Don’t Kill – Love Your Neighbor!
Posted on April 28, 2024 by Royal Rosamond Press

Let me begin my Religious Lesson by challenging the two chief rbbis if Israel to a Holy Game of Chess. I will concede Harvard – if the rabbis win!


Kalman Ber (Ashkenazi) and David Yosef (Sephardi), the Chief Rabbi
I declare the Judaic, and the Zionist religion – A FOREIGN RELIGION AND INSTITTUTION! The Jewish Religion was not born within the borders of the United States.
The same goes for Harvard co-founded by my Puritan Ancestor, John Wilson. The Puritan Religion was born in England, and migrated to America. Judaism is a VERY EXCLUSIVE RELIGION. Very few non-Jews have become Jewish. Jews claim they are children of the One God, yet these children have long been involved in – HOLY CIVIL WAR! England has had several Civil Wars. The Puritan religion appears to have it roots in a religious civil war. When John Wilson came to America – Israel did not exist. The Jews had no nation. I bid the chief rabbis to make a list of how many European Kingdoms did not want a New Nation of Jews – to exist! Then my attorney will make a case about what constitutes
ANTISEMITISM
Will the Trumpire of King Donald ever resort to CRUCIFIXION in order to eliminate a worthy opponent? why would any Jewish ruler crucify any opponent? The question whether or not the Jews crucified Jesus can be answered in Alexander Jannaeus crucifying 800 hundred Pharisee. As for the question of modern Israel conducting group starvation, and group murder of religions rivals, Alexander dined with his concubines while his armed men SLAUGHTERED THE CHILDREN of men who had a difference of religious opinion – that stem from their worship of the One God! I suggest 2,600 hundred INNOCENT CHILDREN WERE SLAUGHTERED.
The other question I will ask the chief rabbis….
“Do you know the history of America’s Civil War, and, do you understand Trump and the Republicans have divided my Democracy along the lines of the Civil War, suggesting the South is out for revenge?”
I’m going to invent a new chess game, called Covert Chess, where Neo-Confederates take over the Republican Party co-founded by my kin John Wilson. They want good Christians to blieve they are befriending Aboltionists! How about…
FOXY LIAR CHESS
After taking a piece, you turn it over to see who and what it really is.
The point is, if you have a history of being Anti-Democratic, and Pro-Civil War, your input on antisemitic matter should be……..
NULL AND VOID
in my Democracy, or, any Democracy! You could say that Jews are so exclusive because they do not want to entertain the opinions of non-Jews, such as the opinions of the Palestinians, because they are INTOLERANT of Jewish Opinions! Both books of the Bible are lessons in
INTOLERANCE!
John Presco
The Israelites, also known as the Hebrews, engaged in a number of armed conflicts among themselves in the Land of Israel. Many of these feature in the Hebrew Bible. These conflicts took place during the nomadic period of the Twelve Tribes of Israel and also after the establishment and collapse of ancient Israel and Judah, which were two independent kingdoms—Israel in the north and Judah in the south—in the Southern Levant, though the biblical narrative asserts that they were once amalgamated as the Kingdom of Israel and Judah.
This article provides a list of incidents of intra-Israelite warfare, including conflicts among and between the Jews and the Samaritans.
The Judean Civil War was a conflict between King Alexander Jannaeus and the Pharisees, the dominant political party in the Great Sanhedrin at the time. Alexander was supported by the minority Sadducees, while the Pharisees under Nasi Joshua ben Perachiah were briefly backed by the Seleucid Empire.
Alexander brought the surviving rebels back to Jerusalem, where he had eight hundred Jews, primarily Pharisees, crucified. Before their deaths, Alexander had the rebels’ wives and children executed before their eyes as he ate with his concubines. Alexander later returned the land he had seized from the Nabateans to have them end their support for the Jewish rebels. The remaining rebels, who numbered eight thousand, fled by night in fear of Alexander.[3]
U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs, who was appointed to the federal bench by former President Barack Obama in 2014, heard arguments Monday morning in the case, the latest in a series of standoffs between the university and the White House.
“She is a TOTAL DISASTER, which I say even before hearing her Ruling,” Trump wrote in the post to his social media platform, Truth Social. “She has systematically taken over the various Harvard cases, and is an automatic ‘loss’ for the People of our Country!”
Trump also said he planned to appeal her decision if the judge rules against his administration. He also attacked Harvard as “anti-Semitic, anti-Christian, and anti-America,” touting the White House’s decision to freeze several billions of dollars in grants to Harvard.
Queen Califia and The Knights of Saint George
Posted on May 7, 2021 by Royal Rosamond Press









