Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Camilla | |
|---|---|
| Duchess of Cornwall | |
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| Spouse | The Prince of Wales (2005-) Andrew Parker Bowles (1973-1995) |
| Issue | |
| Tom Parker Bowles Laura Lopes |
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| Full name | |
| Camilla Rosemary Mountbatten-Windsor | |
| Titles | |
| HRH The Duchess of Cornwall Mrs Camilla Parker Bowles Mrs Andrew Parker Bowles Miss Camilla Shand |
|
| Royal house | House of Windsor |
| Father | Bruce Shand |
| Mother | The Hon. Rosalind Shand, née Cubitt |
| Born | 17 July 1947 |
Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall (Camilla Rosemary Mountbatten-Windsor; formerly Parker Bowles; born Shand, 17 July 1947) is the second wife of Charles, Prince of Wales, heir apparent to the thrones of the United Kingdom and the other 15 Commonwealth Realms.
Prior to their marriage she had been his long-time partner. As the consort of the Prince of Wales she is legally the Princess of Wales[1]; Clarence House has announced that she is officially styled HRH The Duchess of Cornwall. This is mainly because the former title was so closely identified by the public with her husband's first wife, the late Diana, Princess of Wales. Camilla is officially styled as Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall (Duchess of Rothesay in Scotland).
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Christened Camilla Rosemary Shand and known since childhood as "Milla", the Duchess spent her early youth in the village of Plumpton, East Sussex, where the family home stood opposite the Plumpton Racecourse.
She attended Dumbrells School in Sussex, as well as Queen's Gate School in Kensington; later she attended Mon Fertile, a finishing school in Switzerland.
She made her debut in London in 1965. In her youth she worked for a year at the London decorators, Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler.
The Duchess of Cornwall's parents are the late Major Bruce Shand, a British Army officer turned wine merchant, who died on 11 June 2006 after a battle with cancer, and the late Hon. Rosalind Cubitt, eldest child of Roland Calvert Cubitt, 3rd Baron Ashcombe. Among the Duchess's forebears is Thomas Cubitt, who made a fortune constructing much of London's West End for the Grosvenor family. An aunt is Elspeth Howe, the former chair of the Broadcasting Standards Commission. She has one brother, Mark, and a sister, Annabel.
In 1973, the then Camilla Shand married Andrew Parker Bowles, a Roman Catholic. They had two children together, Tom, born in 1974 and a godson of Prince Charles, and Laura, born in 1978. The children were both raised as Roman Catholics. Tom attended Eton, while Laura attended the Roman Catholic St. Mary's Convent School, Shaftesbury. Andrew and Camilla were divorced on 3 March 1995.
According to genealogist William Addams Reitwiesner, her ancestry is French, English, Dutch, Scottish, Canadian and American. She is descended from several families — Treadway, Barnes, Jones, Goodnow, Allen, Brazier and others — who were living in Massachusetts and Connecticut in the 17th and 18th centuries.
She also has French Canadian ancestors, being the great-great-granddaughter of Sophia Mary MacNab and William Coutts Keppel of Hamilton, Ontario. Sophia was the descendant of immigrants to Quebec in the 17th century and the daughter of Sir Allan MacNab, Premier of the Province of Canada. The couple's son (and Camilla's great-grandfather), George Keppel, married Alice Edmonstone, who would later become the mistress of King Edward VII (great-great-grandfather of Prince Charles). This same lineage makes Camilla a distant relation of Canadian singer Celine Dion, and Madonna.[2]
The Duchess also has royalty and royal connection in her ancestry. This includes:
- King Charles II of England from his illegitimate son Charles Lennox, 1st Duke of Richmond.
- Her great-grandmother, Alice Keppel, who was the last mistress of Edward VII (reigned 1901-1910). Mrs. Keppel's daughter Sonia was the Duchess' maternal grandmother.
- The First Earl of Albemarle, a favourite of William III (r. 1689-1702).
- Her great aunt, Violet Trefusis, the daughter of Mrs. Keppel, who caused a scandal by eloping, in the 1920s, with another woman, fellow writer Vita Sackville-West, when both were married.
- Her great-great-grandfather Thomas Cubitt, the Victorian builder.
