Her Majesty the Queen Elizabeth was born on April 21, 1926,
and christened Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor in the chapel at Buckingham
Palace.
Educated at home with her younger sister Princess Margaret, she later
went on to serve during World War II as a subaltern in the Auxiliary
Territorial Service, where she reached the rank of Junior Commander.
In 1947, she married a handsome young naval officer,
Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten, a distant cousin she met when she was just 13
and the son of Prince Andrew of Greece and a great-great-grandson of Queen
Victoria. Their first child, Prince Charles, was born in 1948 and his sister
Princess Anne came along two years later.
When her father's illness forced him to abandon a proposed
visit to Australia and New Zealand in 1952, the Princess, accompanied by Prince
Philip, undertook the journey in his place.
On February 6, while in Kenya on
the first stage of her trip, she received the news of King George VI's death
and her own accession to the throne.
The coronation took place in Westminster Abbey on June 2,
1953, and was broadcast on radio around the world and - at the young Queen's
request - on television, bringing the splendor of the event to hundreds of
thousands of people in a way never before thought possible.
When the Queen's
youngest sons, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward, were born in 1960 and 1964
respectively, they were the first children to be born to a reigning monarch
since Queen Victoria.
The Queen has experienced the marriage break-ups of three of
her four offspring, and the demise of Charles and Andrew's relationships,
combined with a major fire at Windsor Castle, led her to describe 1992 as an annuls
horribly in her Christmas speech for that year.
Recent years may have been turbulent
ones for the royal family, but there is no doubt that its titular head has
helped uphold the traditional image of the monarchy while contributing
significantly to the creation of a modern role for it.
The British monarch maintains close contact with the prime
minister, with whom she has a weekly audience when she is in London, and acts
as host to visiting heads of state.
In the course of her reign she has visited
nearly every county in the realm, and as her 80th birthday celebrations in 2006
proved, the energetic monarch shows no sign of slowing down.
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