Wednesday, March 11, 2026

The East Wing Tour of Buckingham Palace

 




Last December, I received an email from the Royal Collections about an upcoming tour of Buckingham Palace's East Wing.  Tours were scheduled for late January through March.  We were also given an opportunity to purchase tickets before the general sale.  I hemmed and hawed for several days before a friend reminded me:  we go around the sun only once.  

Oops ... I hit the Order button - February 20 at 1:45 p.m.   My credit card was charged, which meant three things: cash in air miles; book a hotel, and the Heathrow Express.

I flew out of National Airport (rather than Dulles on American Airlines to JFK on February 18, arriving at 6:30 in the morning. First stop was Cafe Nero (Terminal 3) for an extra-strong coffee and a pain au chocolat.  Check in at The Hub by Premier Inn at Camden Town, which was not too far from where I stayed in June at an Airbnb.  

Camden Town is by Regent's Canal, and is a cool, edgy place with pubs, breweries (Camden Pale Ale is one of my favorite beers), and restaurants.  It is on the Northern Line.

Heathrow Express to Elizabeth Line (Tottenham Court Road), changed to the Northern Line to Camden Town.  A few minutes' walk to the hotel, which offers early check-in for £15.00.  Thank goodness.

Turn on the TV in my room:  Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested.  Definitely not on my bingo card.   Thursday was a quiet day, so I spent a few hours riveted by the coverage before heading out to Fortnum & Mason for lunch and Hatchards, where I bought several new books.

I have endured brutally cold, subfreezing temperatures for weeks, combined with a snowstorm that turned into icy rain.  It took 2 1/2 weeks for the ice to melt on my skylights.  Snow can be shoveled. Ice can't. Four days after the storm, a friend dug my car out.  I was not permitted to do such things, as I had fallen off a ladder on my balcony a week earlier.  The ladder had two steps.  I am fine. No bruises, no fractures, but no one wanted me trying to dig out the ice.   It was an order from several friends.

There are still remnants of icebergs (piled ice/snow) in parking lots, even with warmer temperatures, though they did not last long.  More freezing temperatures, a little more snow, but it could hit nearly 80 degrees on Saturday. 

It was lovely to see color and cute ducks and geese.

In the evening, I had dinner at Belushi's on Borough High Street, near London Bridge, where I was able to watch the Long Program (Ladies' Figure Skating). A group of students from George Washington University was at the next table watching the Women's Gold Medal Game.   The two Gold Medals were less than 50 

The trip to Buckingham Palace was on Friday, February 20th.   I visited the Palace for the State Apartments in September 2023.

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2023/10/day-3-and-4-its-time-for-palace.html 

Before my tour, I spent time communing with nature in St. James's Park, enjoying crocuses, daffodils, and ducks.    

My ticket was for 1:45 p.m.    The entrance is through the North Gate to the Forecourt.   If you are facing the Palace (the East Wing), the entrance is on the right.   You go through the gate, passing several friendly policemen with rather large weapons, and walk across a path to a door on the right.   A member of Buckingham Palace staff checked my name off on the tour list.

Only 20 people per tour.  We went into a temporary coat room to hang up our coats and put our bags, cameras, and phones away in a secure place until the end of the tour.  There is no opportunity to take pictures,

Our guide, who wore the Buckingham Palace uniform, was well-informed and funny.  The coat room, which I think is an office on the non-tour days, has a desk in the corner.   A painting by the desk caught my attention.  It was of the future Edward VII's baptism.

We walked up the stairs, and the first portrait I spotted was a young Victoria by Franz Xaver Winterhalter.

