Charles, prince of Wales
Charles, prince of Wales, in full
Charles Philip Arthur George, prince of Wales and earl of
Chester, duke of Cornwall, duke of Rothesay, earl of Carrick and Baron Renfrew,
Lord of the Isles, and Prince and Great Steward of Scotland (born
November 14, 1948, Buckingham Palace, London, England), heir apparent to the
British throne, eldest child of Queen Elizabeth II and
Prince Philip, duke of
Edinburgh.
![Princess Elizabeth and the duke of Edinburgh with Prince Charles, December 1948.
[Credit: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.] Princess Elizabeth and the duke of Edinburgh with Prince Charles, December 1948.
[Credit: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_sK4WgKkArC2swa7xtTbXiZY8OF7NDLwMNUf5BWB-NWrqiwd7xMqZm2UVLAtSFDFqRjCjz_Dmc-DbQmZ10CuezgcmsvgxWc6Z6QyDs2HUKWPND0UzyTrBX2zEe_bq7V9wdWDpWtz78=s0-d)
After private schooling at Buckingham Palace and in
London, Hampshire, and Scotland, Charles entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in
1967. He took a bachelor’s degree there in 1971, the first ever earned by an
heir to the British crown. He also spent a term at the University College of
Wales, Aberystwyth, learning Welsh in preparation for his investiture as prince
of Wales on July 1, 1969, at Caernarvon Castle. He then attended the Royal Air
Force College (becoming an excellent flier) and the Royal Naval College,
Dartmouth, and from 1971 to 1976 took a tour of duty with the Royal Navy. Later
he became an outspoken critic of modern architecture. He expressed his views on
the topic in A Vision of Britain (1989). In 1992 he founded the Prince
of Wales’s Institute of Architecture, which later evolved into the BRE Trust, an
organization involved with urban regeneration and development projects.
![Charles, prince of Wales, with his second wife, Camilla Parker Bowles, after their wedding on April …
[Credit: © Tim Graham/Getty Images] Charles, prince of Wales, with his second wife, Camilla Parker Bowles, after their wedding on April …
[Credit: © Tim Graham/Getty Images]](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_tGPYD8CaSBoP6r2_zOKI6h9iUtVS7WnGVt-52fkqzZ7glQ1xFssFfLJsBhUIiCia9H8Rfu-KSZlzqARhERI_i8AhjAyHNsMp2gqwRhN4ED1futfK9yNAaNPD_08Q_SidLdVJIzS8_H=s0-d)
On July 29, 1981, Charles married Lady Diana Frances
Spencer (see Diana, princess of
Wales), daughter of the 8th Earl Spencer; the royal wedding was a
global media event, broadcast live on television and watched by hundreds of
millions of people. The couple’s first child, Prince
William of Wales, became at his birth (June 21, 1982) second in line
of succession to the throne. Their second child, Prince Henry Charles
Albert David (known as Harry), was born on September 15, 1984.
Charles’s marriage to Diana gradually grew strained amid intense scrutiny from
the tabloid press and rumours of infidelity. On December 9, 1992, it was
announced that Charles and Diana had decided to separate but would continue to
fulfill their public duties and to share the responsibility of raising their
sons. The couple divorced on August 28, 1996. A year later Diana died in an auto
accident, and popular feeling for her, stronger even in death than in life,
served to jeopardize the traditional form of monarchy that Charles represented.
He subsequently spent much effort in modernizing his public image as the heir
apparent. On April 9, 2005, he married Camilla Parker
Bowles (born 1947), with whom he had a long-standing relationship;
after the wedding, Parker Bowles took the title of duchess of
Cornwall.
No comments:
Post a Comment