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In the bridal party were Elizabeth's sister Princess Margaret Rose, their cousin Princess Alexandra of Kent; Lady Caroline Montagu-Douglas-Scott; Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester; the bride's second cousin, Lady Mary Cambridge; Lady Elizabeth Mary Lambart (now Longman); The Honourable Pamela Mountbatten (now Hicks); and two maternal cousins, The Honourable Margaret Elphinstone (now Rhodes) and The Honourable Diana Bowes-Lyon (now Somervell). Serving as pages were Prince William of Gloucester and Prince Michael of Kent.
Still, for all the closed-door machinations involved, the lavish affair at Westminster Abbey went off without a hitch, as these royal events so often do; the morning of the wedding Prince Philip was created Duke of Edinburgh - the third such creation in history**. Britain not only got its spectacle that day, but over the next 60 years the marriage of Elizabeth and Philip would provide, pound for pound, some of the best entertainment value of the 2oth Century, an investment that keeps on giving into the third millennium...
*Philip was Greek Orthodox; the Queen (later the Queen Mother) referred to Philip as 'The Hun'; Philip's sisters weren't invited because they'd all married German princes; the King's sister Princess Mary, Princess Royal refused to attend because the Duke of Windsor (or more specifically the Duchess of Windsor) wasn't invited...
**The first Duke of Edinburgh was Prince William Henry, the younger brother of George III, who passed the title to his son, Prince William Frederick before it went extinct; the second was Queen Victoria's son Prince Alfred, whose contribution to history was surviving an assassination attempt in Australia at the hands of Henry James O'Farrell in March 1868 and whose daughter became the redoubtable Marie of Romania.
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