@Royal Collection

Queen Victoria financed the building of Buckingham Palace by selling King George IV's Brighton Pavilion.  Before the sale, the queen took possession of the palace's furniture, art, fittings, and wallpaper, as she expected her uncle's folly to be torn down. It wasn't.  The East Wing is filled with Uncle George's chinoiserie and Chinese treasures.

https://brightonmuseums.org.uk/discovery/history-stories/the-gayest-and-most-splendid-colours-george-iv-proudly-embraces-his-feminine-side-at-brightons-royal-pavilion/

The first room on the tour is the Chinese Dining Room.  The dining table is now in the Yellow Drawing Room, which is also on the tour.    The King often uses the Chinese Drawing Room for meetings.  Four chairs were set up for a meeting.  Our guide pointed to a clock on a table.  The king will sit in a chair facing that clock to keep time during the meeting and know when to end it. 

Most of the tour was spent in the Principal Corridor.  We were told that if staff or others come through, we need to stand to the side.  That makes sense -- and it did happen several times.     The Principal Corridor is long.  The walls feature numerous family portraits, including one I wanted to take home: the Duchess of Cambridge (Princess Augusta of Hesse-Cassel) and her two elder children, Prince George and Princess Augusta.

                                    Melchior Gommar Tieleman (1784-1864) @Royal Collection

There were also portraits of King Leopold I, the Duke of Cambridge, King George V, and Queen Mary.  One of the most interesting paintings was William Powell Frith's The Marriage of the Prince of Wales with Princess Alexandra of Denmark, which was recently conserved and restored.  


The Marriage of the Prince of Wales with Princess Alexandra of Denmark   @Royal Collection Trust

Queen Victoria is quite conspicuous at the top right of the portrait.

Leaving the Principal Corridor, we entered the penultimate room: the Yellow Drawing Room.  More of George IV's collection is on display here, including the dining room table from the Chinese Dining Room, the first room on the tour.  The room is named for the Yellow Silk, which was on the original walls in 1850.  In the late 1920s, Queen Mary replaced the yellow silk with Chinese wallpaper from the palace's storage, which had once been used in the Brighton Pavilion's Saloon.   Today, the curtains and upholstered chairs are made of yellow silk.

The guide brought us back into the Principal Corridor to the middle, where he and a young girl on the tour opened the door to the Centre Room.     This room was one known as the Tapestry Drawing Room.  In the 1920s, Queen Mary redecorated the room in a "Chinese vein," and it was renamed the Centre Room.

The Centre Room is where members of the Royal Family go to the balcony.  There are three doors.  

We were allowed to walk right up to the doors and peek out, but were reminded not to touch the security curtains.  We can see out, but the tourists cannot see us.  Looking through the windows offered an interesting perspective as the royals walked out to the balcony.  It is not very big, which makes you wonder how so many members of the family fit comfortably to watch the Flyover after the Trooping.

The Victoria Memorial blocks the King and his family's view of the crowds walking toward the Palace for the balcony appearance.  It offers a different perspective.  

When I am there in June, standing outside the Palace, I am going to look up to see the chandelier which can be seen from the middle door.

The Centre Room was the end of the tour.  Our guide brought us back down to the room with the coat racks and the bag check.  I spotted a painting and asked the guide if I could see it up close.  He moved one of the coat racks so I could have a better view of Sir George Hayter's The Christening of The Prince of Wales.  I smiled and said thank you.

Yes, I waved from the window .... as did everyone else on the tour.    No one outside could see us waving due to the security curtains.   A walk across the courtyard and out the gate.  Several tourists were interested in the people leaving the palace.   One asked me why I was in the palace.  Oh, I was on a tour of the East Wing, including seeing the balcony.

  https://www.rct.uk/event/east-wing-exclusive-guided-tour-10-2025 .  The link includes a video highlighting the East Wing.

Those of us on the tour were told that our tickets would get us a 10% discount in the Buckingham Palace shop (on the same day).  I walked to the shop and bought a new guidebook, which does not include the East Wing.

Ashley Hicks' Buckingham Palace: The Interiors is perhaps the only recent book to include photographs of the East Wing (taken before the restoration began).



https://amzn.to/4usen2I (US)

https://amzn.to/3PdwmJQ (UK)

https://royalbooknews.blogspot.com/2019/02/buckingham-palace-interiors-by-ashley.html

After lunch and before the tour, I spent some time in St. James's Park -- and it was a true clusterduck:


First two photos - Hatchards


The crocuses brought a smile to my face -- 







a determined squirrel

I am sure I buried the nut here

Success






+














Taken before I went inside


You can have afternoon tea on a bus!


