Jo of Palatine
Heir Apparent
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2006
- Messages
- 3,323
- City
- Munich
- Country
- Germany
Thinking back to the 1970s and the speculation about a possible bride for Charles, foreign royals were mentioned sort of in passing (most papers were talking about Princess Caroline despite the religion issue, possibly because she was the only princess that most of the tabloid readers would have ever heard of), but the serious candidates were all members of the aristocracy.
I don't think Camilla Shand would have really been given serious consideration even if the papers had picked up on the fact that she and Charles were serious about each other for a while, because she wasn't the daughter of the Duke of This or the Earl of That and because she had - horrors! - a "past." The existence of a previous serious boyfriend heralded the end of Davina Sheffield's chances, and it doesn't seem as though it'd have been hard to find a similar skeleton or three in Camilla's closet.
IMHo what really changed the view on marriages of an Heir to the Throne was the statement of Crown Prince Haakon of Norway that as in a constitutional monarchy the people can decide against him becoming king anytime by voting against the monarchy, he at least can decide whom to marry and that he chose Mette-Marit, despite her having a "past".
I really think this statement told exactly how nowadays the Royals view her job. They work for their country because they are Royals but they are free when it comes to their private life. Just like their "subjects" are free to choose when it comes to their private life.
As for Charles: not only was he heavily influenced by Mountbatten and the QM but there was still the opinion in his family that it is simply not done to marry out of love and to hell with the consequences. The people most affected by the duke of Windsor's decision to do exactly that were still around and able to influence Charles' way of thinking.
Plus I agree with Skydragon: I believe there were many people around who had a vivid interest in discouraging Camilla and show her that whatever Charles might feel for her, he would not offer for her. People who probably convinced her that the best thing for her was to make a suitable marriage herself and go on with her life. Andrew Parker Bowles was not such a bad choice. He is one of the Macclesfield Parkers and a grandson of Sir Humphrey De Trafford, he gave Camilla a suitable social position and two children and when the times had changed, he gave her a genteel divorce while still being supporting to his former wife and their family.
People who entertain the idea that Charles would have offered for Camilla if she had only waited for him IMHO have no idea how many pressures were on Charles back then not to marry her.