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Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee

March 23, 2012 by · Comments Off on Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee 

Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee, British lawmakers Friday launched a bid to rename London’s famous Big Ben tower after Queen Elizabeth II to mark her Diamond Jubilee.

Lawmaker Tobias Ellwood filed a motion in parliament calling for the iconic landmark — officially named the Clock Tower, but known to millions as Big Ben — to be named “Elizabeth Tower, in recognition of Her Majesty’s 60 years of unbroken public service on behalf of her country.”

The motion, which already was supported by lawmakers from all three of Britain’s major political parties, notes that the Palace of Westminster’s other tower was renamed the Victoria Tower in 1860 to commemorate the long reign of Queen Victoria.

It adds that of the 41 monarchs who have reigned the country since William the Conqueror in 1066, only Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II reached the “landmark” Diamond Jubilee.

“I cannot think of a greater tribute for parliament to bestow than to rename such an iconic landmark as the Clock Tower,” Ellwood told The Sun. “Most people will continue to call it Big Ben, but it would be appropriate to change the official name.”

It comes a day after Buckingham Palace announced the latest details of celebrations to be held in June in honor of the queen’s Diamond Jubilee.

Queen Elizabeth II

February 6, 2012 by · Comments Off on Queen Elizabeth II 

Queen Elizabeth II, The Princess Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor was up a tree in Kenya gazing at the wildlife below when her father, King George VI, died in London on Feb. 6, 1952. At that moment, 60 years ago today, she was queen of the United Kingdom, at age 25. Only she didn’t know it yet.

Six decades later, the British are preparing to celebrate Queen Elizabeth II’s Diamond Jubilee with an outpouring of affection and patriotism and an extravagant party for their 40th monarch since the Norman Conquest.

It’s only the second Diamond Jubilee in British history. The first was Queen Victoria’s in 1897. The queen was so frail (she was 78) she had to sit outside St. Paul’s Cathedral in her carriage for the thanksgiving service because she couldn’t get up the steps.

Not so for her great-great-granddaughter, soon to be 86, who has spent a lifetime demonstrating how sturdy and steady she is, and always has been, since that gloomy day she arrived home from Kenya. The image is burned into the British memory: a small, black-gloved figure in a black coat and hat, alone at the top of the aircraft stairs, a line of ministers below led by a teary Winston Churchill.

“It was the first of very significant moments in the nation’s emotional life,” says royal biographer Robert Lacey, whose latest book about Elizabeth, “A Brief Life of the Queen,” just came out in the U.K.

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