Elizabeth Tower, which hosts the Great Bell (Big Ben)


Afterward, I headed back to the hotel in Camden Town, stopping at M&S for a salad, dessert, and a bottle of water.  I ate dinner in my room and then went to the theatre to see a wonderful production of The Producers at the Garrick Theatre.


I also saw the Marie Antoinette exhibit at the V&A on Saturday.  More about that visit in another post.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Duchess of Gloucester at St. Paul's Cathedral School

 

@Ken Stone

@Ken Stone


HRH The Duchess of Gloucester arrives at St. Paul's Cathedral School in London on February 27, 2026.   The Duchess is Patron of the Friends of St. Paul's Cathedral,

The photos were taken by the wonderful Ken Stone!  

Monday, March 2, 2026

Grand Duchess Victoria Feodorovna dies in Germany

Embed from Getty Images 


 March 2, 1936


Grand Duchess Victoria Feodorovna of Russia died today at Schloss Amorbach near Würzburg.

Victoria, who was the wife of Grand Duke Kirill, the head of the Russian Imperial Family, and de jure Emperor of Russia, was born Princess Victoria Melita of Edinburgh, the second daughter and third child of Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, and Grand Duchess Marie Alexandrovna of Russia. She was a granddaughter of the late Queen Victoria and the late Emperor Alexander II of all the Russias.

She was 59 years old.

At her bedside when she died was her older sister, the Dowager Queen Marie of Romania. As young princesses, Marie and Victoria Melita were the toasts of the courts of Europe for their extraordinary beauty." They were the two eldest of four sisters, all known for their beauty. The oldest child, Hereditary Prince Alfred, died in 1899.



The Grand Duchess had arrived at Würzburg in time to celebrate the Christmas holiday with her elder daughter, Marie, who was expecting her fifth child.  Marie was ill and confined to bed.   Although in poor health herself, the Grand Duchess insisted on caring for her daughter, who gave birth to Mechtilde on January 2.

The Hereditary Prince of Leiningen, her new baby, and Grand Duchess Victoria returned to Schloss Amorbach in mid-January, where the Grand Duchess received a message that her first cousin, King George V, was dying.

The British monarch died on January 20.   The Grand Duchess's health continued to deteriorate, and she became steadily weaker.  Her new granddaughter, Princess Mechtilde, was baptized in early February at the local church in Amorbach.   The Grand Duchess "summoned up all her will" to attend the baptism.  The following day, she suffered a stroke that left her partially paralyzed and barely able to speak.

Her family was notified.  Her younger daughter, Grand Duchess Kira,  arrived at Amorbach on February 5 and kept her father, Grand Duke Kirill, and her younger brother, Grand Duke Wladimir, who was recovering from whooping cough, abreast of her mother's condition with daily telegrams.  On February 18, the Grand Duchess's condition became worse, and her family was told to come to Amorbach.

Grand Duke Kirill and his son left their home in France for Germany on the following day.  Her three sisters were also sent for, with Alexandra arriving first, traveling from Langenburg.  Beatrice arrived shortly afterward, followed by Marie's daughter, Ileana, who had traveled from Vienna.

The Dowager Queen Marie was the last to arrive, waiting for her son, King Carol II, to allow her to travel to Amorbach.  She arrived barely in time.  Queen Marie sat at her sister's bedside, holding her hand, speaking "tenderly to her of the past."

Late last night, the doctors noticed that the Grand Duchess's pulse was weakening.   Fifteen minutes after midnight,  she died in the presence of her family.

Marlene Eilers Koenig Collection

Princess Victoria Melita was born at Valetta, Malta, on November 25, 1876, where her father was serving in the Royal Navy. On April 19, 1894, she was married to her first cousin, Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig IV of Hesse and by Rhine.