- Through George Keppel, Alice's husband, she is related to Judith Keppel, the first winner of the top prize on the British television game show Who Wants to be a Millionaire?. George Keppel's brother is the great-grandfather of Judith Keppel, making them third cousins, with Sir William Coutts Keppel, 7th Earl of Albemarle and his wife as common ancestors.[3]
| Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall | Father: Bruce Shand |
Paternal Grandfather: Philip Morton Shand |
Paternal Great-grandfather: Alexander Faulkner Shand |
| Paternal Great-grandmother: Augusta Mary Coates |
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| Paternal Grandmother: Edith Marguerite Harrington |
Paternal Great-grandfather: George Woods Harrington |
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| Paternal Great-grandmother: Alice Edith Stillman |
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| Mother: Hon. Rosalind Cubitt |
Maternal Grandfather: Roland Cubitt, 3rd Baron Ashcombe |
Maternal Great-grandfather: Henry Cubitt, 2nd Baron Ashcombe |
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| Maternal Great-grandmother: Maud Marianne Calvert |
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| Maternal Grandmother: Sonia Cubitt, Baroness Ashcombe |
Maternal Great-grandfather: Hon. George Keppel |
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| Maternal Great-grandmother: Alice Keppel |
The relationship between Camilla and the Prince of Wales began in 1970, after they met at a polo match before either of them were married.[4] Camilla Shand was married in 1973 to Andrew Parker Bowles, an Army officer, friend of the Prince of Wales.
The friendship between the Prince of Wales and the Parker Bowleses carried on her affair after the marriage of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer. Camilla and her husband seemingly carried on extramarital affairs during their marriage. It is said that Prince Charles and Camilla became lovers during this time, while her husband Andrew Parker Bowles took a long-term companion, Rosemary Pitman (nee Dickinson), whom he later married.
Charles was at this time Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Regiment of Wales, in which a junior officer Captain Christopher Elliot had spent 2 years as an Equerry to the Prince in London, accompanied by his wife Annabel, Camilla's sister. He and his wife re-joined the regiment in Osnabrück, northern Germany, in the early/mid-1970s. Camilla is known to have visited her sister and brother-in-law in Germany. Charles made annual weekend-long visits to the regiment during the 1970s, and it is said that it was during this period that he discreetly resumed his relationship with Camilla.
Captain Elliot retired as a major-general in the early 2000s, having been at one time the youngest lieutenant-colonel in the Army. He and his wife remained close to the Prince of Wales throughout his career. It was Annabel Elliot's birthday party at the Ritz, during one of her husband's many London postings, which provided the first public occasion at which Charles and Camilla allowed themselves to be photographed — the success of the opportunity provided the template for many more.
The Prince's first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales, publicly blamed the relationship between her husband and Camilla for the break-up of the Wales' marriage; privately, the Princess referred to Camilla, with whom she had originally been on affable terms, as "the Rottweiler." Diana reported that Camilla had known before she did that the Prince of Wales was going to propose to her. The Prince and Mrs Parker Bowles bought one another presents and used the pet nicknames of "Fred" and "Gladys" to one another. (These were based on their attachment to the British comedy group, the Goons.) The Prince's supporters maintained that Diana's "paranoid fixation" over his friendship with Camilla broke up the Wales' marriage.
The romance became public knowledge upon the publication of Diana: Her True Story, followed by the Camillagate scandal (when a racy phone conversation between Camilla and Charles was secretly recorded and published) and Diana's television interview about her failing marriage. These revelations made Camilla unpopular. A claim however that Camilla was pelted with bread rolls in a supermarket by shoppers, though often repeated in the media[5], has been denied by her friends, who suggest that it was a tabloid media invention that has ended up becoming an urban myth.[6]
Some claim that the couple's affair had been conducted throughout the Prince's engagement, and that they had been intimate on the night before Charles's marriage to Diana, charges that were unsubstantiated.[7] Though the timing of these tangled relationships has been much discussed and dissected, reliable published reports indicate that they renewed their romantic relationship in the early 1980s, much prior to the timeframe Diana got involved with Hewitt outside the marriage. After the Prince of Wales's public admission, in a television interview with Jonathan Dimbleby, that he had committed adultery, the Parker Bowles announced their own divorce in 1995. They had been living apart for some time, and Andrew Parker Bowles soon remarried.
Though she maintains a residence in Wiltshire, the Duchess of Cornwall primarily lives at Highgrove House and at Clarence House, the former residence of the late Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, which is now the Prince of Wales's official London residence. He spent his early childhood in the house, which was the first residence of his newlywed parents, the present Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and the Duke of Edinburgh. British newspapers reported in early 2005, in articles about the finances of the Prince of Wales, that, even though they were not married at the time, the prince paid for her jewels and designer wardrobe (among the designers are Giorgio Armani and Oscar de la Renta) and the decoration of her two-room Clarence House quarters by designer Robert Kime.
