
Together with her two elder
sisters Sarah (born 1955), Jane (born 1957) and her younger brother
Charles (born 1964), Lady Diana continued to live with her father at Park
House, Sandringham, until the death of her grandfather, the 7th Earl
Spencer. In 1975, the family moved to the Spencer family seat at Althorp
(a stately house dating from 1508) in Northamptonshire, in the English
Midlands.
Lady Diana was educated first
at a preparatory school, Riddlesworth Hall at Diss, Norfolk, and then in
1974 went as a boarder to West Heath, near Sevenoaks, Kent. At school she
showed a particular talent for music (as an accomplished pianist), dancing
and domestic science, and gained the school's award for the girl giving
maximum help to the school and her schoolfellows. She left West Heath in
1977 and went to finishing school at the Institut Alpin Videmanette in
Rougemont, Switzerland, which she left after the Easter term of 1978. The
following year she moved to a flat in Coleherne Court, London. For a while
she looked after the child of an American couple, and she worked as a
kindergarten teacher at the Young England School in Pimlico.
On 24 February 1981 it was
officially announced that Lady Diana was to marry The Prince
of Wales. As neighbours at Sandringham until 1975, their families had
known each other for many years, and Lady Diana and the The Prince had met
again when he was invited to a weekend at Althorp in November 1977.
They were married at St Paul's
Cathedral in London on 29 July 1981, in a ceremony which drew a global
television and radio audience estimated at around 1,000 million people,
and hundreds of thousands of people lining the route from Buckingham
Palace to the Cathedral. The wedding reception was at Buckingham
Palace.
The Princess was the first
Englishwoman to marry an heir to the throne for 300 years (when Lady Anne
Hyde married the future James II from whom the Princess was descended).
The bride wore a silk taffeta dress with a 25-foot train designed by the
Emanuels, her veil was held in place by the Spencer family diamond tiara,
and she carried a bouquet of gardenias, lilies-of-the-valley, white
freesia, golden roses, white orchids and stephanotis. She was attended by
five bridesmaids including Princess Margaret's
daughter Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones (now Lady Sarah Chatto); Prince Andrew
(now The Duke of York)
and Prince Edward
were The Prince of Wales's supporters (a Royal custom instead of a best
man).
The Prince and Princess of Wales
spent part of their honeymoon at the Mountbatten family home at
Broadlands, Hampshire, before flying to Gibraltar to join the Royal
Yacht HMY BRITANNIA for a 12-day cruise through the Mediterranean to
Egypt. They finished their honeymoon with a stay at Balmoral.
The Prince and Princess made
their principal home at Highgrove House near Tetbury, Gloucestershire, and
shared an apartment in Kensington Palace.
The Princess of Wales had two
sons. Prince
William Arthur Philip Louis was born on 21 June 1982 and Prince Henry
(Harry) Charles Albert David on 15 September 1984, both at St Mary's
Hospital, Paddington, in London.
The Princess had seventeen
godchildren.
In December 1992 it was announced
that The Prince and Princess of Wales had agreed to separate. The Princess
based her household and her office at Kensington Palace, while The Prince
was based at St James's Palace and continued to live at Highgrove.
In November 1995, the Princess
gave a television interview during which she spoke of her unhappiness in
her personal life and the pressures of her public role. The Prince and
Princess were divorced on 28 August 1996.
The Prince and Princess continued
to share equal responsibility for the upbringing of their children. The
Princess, as the mother of Prince William (second in line to the throne),
continued to be regarded as a member of the Royal family. The Queen, The
Prince and The Princess of Wales agreed that the Princess was to be known
after the divorce as Diana, Princess of Wales, without the style of
'Her
Royal Highness' (as the Princess was given the style 'HRH' on marriage she
would therefore be expected to give it up on divorce).
The Princess continued to live
at Kensington Palace, with her office based there.
After her marriage, The
Princess of Wales quickly became involved in the official duties of the
Royal family. Her first tour with The Prince was a three-day visit to
Wales in October 1981. In 1983 she accompanied The Prince on a tour of
Australia and New Zealand, and they took the infant Prince William with
them. Prince William, with Prince Harry, again joined The Prince and
Princess at the end of their tour to Italy in 1985. Other official
overseas visits undertaken with The Prince included Australia (for the
bicentenary celebrations in 1988), Brazil, India, Canada, Nigeria,
Cameroon, Indonesia, Spain, Italy, France, Portugal and Japan (for the
enthronement of Emperor Akihito). Their last joint overseas visit was to
South Korea in 1992.
The Princess's first official
visit overseas on her own was in September 1982, when she represented The
Queen at the state funeral of Princess Grace of Monaco. The Princess's
first solo overseas tour was in February 1984 when she travelled to Norway
to attend a performance of Carmen by the London City Ballet, of which she
was patron. The Princess subsequently visited many countries including
Germany, the United States, Pakistan, Switzerland, Hungary, Egypt,
Belgium, France, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Nepal.
Although the Princess was
renowned for her style and was closely associated with the fashion
world,
patronising and raising the profile of younger British designers, she was
best known for her charitable work.
During her marriage, the
Princess was president or patron of over 100
charities. The Princess did
much to publicise work on behalf of homeless and also disabled people,
children and people with HIV/Aids. In December 1993, the Princess
announced that she would be reducing the extent of her public life in
order to combine 'a meaningful public role with a more private life'.
After her separation from The
Prince, the Princess continued to appear with the Royal family on major
national occasions, such as the commemorations of the 50th anniversary of
VE (Victory in Europe) and VJ (Victory over Japan) Days in 1995.
Following her divorce, the
Princess resigned most of her charity and other patronages, and
relinquished all her Service appointments with military units. The
Princess remained as patron of Centrepoint (homeless charity), English
National Ballet, Leprosy Mission and National Aids Trust, and as President
of the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street and of the Royal
Marsden Hospital. In June 1997, the Princess attended receptions in London
and New York as previews of the sale of a number of dresses and suits worn
by her on official engagements, with the proceeds going to charity.
The Princess spent her 36th and
last birthday on 1 July 1997 attending the Tate Gallery's 100th
Anniversary celebrations. Her last official engagement in Britain was on
21 July, when she visited Northwick Park Hospital, London (children's
accident and emergency unit).
In the year before her death,
the Princess was an active campaigner for a ban on the manufacture and use
of land mines. In January 1997, she visited Angola as part of her
campaign. in June, the Princess spoke at the landmines conference at the
Royal Geographical Society in London, and this was followed by a visit to
Washington DC in the United States on 17/18 June to promote the American
Red Cross landmines campaign (separately, she also met Mother Teresa in
The Bronx).
The Princess's last public
engagements were during her visit to Bosnia from 7 to 10 August, when she
visited landmine projects in Travnic, Sarajevo and Zenezica.
It was in recognition of her
charity work that representatives of the charities with which she worked
during her life were invited to walk behind her coffin with her family
from St James's Palace to Westminster Abbey on the day of her funeral.
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