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        <title><![CDATA[How Queen Elizabeth II Is Breaking Royal Mourning Tradition]]></title>
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        <lastBuildDate>Tue, 20 Apr 2021 20:00:19 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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            <media:title type="html">How Queen Elizabeth II Is Breaking Royal Mourning Tradition</media:title>
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						<p>A subtle tribute. <strong><strong>Queen Elizabeth II</strong></strong> will deviate from royal mourning tradition in a minor but meaningful way following the death of her husband, <strong>Prince Philip</strong>.</p>


<p>The queen, 94, “will be breaking with royal protocol by not using the traditional black-trimmed stationery,” a source told <em>Us Weekly</em> on Tuesday, April 20. “Her Royal Highness will be using her personalized stationery, with one change: the stationery will include her crest in black, not the traditional red.”</p>
<figure id="attachment_2013239"  class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img  data-src="/uploads/2021/04/20/how-queen-elizabeth-ii-is-breaking-royal-mourning-tradition-0.jpg" alt="How Queen Elizabeth Is Breaking Royal Mourning Tradition" /><figcaption class="wp-caption-text"><span class="caption">Queen Elizabeth II.</span> <span class="credit">Victoria Jones/WPA Pool/Shutterstock</span></figcaption></figure><p>Though the change is small, it’s also a direct reflection of what the monarch’s late husband hoped would happen after his death. “The queen believes this is keeping with Prince Philip’s wishes as to not make a fuss over his passing,” the insider added.</p>
<p>The Duke of Edinburgh <strong>died April 9 at age 99</strong> following a <strong>month-long hospital stay</strong> and heart surgery earlier this year. In their statements following his death, both <strong><strong>Prince William</strong></strong> and <strong><strong>Prince Harry</strong></strong> alluded to the fact that their grandfather wouldn’t have wanted his passing to become a big production.</p>


<p>“I will miss my Grandpa, but I know he would want us to get on with the job,” the Duke of Cambridge, 38, <strong>said in a statement on April 12</strong>.</p>
<p>Harry, 36, <strong>added in a separate tribute</strong> the same day, “He has been a rock for Her Majesty The Queen with unparalleled devotion, by her side for 73 years of marriage, and while I could go on, I know that right now he would say to all of us, beer in hand, ‘Oh, do get on with it.'”</p>

		<p><strong>Philip’s funeral</strong>, held on Saturday, April 17, was kept small because of ongoing restrictions due to the coronavirus pandemic, but the queen, William, Harry and other royals paid their final respects in a moving ceremony. While at St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, <strong>the queen placed a note</strong>, handwritten on her personal stationery, on top of the casket. It appeared to say “I love you” and “Lilibet,” a childhood nickname that Philip also used for the queen throughout their marriage.</p>
<p>While Philip had been in poor health over the past several months, a source told <em>Us</em> earlier this month that <strong>“the loss was still a surprise”</strong> for the “heartbroken” queen.</p>


<p>“Although it was expected, although he was so old, it still would have been a shock,” royal biographer Ingrid Seward told <em>Us</em> in <strong>an exclusive interview following Philip’s death</strong>. “Shock makes you go into … what I always call military mode, because you actually do things very, very calmly, very exactly, very quickly, and you just get on with it. And usually, grief hits a little bit later. So I would think that the queen is absolutely just getting on with the organization or delegating her wishes as to what she wants … I think when the whole thing is over, that will be the hard time for her.”</p>
<p><em>With reporting by Travis Cronin</em></p>
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												<p>This story originally appeared on: <strong>US Magazine</strong> - Author:<strong>Eliza Thompson</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Eliza Thompson]]></dc:creator>
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