logo
King to mark official birthday with Trooping the Colour parade

King to mark official birthday with Trooping the Colour parade

Military pomp and pageantry will be on display in central London to mark the milestone but the event will also remember those killed in the Air India plane crash.
The King has requested a minute's silence be observed in tribute to the 241 passengers and crew killed, and others affected, when a Boeing 787 Dreamliner bound for Gatwick Airport came down on Thursday in the Indian city of Ahmedabad.
Black armbands will also be worn by the head of state and senior royals riding in the ceremony, also known as the King's Birthday Parade, staged in Horse Guards Parade in Whitehall.
The King, Colonel-in-Chief of the Coldstream Guards, inspected the regiment during a ceremony at Windsor Castle, Berkshire, on Friday (Henry Nicholls/PA)
On horseback and wearing the armbands will be the Royal Colonels – Prince of Wales, Colonel of the Welsh Guards, the Princess Royal, Colonel Blues and Royals, and the Duke of Edinburgh, Colonel Scots Guards.
The Queen, the Princess of Wales and the Duchess of Edinburgh are expected to be among the royal party watching the event and royal fans will hope Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis will join them as they did last year.
Members of the royal family not taking part in the parade and who normally watch events from the Duke of Wellington's former office will not wear black armbands.
A Buckingham Palace spokesperson said the King requested amendments to the Trooping the Colour programme 'as a mark of respect for the lives lost, the families in mourning and all the communities affected by this awful tragedy'.
In 2017, Trooping was held a few days after the Grenfell Tower blaze and the loss of life was marked by a minute's silence, a decision taken by Queen Elizabeth II.
The King issued a written message soon after the Air India plane crash saying he was 'desperately shocked by the terrible events' and expressing his 'deepest possible sympathy'.
He was kept updated about the developing situation on Thursday and it later emerged there was a sole survivor, UK national Vishwash Kumar Ramesh.
Trooping the Colour will see more than 1,000 servicemen taking part in the military display who when not performing ceremonial duties are fighting soldiers.
The colour – regimental flag – being trooped this year is the King's Colour of Number 7 Company, Coldstream Guards, a prestigious regiment known as the sovereign's bodyguard which is celebrating its 375th anniversary this year.
The day will end with the royal family gathering on Buckingham Palace's balcony for the traditional RAF flypast.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kate Middleton channels Queen Elizabeth II in a 'history repeating itself' moment at Trooping the Colour
Kate Middleton channels Queen Elizabeth II in a 'history repeating itself' moment at Trooping the Colour

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Kate Middleton channels Queen Elizabeth II in a 'history repeating itself' moment at Trooping the Colour

The Princess of Wales channelled the late Queen Elizabeth II at yesterday's Trooping the Colour. Kate, 43, accompanied members of the Royal Family for the annual parade before observing a flypast on the balcony of Buckingham Palace, London, to mark King Charles 's official birthday. During the parade, photographers captured Kate glancing to her side in an image that carries a striking resemblance to one taken of the late monarch during Trooping the Colour in 2018. That year, Elizabeth welcomed her family to the procession to celebrate her 92nd birthday. In the similar photographs, Elizabeth and Kate are seen both enjoying the Horse Guards Parade while sitting inside a carriage and beaming towards their side. The royal's outfits also resembled each other, with Kate's turquoise Catherine Walker dress coat mirroring the bright blue tone of Elizabeth's outfit in 2018. Royal fans took to X to marvel at the similarities, with one commenting, 'History repeating itself'. A second wrote, 'Wow! Two wonderful much beloved ladies.' Another added, 'One for the history books.' Meanwhile, Kate also paid a poignant tribute to Princess Diana at Trooping the Colour yesterday, donning a striking coat dress by the late royal's favourite designer - and echoing one of her most memorable looks from the early '90s. Royal watchers were quick to draw comparisons between Kate's refined ensemble and the tailored Catherine Walker suit worn by Prince William's mother during her official visit to New Delhi in 1992. Both outfits featured the same crisp white and turquoise colour palette and sleek silhouette, evoking the timeless elegance that defined Diana's style legacy. Catherine Walker was a go-to fashion house for her, and the Princess of Wales has followed suit in recent years, regularly stepping out in bespoke pieces from the British label. The designer's enduring link to the royal family and its polished aesthetic makes it a natural choice for Kate. The visual tribute didn't stop at the clothing. In a detail that delighted royal fans, Kate also opted for a cherished accessory with a storied royal provenance - the Bahrain pearl drop earrings, originally gifted to the then-Princess Elizabeth in 1947 by the Hakim of Bahrain as a wedding present. The jewellery, which feature a diamond stud and suspended Art Deco-style diamonds ending in two Bahrain-sourced pearls, has become a symbol of royal continuity across generations. Diana was the first to wear the earrings after the Queen, having borrowed them as early as 1982 - a year after she herself became a royal bride. She often paired them with the Queen Mary's Lover's Knot Tiara, a piece now closely associated with the Princess of Wales, who continues to wear the tiara at formal state occasions. Kate has worn the pearl earrings several times since Queen Elizabeth II's passing in 2022, signalling both personal respect and royal tradition. 'Pearls are one of the very few jewellery items you can wear in mourning and are inextricably linked with Queen Elizabeth and her personal jewellery legacy,' royal jewellery expert Bethan Holt previously told People. The nod to both Diana and the late Queen was widely interpreted as a deliberate gesture, designed to underline the Princess of Wales's role as a bridge between the monarchy's past and future. Kate's decision to wear Catherine Walker for such a high-profile event was no surprise. She has often gravitated towards the label's sleek tailoring and understated colour palettes, much like Diana before her. One of the most notable early examples came in 1987, when Diana coordinated in a matching Catherine Walker look with a young Prince William for an Easter Sunday service. Now, nearly four decades later, William stood alongside his wife as she paid homage to the mother-in-law she never met but whose influence continues to shape her public image. And Princess Charlotte joined her mother in paying tribute to Queen Elizabeth. Kate's only daughter rewore a brooch she first wore to her great-grandmother's funeral. The young royal, ten, pinned the historic Diamond Horseshoe brooch to the front of her light blue dress for her grandfather King Charles's birthday parade. The brooch, which has been in the Royal Family for generations, had been a gift from her 'Gan-Gan' the Queen, and was a fitting nod to Her Majesty's love of horses. Trooping the Colour is one of the most significant ceremonial events in the royal calendar. Dating back to the 17th century, the annual parade marks the Sovereign's official birthday and showcases the full spectacle of British pageantry. The event features over 1,400 soldiers, 200 horses, and 400 musicians, culminating in a Royal Air Force flypast watched by senior royals from the Buckingham Palace balcony. More than just a spectacle, Trooping the Colour serves as a public reaffirmation of the monarchy's continuity and presence - a role Kate is increasingly stepping into with grace and poise.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store