Here is the e-mail I sent Gavin Newson, the Governor of California.
Dear Governor; I am kin to all members of the Getty family via Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor, and thus all the Gettys are kin to Ian Fleming the author of James Bond novels. I began my own Bond novel ‘The Royal Janitor’ three years ago. The newest Bond movie has been delayed for over a year due to the Coronavirus. There many not be any profits from this movie. Hollywood must be hurting.
Today, I founded the European Union Kingdom of Helgoland, and made Harry and Meghan Windsor the titular King and Queen of this amazing island. I have suggested this royal couple read the names of the Knights of the Garter whose cote of arms are found in the stalls of Saint George Chapel where both Princess Diana’s sons got married. In researching Queen Califia, a African pagan, it occurred to me that Megan could play her in a movie, a propaganda movie aimed at weakening the threat of China. My 9th. grandfather is buried in Saint Georges and has a stall. His son was the Puritan leader, John Wilson.
I just had a vison: As Meghan and Harry take turns reading the list outside their home in Montecito, one by one – they appear – the Knights of the Garter of Saint George. Suddenly, Meghan is transformed into the ancient pagan queen who ruled California. Her court of beautiful Amazons are startled to see these English Knights, and a battle looks eminent. Just then, three ancient Chinese Knights appear – from the past. They are the Dragons of Buddha. They plead for peace, and ask for the Queen and King of Helgoland to help defeat the oppressive rulers of China, and restore the beautiful rituals that made China famous.
My kin, Carl Janke, was a Pioneer of Belmont. His sons wore the flag of the California Fusiliers that were a legitimate militia. Today is Archie Mountbatten-Windsor’s birthday. He lives in California. He will soon have a sibling – that will be born in California. His mother has been in great distress due to royal protection not provided her child – and his parents.
What I suggest, is, you reform the California Fusiliers, and have them be bodyguards to all the Windsors who have migrated to our beloved State. They will be financed by The Movie Lottery you will establish, where many citizens of all nations, can purchase stock in all movies made in Hollywood – before they are made! The common people who love Movie Goddesses, can read a synopsis of a script, and purchase a ticket in advance. When the movie comes out, they are given a free ticket to another movie. I see three sequels to California and Her Knights. Contact Meg Whitman to see if she could help make all this possible.
Sincerely
John Presco:
President: Belmont Soda Works
(32) St. George’s Chapel – YouTube

Sir Winston Churchill’s Garter stall plates – College of St George (stgeorges-windsor.org)
You probably didn’t know that California is named after a black queen – (face2faceafrica.com)