Victoria was only 17 years old at the time of the marriage, which took place in the private chapel at the palace in Coburg. It was a very grand wedding as the bride was the daughter of the reigning Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and the groom was the Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine. The bride was also a Princess of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, something that she and her sisters never forgot.

Marlene A. Eilers Koenig Collection

In the wedding procession to the chapel, the bride's mother, the Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, was escorted by Kaiser Wilhelm II, who was a first cousin to the bride and groom. They were followed by Empress Friedrich, the Kaiser's mother, and Queen Victoria's eldest child. She walked alone. Queen Victoria was escorted by her son, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and "was seated in an armchair in the front row of seats semi-circling the altar," according to the New York Times report of the wedding. Other guests in the procession included the Prince of Wales and the heir to the Russian throne, Tsarevitch Nicholas.

Princess Victoria Melita was "robed in white silk, with orange blossoms," and she "entered the church on the arm of her father. Her train was carried by her youngest sister, Beatrice, and Princess Feodora of Saxe-Meiningen, both dressed in pink and white. Princess Feodora was the first great-grandchild of Queen Victoria, the only child of the Hereditary Prince and Princess of Saxe-Meiningen.

The wedding was attended by many of Victoria Melita and Ernst Ludwig's families, including the Duke and Duchess of Connaught, the Hereditary Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and Princess Alexandra of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Prince and Princess Henry of Prussia (the princess being the groom's sister), Grand Duke Serge and Grand Duchess Elisabeth of Russia (another of the groom's sister), Princess Alix of Hesse and By Rhine, the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Roumania (the bride's older sister), the Hereditary Prince and Princess of Saxe-Meiningen, Prince and Princess Philipp of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Prince George of Greece, Prince and Princess Aribert of Anhalt, and Prince and Princess Henry of Battenberg and Prince Louis of Battenberg.

After the benediction was pronounced, the bride and groom "turned to the Queen and kissed her affectionately." To the strains of Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," the newlyweds marched out of the chapel and to the Great Hall for the wedding breakfast.
Marlene A. Eilers Koenig Collection

Marlene A. Eilers Koenig Collection


Marlene A. Eilers Koenig Collection
Outside, in the streets, great cheers were heard as the "wedding procession moved along."

A civil ceremony, required by law, was "performed in Queen Victoria's room in the palace at noon," before the bridal party departed for the chapel. After breakfast, Victoria Melita, known to her family as "Ducky," donned "a traveling costume of white and gray-blue cloth." Her "white skirt was embroidered with rose sprays and the bodice with gray electric silk." She returned to the wedding party to "bade everyone good-bye," and then entered, "with her husband, in an open phaeton, trimmed with flowers," in the courtyard. All of the guests had gathered in the courtyard. Victoria Melita, before getting into the carriage, "embraced her mother and sister repeatedly.

The Grand Duke and his new Grand Duchess were cheered as they drove away. Showers of rice fell on them, thrown by the princesses.

As the carriage left the courtyard, "an amusing incident occurred as four enterprising photographers saw an opportunity to take a group photo. With their cameras and tripods in place, they frantically signaled to the "Royal party to remain stationary. With this extremely unceremonious demand," the entire group "laughingly complied," according to The Times' report. After four or five negatives were taken, one of the photographers "rushed up to the Prince of Wales," and asked if he would pose with his brothers, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and the Duke of Connaught. The three men gave their consent, and several more photographs were taken before they returned to the castle.

The first stop for the newlyweds was Rosenau, the birthplace of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria's husband. They were to stay at Rosenau for two days before going to Kranichstein, the Grand Duke's hunting lodge, near Darmstadt, where they were expected to spend several more days before making an entry in Darmstadt "in state."

It was at noon on April 20, when Grand Duke and Grand Duchess entered Darmstadt. They rode "in an open state carriage, and were vociferously cheered by the crowds that filled the streets." Darmstadt was "gayly decorated" with flags, flowers, and banners. In Coburg, in the afternoon, the Duke and Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha hosted a party at Schloss Rosenau for their youngest daughter, Beatrice, who celebrated her tenth birthday. Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm were present at the party, which also served as a celebration of the engagement between Tsarevitch Nicholas and Princess Alix of Hesse and By Rhine, which took place earlier in the day.

