Princess Diana: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| (4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
1961-1997. Third daughter of Edward, Earl Spencer and his wife Frances. Related to the queen of romance, [[Barbara Cartland]]. Ex-wife of [[Prince Charles]]. | |||
She married Prince Charles 29 July 1981 in a televised ceremony at [[St Paul's Cathedral]]. Her first son [[Prince William|William]] was born June 21 1982. Her second son [[Prince Harry|Henry]] was born in 1984. First rumours about the royal couple separating started to appear in the late 1980s. Camilla Parker Bowles was named one of the [[Camillagate|reasons]]. Finally, in 1992 the royal couple separated. The divorce was finalized in 1996. Princess Diana moved to [[Kensington Palace]], where she lived until her death 31 August 1997. | |||
Cannon, John. A Dictionary of British History. Oxford UP | She was killed in a car crash in Paris. Her funeral attracted enormous public interest, and like her wedding ceremony, was televised. She was buried in a private ceremony on an island in the lake of Althorpe. | ||
Sources: | |||
Cannon, John and Anne Hargreaves. ''The Kings and Queens of Britain''. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2001. | |||
Cannon, John. ''A Dictionary of British History''. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2001. | |||
Latest revision as of 15:42, 24 October 2018
1961-1997. Third daughter of Edward, Earl Spencer and his wife Frances. Related to the queen of romance, Barbara Cartland. Ex-wife of Prince Charles.
She married Prince Charles 29 July 1981 in a televised ceremony at St Paul's Cathedral. Her first son William was born June 21 1982. Her second son Henry was born in 1984. First rumours about the royal couple separating started to appear in the late 1980s. Camilla Parker Bowles was named one of the reasons. Finally, in 1992 the royal couple separated. The divorce was finalized in 1996. Princess Diana moved to Kensington Palace, where she lived until her death 31 August 1997.
She was killed in a car crash in Paris. Her funeral attracted enormous public interest, and like her wedding ceremony, was televised. She was buried in a private ceremony on an island in the lake of Althorpe.
Sources:
Cannon, John and Anne Hargreaves. The Kings and Queens of Britain. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2001.
Cannon, John. A Dictionary of British History. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2001.