Garter stall plates are small enamelled brass plates located in St George’s Chapel displaying the names and arms of the Knights of the Garter. Each knight is allotted a stall in St George’s Chapel and the stall plate is affixed to his personal stall. His successor knight in that stall adds his own stall plate and thus a fairly complete series of stall plates survives for the successive occupants of each stall. Many other ancient European Orders of Chivalry use similar stall plates in the home church or other building of their order.
They are works of art in their own right which demonstrate the skills of medieval and later metal workers and enamellers.
- They are an extremely valuable source to students of heraldry, as they show contemporary images of ancient arms the provenance and reliability of which is second to none. Unlike the ancient seals which often survive, stall plates show not only the form of the arms but generally also the tinctures (colours).
“It is agreed that every knyght within the yere of his stallation shall cause to be made a scauchon of his armes and hachementis in a plate of metall suche as shall please him and that it shall be surely sett upon the back of his stall. And the other that shall come after shall have their scochons and hachements in like manner; but their plates of metall nor their hachements shall not be soo large nor soo greatte as they of the first Founders were excepte strangers which may use their plates and fashions at their pleasure”
St George’s Chapel | The Royal Family
Queen Calafia – The Adventures of the Real Mr. Science (therealmrscience.com)
Sir Winston Churchill’s Garter stall plates
Sir Winston Churchill’s Garter stall plates

2015 marks the 50th anniversary of the death of Sir Winston Churchill KG. As customary on the death of a Knight of the Garter, Churchill’s Garter achievements (banner crest, helm and sword) were removed from his Garter stall in St George’s Chapel on the announcement of his death and a wreath was placed in his stall, as shown in this photograph taken in 1965 [SGC PH CER.34]. The wreath remained in the stall until the presentation of Churchill’s banner to his family at Evensong on 5 April 1965. Churchill’s Garter stall plate remains on the stall as a permanent memorial of his membership of the Order of the Garter. However, it was not the only stall plate made for Churchill’s stall – the other one is now believed to be in private hands. How did this come about?
Sir Winston Churchill was nominated as a Knight of the Garter on 24 April 1953 and invested and installed over a year later, on 14 June 1954. However, the production and fixing of his stall plate were delayed by a long running dispute between the stall plate maker, Harold Soper, and the College of Arms. Soper produced a partially completed stall plate for Churchill’s installation ceremony in 1954, but removed it immediately after the ceremony ‘in its unfinished state’, replacing it with a cardboard dummy plate of Churchill’s quarterly arms and two crests. By 5 October 1954, Soper informed the Garter King of Arms, Sir George Bellew, that the stall plate was finished but refused to produce it or to submit an invoice. On 29 November, Bellew wrote to Soper: ‘Can you let me have the Churchill Plate? If you do not wish me to have it and refuse to send it you can scarcely blame me for having another one made elsewhere, but that seems to me a foolish waste’.
In 1957, at the end of his tether, Bellew attempted to find an alternative manufacturer of stall plates, not just for Churchill but also for the other Companions of the Garter who lacked plates. On 1 July 1957, he wrote to Canon Venables at Windsor, ‘After nearly six years of trying to bury the hatchet with the Sopers I have at last had to give it up … Do not worry I am having all the plates made elsewhere (the first of which is Attlee, put up a few weeks ago). Churchill should be next.’

The manufacturer chosen was engraver George T. Friend. However, Friend lacked the skills and experience of Harold Soper in working with enamel and therefore came up with an inferior product. When Friend sent Churchill’s plate to the College of Arms for approval, the Garter King of Arms commented that he was disappointed that the red used on the plate was not brighter and noted that some of the enamel in the engraved surround had already fallen out. Friend was apologetic, explaining in a letter written on 29 May 1957 that ‘the engraved lines will not hold enamel, it is a lottery chance, and each time it was fired the other colours suffered.’ Friend concluded, ‘I cannot do Churchill in time [presumably for the Garter service on 17 June 1957], all will have to come out, it means doing it again. I would rather be in disgrace for delay than bad work’. He eventually completed the plate and sent it to Garter on 14 January 1958 and in due course it was fixed to Churchill’s stall in St George’s Chapel. Friend went on to manufacture other stall plates for St George’s until his death in 1969 Field’s stall plate for Sir Winston Churchill What happened to the stall plate made for Churchill by Harold Soper? The plate was rediscovered in the effects of Miss Viola Soper at her death in 1989 and was auctioned with her other possessions. It fetched £6,000. In 1992 it reappeared at a Sotheby’s auction in Geneva, but did not reach its reserve price and was withdrawn from sale. It was put up for auction again in 2011 by Bonhams at an estimated price of between £10,000 and £12,000 and is, presumably, now in private hands. A photograph of Soper’s stall plate for Churchill which is included in P Begent and H Chesshyre, The Most Noble Order of the Garter: 650 Years (London, 1999) page 292 demonstrates the superiority of Soper’s work in design and execution. What a pity that it does not adorn the Quire of St George’s Chapel for which it was commissioned.
Queen Lowered Into Royal Vault
Posted on September 20, 2022 by Royal Rosamond Press