Since the marriage of Charles and Camilla, it has been revealed that they are ninth cousins.[8]
| Styles of The Duchess of Cornwall |
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|---|---|
| Reference style | Her Royal Highness |
| Spoken style | Your Royal Highness |
| Alternative style | Ma'am |
On 10 February 2005, it was announced that Camilla and the Prince of Wales would marry on 8 April 2005 at Windsor Castle with a civil service followed by religious prayer.
On 4 April, it was announced that the wedding would be postponed 24 hours until 9 April, so that the Prince of Wales could attend the funeral of Pope John Paul II as the representative of the Queen.[9]
The civil service actually took place at the Guildhall, Windsor instead of the castle, due to the constraints that obtaining a wedding licence for the castle would impose. The service was attended by close members of the couple's family.
However, the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh did not attend the civil service, with Buckingham Palace explaining that the Queen did not want to overshadow the wedding. Others commented that this was a snub to Charles and Camilla, or explained by the Queen's reluctance to attend a civil wedding due to her position as Supreme Governor of the Church of England.[10]
However the Queen and Duke attended the service of religious prayer at St George's Chapel following the civil service (officiated by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams), and held a reception for the couple in Windsor Castle afterwards.[11]
Following the wedding, the couple travelled to Birkhall, the Prince's country home in Scotland, near Balmoral Castle. The new couple carried out their first royal duties together during their honeymoon. To the surprise of her critics, Camilla's choice of clothes for her wedding day won widespread media praise, with the News of the World calling her outfits "sensational".[12]
Since her marriage, Camilla has been known as HRH The Duchess of Cornwall.
The Duchess of Cornwall spent her first wedding anniversary with the Prince of Wales in Birkhall, near Balmoral Castle.
Following the royal wedding, the Duchess of Cornwall began to undertake a range of royal duties. Initially, these involved accompanying the Prince of Wales in his official duties. The Duchess also began to undertake her own solo duties, visiting a hospital in Southampton. She attended the Trooping the Colour ceremony in London for the first time in June 2005, and made her first appearance on the balcony of Buckingham Palace afterwards.
Following the 7 July 2005 London bombings, the Duchess accompanied the Prince to visit victims of the attack at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington.
In November 2005, the Duchess accompanied Prince Charles on a royal tour of the United States of America, her first official international tour as a member of the British Royal Family.
In March 2006, the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall went on a royal tour through Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and India. The long and arduous trip was a great success and won Camilla praises for her persistence and down to earth attitude.
She is a dedicated horse-rider and was an avid fox-hunter until it was outlawed in Britain in 2004.
In March, 2007 she had a hysterectomy[13], which was rumoured to have been to treat cancer. However, no details of the reasons for the procedure have been confirmed. Other possible conditions include fibroids in the uterus, heavy menstrual bleeding or a uterine prolapse.
- 17 July 1947-1973: Miss Camilla Rosemary Shand
- 1973-1995: Mrs Andrew Parker Bowles
- 1995-9 April 2005: Mrs Camilla Parker Bowles
- 9 April 2005-: Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall
Camilla's full, seldom-used, style is: Her Royal Highness The Princess Charles, Princess of Wales and Countess of Chester, Duchess of Cornwall, Duchess of Rothesay, Countess of Carrick, Baroness of Renfrew, Lady of the Isles, Princess of Scotland
As she is the consort and wife of the Prince of Wales, Camilla legally holds the title and technical rank of Princess of Wales, but she chooses not to style herself as such. Clarence House announced at the couple's engagement that she wished to use the style of her husband's subsidiary title, Duke of Cornwall, rather than Princess of Wales, except in Scotland, where both Charles and Camilla are formally styled as Duke and Duchess of Rothesay, a title historically associated with heirs to the Scottish throne.
The Queen has placed the Duchess as the fourth highest-ranking female royal in the United Kingdom Order of Precedence in 2005 (after herself, Anne, Princess Royal and Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy) rather than second (as would normally befit a consort to the heir) to strengthen the notion of being a royal duchess rather than a princess. Her degree of acceptance within the Royal Family was shown in the decision to allow her wear the tiaras and jewels of the late Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother.[14]
She made Mr. Blackwell's worst-dressed list in 2006, at number 2.
Clarence House has indicated that when Charles accedes the throne it is intended that she will use the title HRH The Princess Consort, although, as with the example of the Princess of Wales, technically as the wife of a king, Camilla would be Queen. However, as is prohibited by the Church of England, Camilla cannot be Queen because she has been divorced before.