The marriage, which had been encouraged and engineered by Queen Victoria, was not a happy one. In 1895, Victoria Melita gave birth to a daughter, Elisabeth, and also suffered the stillbirth of a son. Her husband preferred the company of men. They divorced in 1901.

Princess Elisabeth died from typhoid fever in 1903.

On October 8, 1905, against the wishes of the Russian Emperor Nicholas II, Victoria Melita married her first cousin, Grand Duke Kirill, who was the son of Grand Duke Vladimir and Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna. Victoria Melita and Kirill were first cousins to each other and to Nicholas II. Victoria Melita was also Empress Alexandra's first cousin and former sister-in-law. The original announcement of their engagement was made public by a Bucharest newspaper in October 1903.

Marlene A. Eilers Koenig collection


Marlene A. Eilers Koenig collection

Victoria Melita's second marriage took place quietly at the Hotel de Russie in Munich, according to the New York Times. The civil ceremony was performed by a Coburg government official, and the Russian Orthodox service took place in the presence of the bride's mother, the Dowager Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and Grand Duke Alexis, "who came from Paris in an automobile."

Everything was done in great secrecy, and the announcement of the marriage was made several days after the ceremony took place.

The marriage was not originally approved because the couple were first cousins. The Russian Orthodox church prohibited marriage between first (and second and third) cousins, but the Russian emperor, according to the fundamental laws, could override this rule. Kirill was "disgraced, deprived of certain honorary titles," but in July 1907, he was pardoned. His wife, who converted to the Orthodox church in January 1907, became known as Grand Duchess Victoria Feodorovna.

Victoria and Kirill were the parents of two daughters, Marie and Kira, who were born in 1907 and 1909, respectively. In June 1917, the family left Russia for Finland, where, in August of that year, Victoria Melita gave birth to a son. After the murders of Nicholas II, his son, Alexis, and his brother, Grand Duke Michael, Kirill, the eldest son of the late Grand Duke Vladimir, younger brother of Alexander III, became the heir to the throne. In 1924, he issued a manifesto in which he claimed to be the new emperor.

In their final years, Victoria and Kirill spent most of their time in Coburg, Germany, and at a villa near Dinard in Brittany. The Grand Duchess was also a Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, as her father, the Duke of Edinburgh, succeeded his uncle, Ernst II, as Duke in 1893.

The villa was the scene of receptions for emigres in "accepted imperial style." Victoria Melita also remained close to her sister, Queen Marie, and Marie's grandson, Crown Prince Michael, who often visited his great-aunt. The King and Queen of Yugoslavia (Victoria Melita's niece, Marie), Princess Ileana of Roumania, another niece (before her marriage), and her two younger sisters, the Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg and Infanta Beatrice of Spain, were also among the guests.

In 1924, Grand Duchess Victoria Melita visited the United States, where she "was entertained lavishly by members of New York Society."

Marlene A Eilers Koenig collection

She is survived by her husband, Grand Duke Kirill, and her three children, Marie, who is married to the Hereditary Prince of Leiningen, Grand Duchess Kira, and Grand Duke Wladimir, and by her three sisters, Marie, the Dowager Queen of Roumania, Alexandra, the Princess of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, and Infanta Beatrice of Spain.   She is also survived by her five grandchildren,  Prince Emich Kirill, Prince Karl,  Princess Kira, Princess Margarita, and Princess Mechtilde of Leiningen.


https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2014/12/grand-duchess-victoria-believes.html   






















https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2008/11/kirill-denies-rumors-of-romance.html

(If you liked this article, perhaps you can buy me a vanilla latte, thanks

Friday, February 27, 2026

HRH Princess Donata of Prussia (1952-2026)

 

@toffi-images


HRH Princess Donata of Prussia died on February 25, 2025, after a long illness.  She was 73 years old.  