Alas I see an image of the Royal Vault where my tenth and eleventh grandfather are buried. Queen Elizabeth was lowered into the Royal Vault of The Dead where there are interred the Canons of Windsor – important priests that served the Royal Windsors. In William Wilson we see a linage of priests. His son, John Wilson, is interred in the vault at the King’s Chapel in Boston – that might replicate the burial tradition at Windsor- where we saw several priests giving the funeral mass for Queen Elizabeth. Alas – I have a Tribe – of Holy Men! Who are they? Why was it important the body of the Queen of England be with The Holy Royal Dead – for a little while?
John Presco
President: Royal Rosamond Press
Photos show the Queen’s coffin being lowered into the Royal Vault at St George’s Chapel (msn.com)
Who is buried under St George’s Chapel? – Cemetery Club (wordpress.com)

The vault as it was in 1873. Originally posted on the Anglophile.

The Vault as it was with the internment of Mary Adelaide, Duchess of Teck – Augusta’s daughter, from the pages of the Graphic, 06/11/1897 – via The British Newspaper Archive.
Members of the royal family attend the committal service for Queen Elizabeth II at St George’s Chapel, at Windsor Castle, Windsor, England. Ben Birchall/Pool via AP© Ben Birchall/Pool via AP
- The Queen was lowered into the royal vault at St George’s Chapel in Windsor after her state funeral.
- The Queen’s coffin will be interred in the King George VI memorial chapel – her final resting place.
- Prince Philip’s coffin will be moved a final time from the royal vault to be laid next to the Queen.
Rev. William Wilson died 15 May 1615 at Windsor at the age of 73.
Will
He made his will on 23 Aug 1613; it was proved on 27 May 1615. It said:[1]“Will of William Wilson, Canon of Saint George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle … to be buried in the chapel near the place where the body of my dear father lies. If I die at Rochester or Cliff, in the county of Kent, then to be buried in cathedral church of Rochester, near the bodies of wives Isabel and Anne. To my cousin Collins, prebendary at Rochester … to the Fellows and Scholars of Martin College, Oxford … my three sons Edmond, John and Thomas Wilson, daughter Isabel Guibs and daughter Margaret Rawson … my goddaughter Margaret Somers which my son Somers had by my daughter Elizabeth, his late wife … to my god-son William Sheafe, at the age of twenty one years … son Edmond, a fellow of King’s College, Cambridge, eldest son of me, the said William … to son John the lease of the Rectory and Parsonage of Caxton in the county of Cambridge, which I have taken in my name … to Thomas Wilson my third son … son Edmond to be executor and Mr. Erasmus Webb, my brother in law, being one of the Canons of St. George’s Chapel, and my brother, Mr. Thomas Woodward, being steward of the town of New Windsor, to be overseers. Witnesses: Thomas Woodwarde, Joh. Woodwarde, Robert Lowe & Thomas Holl.”
Death and Burial
He died on 15 May 1615 at Windsor, Berkshire, England. He is buried at St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, next to his father. His tomb states: “To me to live is Christ, and to dye is Gain. Philip. I.21. Here underneath lies interr’d the Body of William Wilson, Doctour of Divinitie, and Prebendarie of this Church by the Space of 32 Years. He had issue by Isabell his Wife six Sons and six Daughteres. He dy’d the 15th of May, in the Year of our Lord 1615, of his Age the 73, beloved of all in his Lyfe, much lamented in his Death.” [2][3]
William Wilson DD (abt.1542-1615) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree
Wilson and Webb | Rosamond Press
The Wilson-Rosamond Altered Lineage | Rosamond Press
John Wilson Risen From The Dead | Rosamond Press
William Wilson (priest)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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William Wilson DD (1545 – 15 May 1615) was a Canon of Windsor from 1584 to 1615[1] and Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral from 1596 to 1615.
Career[edit]
He was educated at Merton College, Oxford and graduated BA in 1564, MA in 1570, BD in 1576 and DD in 1607.
He was appointed:
- Rector of Islip, Oxford 1578
- Chaplain to the Archbishop of Canterbury
- Prebendary of Rochester 1591
- Rector of Cliffe, Kent
- Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral 1596 – 1615
- Prebendary of Ealdstreet in St Paul’s 1615.
He was appointed to the third stall in St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle in 1584 and held the canonry until 1615.