One year after her wedding, polls still showed opposition to the prospect of a Queen Camilla, with only 38% supporting the idea.[15] Meanwhile, Prince Charles is currently viewed fairly well by the public, 52% believing he will be a good King.[16].
- Royal Colonel, of 4th Battalion The Rifles
- Commodore-in-Chief, of Naval Medical Services
On 17 July 2005, the Duchess's 58th birthday, Clarence House unveiled a coat of arms for Camilla's use. It impales her husband's main coat of arms to the dexter (viewer's left) with her father's to sinister (viewer's right), all surmounted by her husband's coronet as heir-apparent.
According to reports in the news media, the arms were authorized and granted by the Queen, who was said to have taken a "keen interest" in its development, along with Charles and Camilla; the arms itself were prepared by Peter Gwynn-Jones, Garter Principal King of Arms.[17] However, aside from the invention of a boar supporter (reflecting her paternal arms) for the sinister side, the arms are entirely consistent with the historical heraldic arrangement for a married woman who is not herself a heraldic heiress.
- ^ A spokesman for the Department of Constitutional Affairs told the Sunday Times "[Camilla] automatically takes the title Princess of Wales and all the other titles that go with her marriage to the Prince of Wales." The Sunday Times. 03.04.2005.
- ^ Leurs histoires commencent dans le Perche… (French)
- ^ Sir William Coutts Keppel, 7th Earl of Albemarle thePeerage.com
- ^ BBC News.
- ^ See CNN claim.
- ^ The author Jilly Cooper, a close friend of Camilla, on RTÉ's The Late Late Show, 12 May 2006.
- ^ While Charles and Camilla were alone together for periods, it was in a room to which other guests and members of staff regularly walked in unannounced. No-one reportedly witnessed any indications of sexual activity and the risks of engaging in such activity in a room where anyone could walk in at any time was highlighted as evidence that no such activity was likely to have happened, contrary to Diana's claims. The Sunday Times. 03.04.2005
- ^ [1]
- ^ BBC News.
- ^ BBC News.
- ^ CBS News
- ^ BBC News.
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6418201.stm
- ^ "Duchess of Cornwall wears Queen Mother's Tiara"
- ^ Ipsos MORI - Monarchy Trends
- ^ Ipsos MORI - Monarchy Trends
- ^ BBC News.
- Whitaker, James (4 April 2006). "WHY I STILL HAVEN'T LEARNED TO LOVE CAMILLA".Mirror.
- "Charles and Camilla Do America". (2 November, 2005). Slate.
- Ginsburg, Marsha (Nov. 5, 2005). "What to know if you encounter a prince or a duchess". SFGate.
- Pierce, Andrew & Gibb, Frances (14 February, 2005). "Camilla might still become Queen". The Times.
- Jonathan Dimbleby, The Prince of Wales, a Biography (Little, Brown and Company, 1994) ISBN 0-316-91016-3
- Official website of the British monarchy - HRH The Duchess of Cornwall
- Prince of Wales' homepage- The Duchess
- Monarchy Wales - leading campaign organisation
- Illustrated biography of Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall
- Biography of early life
- BBC Article: Profile: Camilla Parker Bowles
- BBC News Online's special section on the marriage of Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall and Prince Charles
- BBC article: Prince Charles to marry Camilla
- Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall at the Internet Movie Database
| Order of precedence in the United Kingdom | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by The Queen |
United Kingdom order of precedence Ladies |
Succeeded by The Countess of Wessex |
Titles and honours · Duchy of Cornwall
Family: The Duchess of Cornwall · Prince William · Prince Harry · Diana, Princess of Wales
Events: War of the Waleses · Camillagate · Squidgygate · Second Wedding
Charities: The Prince's Trust · Prince's Foundation for the Built Environment
HM The Queen · HRH The Duchess of Cornwall and Rothesay · HRH The Countess of Wessex · HRH The Princess Royal
HRH Princess Beatrice of York · HRH Princess Eugenie of York · Lady Louise Windsor
HRH The Duchess of Gloucester · HRH The Duchess of Kent · HRH Princess Michael of Kent · HRH Princess Alexandra, The Hon Lady Ogilvy
HRH The Duchess of Cornwall
Diana, Princess of Wales (1981–1996) · Mary of Teck (1901–1910) · Alexandra of Denmark (1863–1901) · Caroline of Brunswick (1795–1820) · Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha (1736–1751) · Caroline of Ansbach (1714–1727) · Catherine of Aragon (1501–1502) · Anne Neville (1470–1471) · Joan of Kent (1361–1376)

