He would not have forced a PB divorce. It would have been an option but extremely unlikely for him to have done so.
Back in the day, Edward VIII wanted to marry Wallis Simpson. The divorce went through between Wallis and her husband, when her husband took the blame in the courts. So that was how it was done back then.
Yes but what that has to do with Charles I dont know. Divorce law in the 1970s was different to the 1930s.
Thank you Cyril as had the pair gotten to know each other, I believe that they would have not chosen to marry.TLLK, I agree with you. Charles and Diana could have dated each other longer to get to know each other better.
Back in the day, Edward VIII wanted to marry Wallis Simpson. The divorce went through between Wallis and her husband, when her husband took the blame in the courts. So that was how it was done back then.
But there is a big difference between these two couples - Wallis and Ernest didn't have children, Camilla and Andrew had.
And it would be highly inappropriate for a future Head of the COE to destroy a family.
It was highly inappropriate for the current Head of the COE to destroy a marriage. Or to not go to church, for that matter. Edward VIII didn't seem to care.
That being said, I'm not sure divorce laws in the UK liberalized that much from the 1930s to the 1970s — they either still don't have or have only just gained no-fault divorce.
That being said, it was unthinkable for a Prince of Wales of the time to marry a divorcée, let alone one with children. So there is no reason Charles would ever have gotten involved in or instigated a Parker Bowles divorce. Next question.
He would not have forced a PB divorce. It would have been an option but extremely unlikely for him to have done so.
Charles and Diana went their separate ways. They even went on separate tours. They may not have always grandly celebrated an anniversary.
If Charles and Diana did not celebrate anniversaries, think of what speculation the press reporters had. First, they might try to calculate an exact reason. Second, they might not get the facts straight and report something that did/did not occur.
“There’s a really nice moment in this documentary where it talks about when Prince Charles went to Paris to bring Diana home following her death. He was beyond devastated. They were officially divorced, but he did still love her. She was the mother of his children,” Arbiter tells Us. “I think they probably had matured. They let go of their ugliness and I think that the future was looking promising.”
Im sure Charles was very upset by Diana's death. he would have to be pretty heartless not to be upset by the tragic loss of a young woman, with kids, who had been through some difficult years, and who hadn't had a chance to come out of the dark days and into a better life. And most importantly a woman he had cared for and who was the mother of his children, but I doubt if he was devastated. He was probably shocked to think of his sons growing up without their beloved mother, grieved and guilty about his part in the failure of hte marriage... but he had found the woman he was happy with and his life was relatively OK by then. I dont know if he and Di had really moved on past the tension and unhappiness. I think they both tired to put it behind them, for the sake of the children but Diana was still struggling to sort out her life, and she wasn't happy that Charles now had a pretty settled relationship with Camilla...
I dont know if he and Di had really moved on past the tension and unhappiness. I think they both tired to put it behind them, for the sake of the children but Diana was still struggling to sort out her life, and she wasn't happy that Charles now had a pretty settled relationship with Camilla...