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1 of 49 Photos in Gallery©Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Here’s who will — and won’t — be attending Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral
- Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral will be held at Westminster Abbey on Monday, September 19.
- Two thousand family members, heads of state, and European leaders will be in attendance at the event.
- Here’s who is on the guest list and who didn’t make the cut.
Queen Elizabeth II died Thursday at the age of 96 at her Balmoral estate in Scotland.
The funeral for the iconic monarch will be held Monday in front of 2,000 family members, heads of state, and European leaders at Westminster Abbey.
The deadline to RSVP to the event is Thursday, and the invite list limits each country to a single head of state and a plus one.
Heads of state that cannot attend can pass their invitation to a named representative.
Here’s who will be in attendance — and who will not — at the Queen’s funeral Monday.
Read the original article on Insider
Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin was lowered into the Royal Vault at St George’s Chapel, Windsor, after a state funeral on Monday.
The Queen’s coffin was placed on a marble slab in a section of the chapel known as the Quire, which was then lowered into the vault. The newly-appointed King Charles II and Queen Consort Camilla were among the mourners paying their final respects to the late monarch, who died aged 96 on September 8.
In a statement sent to Insider on Thursday, representatives for Buckingham Palace confirmed that the Queen’s coffin will be buried in the King George VI memorial chapel, the final resting place of her father, King George VI, who died in 1952. Good Housekeeping reported that the chapel was completed in 1969, after which the remains of its namesake were moved there from the Royal Vault.
The Queen’s coffin begins to be lowered into the Royal Vault at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor. BBC© BBC
Also resting there are Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, and Princess Margaret, the queen’s only sibling, both of whom died in 2002 according to The New York Times. Insider previously reported that Prince Philip, who was laid to rest in the Royal Vault after his funeral in April 2021, will be moved to the chapel to be laid to rest alongside the Queen.
An 1884 illustration from the magazine The Graphic depicting the Royal Vault under St George’s chapel, Windsor Castle. Illustration from the magazine The Graphic, volume XXIX, n 750, April 12, 1884 via Getty Images.
Alas I see an image of the Royal Vault my tenth grandfather is buried in. Queen Elizabeth was lowered into the Royal Vault of The Dead where there are intered the Canons of Windsor?
Photos show the Queen’s coffin being lowered into the Royal Vault at St George’s Chapel (msn.com)
St. George’s Chapel, the Royal Vault & the Royal Burial Ground
Published: 8 September 2022

Photo by Michael Gaylor on Flickr
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The kings and queens of the British Royal Family are not buried in a single site. The graves of some, such as Alfred the Great, are unknown. The majority of modern royals, however, are buried in St. George’s Chapel, including the Royal Vault, in Windsor, or the nearby Royal Burial Ground at Frogmore House.
Who is buried in St. George’s Chapel?

