Iain
Courtier
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2004
- Messages
- 591
branchg said:Parliament is ultimately Sovereign in the UK
Not really correct. In England sovereignty rests with parliament but in Scotland since earliest times it has rested with the people.
branchg said:Parliament is ultimately Sovereign in the UK
Iain said:I don't mean to be rude but it is really annoying that a foreigner should presume to know that there is nothing in Scotland that requires the monarch's presence. Scotland is a kingdom and the oldest in Europe at that. The Queen (she is not EIIR in Scotland) does open the Scottish parliament and when she did so last year was welcomed as Queen of Scots just as she was in 1953 when she came to Edinburgh for the first time as Queen to recieve the Honours of Scotland. I haven't a clue what you mean by the General Synod. There is no such thing. Anne does carry out some duties in Scotland but not that many. Any person or body wanting the Queen to carry out some sort of duty must arrange for it to take place in the first week of July as that is her "Scottish week" but when it comes to England it can be at almost any time apart from during her four months holiday. Many monarchies have buildings on a par, or even more beautiful than Windsor and as for the Coronation, that is on it's way out.
Many monarchies have buildings on a par, or even more beautiful than Windsor and as for the Coronation, that is on it's way out.
Iain said:In England sovereignty rests with parliament but in Scotland since earliest times it has rested with the people.
Yes, the British queen and King Harald are second cousins. Still Elisabeth never attend any family gatherings in Norway. Not even funerals.Alexandria said:Aren't the Queen and King Harald of Norway cousins?
Lots of other royals aren't close cousins such as the Danish/Greek/Spanish royals but they still seem to spend time together. For example, Queen Beatrix and Queen Noor are both close to the Spanish royals and there is no close relationship there.
BeatrixFan said:How can a Coronation be multicultural? These are just the kinds of PC ideas that need firmly rejecting.
It looks like an Aide de Camp behind Philippe (King Olav died in 1991 and King Baudouin died in 1993).joye said:I had a mental exercise trying to identify the people at King Baudouin's funeral. I know several faces and cannot put names to them. Is it King Olav behind the Crown Prince of Belgium?
Who is the elderly man 4th row back, bald, white mo?
This is also my feeling. The extended British Royal Family is huge, so not sending one single person to represent them this weekend is just out of order!Princejohnny25 said:There is NO excuse for this. The BRF is the largest royal family in Europe and one of the biggest in the world. There is at least one person who could have gone.
Princejohnny25 said:There is NO excuse for this. The BRF is the largest royal family in Europe and one of the biggest in the world. There is at least one person who could have gone. But then again maybe the swedes didnt invite them. Still, the windsor clan is huge and there has to be at least one person. I can understand the Queen, DoE, the Walses family not going with many things going on but still there is at least one person.
I agree BeatrixFan. There is no excuse for not sending one representative!BeatrixFan said:Princess Alexandra, the Kents and the Gloucesters haven't got one engagement over the period. Why couldn't one of them been sent to represent us? It's just not on and there's no excuse.
Squidgy said:I agree BeatrixFan. There is no excuse for not sending one representative!
Are there any good Queen impersonators over there? Maybe we could all chip in some money for airfare & send one to the party??
Well done Toledo!! Dame Edna would be perfect. Of course, no one is going to mistake him/her for the Queen, but he/she would add a whole lot of life to the party, so no one would care!Toledo said:Like that famous lady who appears in so many movies at TV shows impersonating the Queen. Or maybe Australia's Dame Edna herself, she is still a loyal subject of the Crown.
It is no secret that the King of Sweden's bithday occurs on 30 April every year, it is his birthday and has been since the day he came to the world, and will continue to be (he has no second official birthday like QEII) throughout his life.kelly9480 said:Some of this is simply due to the Swedish court's refusal to finalise arrangements until the last minute. I remember that even as late as January they refused to discuss events. If the Swedes had announced last October (British calendars are framed in May and November, IIRC, with more events filled in as the time goes on) the events, I'm sure the Wessexes would have been available.