The Royal Family faces a dilemma over who to invite to Prince Philip’s funeral due to the coronavirus restrictions in place across England. The Queen will only be able to invite 30 people to the ceremony at St George’s Chapel in the
Royal Navy warships will lead a worldwide gun salute in honour of Prince Philip today, firing 41 shots over 40 minutes from midday as they are joined by batteries in London, Edinburgh, Cardiff, Belfast and Gibraltar. HMS Diamond, a 8,000-tonne destroyer dubbed
Prince Philip’s attachment to the Armed Forces predated even his 73-year marriage to his beloved wife the Queen. The Duke of Edinburgh – who has died at the age of 99 – was highly-decorated during his distinguished military career – which he gave up in 1953 when
No royal visited Australia more than Prince Philip – who made the long trip an extraordinary 35 times over 71 years. Philip made the 15,000km journey twice as many times as the Queen, with royal watchers even speculating he enjoyed a freedom
Prince Philip touched the lives of millions around the world as patron of hundreds of charities and organisations. But his lasting legacy will be especially immortalised in the scheme he founded to empower young people – and was named after him –
Downing Street has today asked mourners not to gather or lay flowers for Prince Philip outside royal residences due to the risk of Covid. It comes as hundreds of tributes pile-up at palace gates, including Buckingham, Windsor and Balmoral, following the Duke
The Duke of Edinburgh is expected to have a royal ceremonial funeral and Union Jack flags will fly at half-mast around Britain following his death today aged 99. Prince Philip will not lie in state and there will be no state funeral
A Royal Marines dropout who considered joining ISIS before brutally murdering a complete stranger ‘just for the sake of killing someone’ was today jailed for life. Moses Christensen, 22, roamed the countryside hunting for people to murder after arming himself with combat
Archbishop of Canterbury says being in Royal Family is like serving ‘life without parole’ as he warns Prince Harry will never escape ‘celeb’ status Justin Welby: Being a member of the Royal Family is like ‘life without parole’ Archbishop of Canterbury suggested
Piers Morgan has renewed his call for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to name the Royal Family member who they claim questioned ‘how dark’ Archie’s skin would be. Morgan, DailyMail.com’s Editor-at-Large, made his latest demand for an identification in the second half