Illustration by Sydney Prior Hall, Royal Collection, on Wikimedia Commons
Since its construction in the 15th century many royals have been buried in St. George’s Chapel. The tombs of King Henry VIII and Charles I are in the Quire. Edward IV, Henry VII, and Queen Alexandra are buried in the Quire Aisles.
Edward VII, George V and George VI were originally buried in the Royal Vault, but their bodies were moved to tombs in the chapel itself a few years after their deaths.

Photo by Serendigity on Flickr
King George VI’s body was moved into a specially constructed annex of the chapel, the King George VI Memorial Chapel, in 1969.
The Queen Mother and Princess Margaret, Queen Elizabeth II’s younger sister, both died in 2002. The Queen Mother was directly interred in the King George VI Chapel, next to her husband, and although Princess Margaret’s ashes were originally kept in the Royal Vault they were also moved to the chapel a few months later. Princess Margaret was one of very few royals to be cremated rather than buried.
The Queen will also be buried in St. George’s Chapel after her funeral on Monday 19th September 2022.
What is the Royal Vault?
The Royal Vault is a burial chamber beneath St. George’s Chapel in Windsor, that was excavated between 1804 and 1810 on the instruction of King George III. The first interment was in a temporary vault near the entrance in 1810, for Princess Amelia, youngest daughter of the king. Since then the tombs of many other kings and queens of the United Kingdom, and several other notable royals, have been buried in the Royal Vault.
- HRH The Princess Charlotte (daughter of George IV; she died when her father was still Prince Regent), 1817
- HRH Queen Charlotte (wife of George III), 1818
- HRH Prince Edward, Duke of Kent (brother of George III, and father of Queen Victoria), 1820
- HM George III, 1820
- HM George IV, 1830
- HM William IV, 1837
- HRH The Prince Albert Victor (Eldest son of Edward VII, predeceased future George V), 1892

Photo by Wellcome Images on Flickr
Burial in the Royal Vault has become much less common because of space constraints. Since the 1930s burial of senior members of the Royal Family in St. George’s Chapel was resumed and junior members were interred in the Royal Burial Ground at Frogmore House.
The last burial in the Royal Vault was Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, in 2021. His mother Princess Alice of Battenberg was also buried in the Royal Vault, but her body was transferred to Jerusalem in 1988. As well as George V and George VI some other senior royals, such as Queen Mary, were also transferred to St. George’s Chapel.
Before Prince Philip, the most recent burial whose body remains in the Royal Vault is Princess Frederika of Hanover, who was interred in 1926. She was a great-granddaughter of George III, who originally ordered the construction of the vault 122 years earlier.
Traditionally, when someone was buried in the Royal Vault the coffin was lowered into it through a special opening in the floor of St. George’s Chapel during their funeral.

Photo by Wellcome Images on Wikimedia Commons
What is the Royal Burial Ground?

Photo by Peter Symonds on Wikimedia Commons
The Royal Burial Ground is the private cemetery of the royal family of the United Kingdom. It was consecrated in 1928 and became the designated burial site for junior members of the royal family.
Prince Arthur, a son of Queen Victoria, Princess Victoria, a daughter of Edward VII, and Prince George, Duke of Kent, a son of George V, were interred in it. The most famous burials at Frogmore are the graves of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, formerly Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson.
The Royal Burial Ground is not open to the public, but it can be viewed from the perimeter on the few days of the year that Frogmore House is open.
Where else are members of the Royal Family buried?

Photo by Sean O’Neil on Flickr
St. George’s Chapel, the Royal Vault and the Royal Burial Ground are not the only sites where members of the royal family are interred. The majority of Medieval and Early Modern kings and queens are buried in Westminster Abbey. Royal burials in the abbey stopped after the construction of St. George’s Chapel, but since then many other notable people, particularly famous writers, have been interred in it.