The princess was considered one of the top equestrian journalists, a "horsewoman through and through," according to a report on the International Alliance of Equestrians' website.  She was an internationally respected expert in eventing, which was her "favorite subject."  She "loved and lived the sport of eventing."   

The Holsteiner-Verband stated that for more than "a quarter of a century," the princess was "the voice of the Holsteiner horse -- intelligent, knowledgeable, and always with a keen sense for both people and horses."  She served as editor-in-chief of Pferd + Sport from 1992 until 2017, as well as the press officer for the Holsteiner-Verband, where her reporting was thorough and "independent in judgment and loyal in her dealings."  Pferd + Sport described Donata as "intelligent, knowledgeable, and always possessing a keen understanding of both people and horses.

Embed from Getty Images 

 HRH Princess Donata-Victoria Ina-Marie Ottonie of Prussia was born in Bonn on December 24, 1952.  She was the eldest of three children of HRH Prince Wilhelm-Karl Adalbert Erich Detloff of Prussia (1922-2007) and Armgard Elise Helene von Veltheim.  She grew up in Holzminden, Lower Saxony, where her father, Prince Wilhelm-Karl, was a businessman and the Herrenmeister of the Der Johanniterorden (the Protestant Order of St. John).

courtesy of the late HRH Prince Wilhelm-Karl


The princess was horse-mad from childhood. Her father owned several horses in Holminden.  As a teenager, she competed in the German Youth Dressage Championships, although her "true passion was eventing."   She covered equestrian events at the Olympics, World and European championships, Burghley, Badminton, and other international competitions.  

There is no doubt that Princess Donata was delighted when Hinrich Romeike and his horse, Marius, were double Gold Medal winners (individual eventing and team eventing) at the 2008 Summer Olympic Games. Marius was a Holsteiner.

Her career began with an internship at Eugen Wahler's Klosterhof Medingen, a horse-breeding facility. Eugen's grandson, Christoph, was part of the German eventing team that won the World Championship in 2022.   Although the original plan was to work at the center for a few weeks, she remained for several years, during which, according to Eugen's son, Burkhard, Donata and his father could talk about horses for hours, usually over a glass of sherry or a cup of tea.

In 2018, Donata received the prestigious Meteor Prize for her contributions to equestrian sport, a "tribute to her life's work." She was truly honored by the accolade, which "meant a great deal to her."


Embed from Getty Images 

 Princess Donata's father, Prince Wilhelm-Karl, was the youngest of four children of HRH Prince Oskar Karl Gustav Adolf Prince of Prussia (1888-1958), fifth son of Kaiser Wilhelm II, and Countess Ina-Maria Helene Adele Elise von Bassewitz-Levetzow (1888-1973).   This marriage, a love match, was not originally approved by Oskar's father.  Ina-Maria was not of equal birth, so the marriage was morganatic. Before the marriage, which took place on July 31, 1914, she was created Countess von Ruppin.   It was not until November 3, 1919, that Wilhelm II, in exile in the Netherlands, declared that Oskar's marriage was dynastic.   Ina-Marie was granted the rank and title of HRH Princess of Prussia on June 21, 1920.  The couple's three children were also raised to the rank of royalty.  Only Wilhelm-Karl was born as a Prussian prince.


Marlene A Eilers Koenig collection


HRH Prince Oskar of Prussia

Prince Wilhelm-Karl, Princess Armgard, Princess Donata, and Prince Oskar (courtesy of the late Prince Wilhelm Karl)



HRH Prince Wilhelm-Karl (courtesy of the late Prince Wilhelm-Karl)

Prince Wilhelm-Karl, Princess Donata, and Prince Oskar @Mechtild von Veltheim (courtesy of the late Prince Wilhelm-Karl)


Princess Donata never married.  She is survived by her brothers, HRH Prince Wilhelm-Karl and HRH Prince Oskar; her nephews, HRH Prince Oskar and Prince Albert; and her niece, Princess Wilhelmine.


Victoria - Victoria - Wilhelm II - Oskar - Wilhelm-Karl - Donata