Image by Mrs. A Murray Smith on Wikimedia Commons
The Royal Mausoleum, which houses the tomb of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, and the mausoleum of the Duchess of Kent, Victoria’s mother, are also situated at Frogmore House, adjacent to the Royal Burial Ground.
Princess Diana is buried on an island on the Althorp Estate in Northamptonshire, which is owned by her birth-family, the Spencers.
Perhaps the most famous royal burial outside of London, however, was the funeral of Richard III in Leicester Cathedral in 2015, after the discovery of his body underneath a car park in the city.
Photos show the Queen’s coffin being lowered into the Royal Vault at St George’s Chapel
asyed@businessinsider.com (Armani Syed) – Yesterday 11:05 AM
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Members of the royal family attend the committal service for Queen Elizabeth II at St George’s Chapel, at Windsor Castle, Windsor, England. Ben Birchall/Pool via AP© Ben Birchall/Pool via AP
- The Queen was lowered into the royal vault at St George’s Chapel in Windsor after her state funeral.
- The Queen’s coffin will be interred in the King George VI memorial chapel – her final resting place.
- Prince Philip’s coffin will be moved a final time from the royal vault to be laid next to the Queen.
Auto Rotation On
1 of 49 Photos in Gallery©Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Here’s who will — and won’t — be attending Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral
- Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral will be held at Westminster Abbey on Monday, September 19.
- Two thousand family members, heads of state, and European leaders will be in attendance at the event.
- Here’s who is on the guest list and who didn’t make the cut.
Queen Elizabeth II died Thursday at the age of 96 at her Balmoral estate in Scotland.
The funeral for the iconic monarch will be held Monday in front of 2,000 family members, heads of state, and European leaders at Westminster Abbey.
The deadline to RSVP to the event is Thursday, and the invite list limits each country to a single head of state and a plus one.
Heads of state that cannot attend can pass their invitation to a named representative.
Here’s who will be in attendance — and who will not — at the Queen’s funeral Monday.
Read the original article on Insider
Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin was lowered into the Royal Vault at St George’s Chapel, Windsor, after a state funeral on Monday.
The Queen’s coffin was placed on a marble slab in a section of the chapel known as the Quire, which was then lowered into the vault. The newly-appointed King Charles II and Queen Consort Camilla were among the mourners paying their final respects to the late monarch, who died aged 96 on September 8.
In a statement sent to Insider on Thursday, representatives for Buckingham Palace confirmed that the Queen’s coffin will be buried in the King George VI memorial chapel, the final resting place of her father, King George VI, who died in 1952. Good Housekeeping reported that the chapel was completed in 1969, after which the remains of its namesake were moved there from the Royal Vault.
The Queen’s coffin begins to be lowered into the Royal Vault at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor. BBC© BBC
Also resting there are Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, and Princess Margaret, the queen’s only sibling, both of whom died in 2002 according to The New York Times. Insider previously reported that Prince Philip, who was laid to rest in the Royal Vault after his funeral in April 2021, will be moved to the chapel to be laid to rest alongside the Queen.
An 1884 illustration from the magazine The Graphic depicting the Royal Vault under St George’s chapel, Windsor Castle. Illustration from the magazine The Graphic, volume XXIX, n 750, April 12, 1884 via Getty Images.© Illustration from the magazine The Graphic, volume XXIX, n 750, April 12, 1884 via Getty Images.
A committal service took place at 4 p.m. BST, or 11 a.m. ET, with around 800 guests and was conducted by Dean of Windsor, David Conner, with a blessing from Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, Buckingham Palace’s statement said. The Queen was then lowered into the vault.
A close-up of the Queen’s coffin being lowered into the Royal Vault at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor. BBC© BBC
The Queen received a state funeral at 11 a.m. BST, or 6 a.m. ET, in Westminster Abbey, which was attended by heads of state, world leaders, prime ministers, and royal family members.
Related video: Queen Elizabeth II laid to rest at St George’s Chapel
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