Kate Middleton and our conspiracy culture
Wild theories about the princess, who has announced she has cancer, are a symptom of a digital world defined by…
ByThe House of Windsor, presently headed by King Charles III, has been the reigning family of the United Kingdom since it was founded by George V in 1917. The heir to the throne is Prince William.
Wild theories about the princess, who has announced she has cancer, are a symptom of a digital world defined by…
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If the royal family won’t feed the machine, the machine will feed on them.
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The Princess of Wales exists to be photographed. In the absence of images, the public grew restive and feverish.
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Charles III’s cancer diagnosis marks the first, and possibly last, time Britain will understand him.
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Robert Hardman’s obsequious biography pays court to a monarch who is enjoying his power over a deferential nation.
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Peter Morgan’s royal epic concludes with ghosts and banalities in a touchy-feely sixth series.
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He lost his mother at 15, survived ‘Wills Mania’, and clashed with his brother. Can he modernise the monarchy?
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A special debate on the place of the royal family in modern Britain.
Our political culture has established a sort of gradient of respect, in which some people and some views are seen…
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Toxic relic or political necessity? Tanya Gold, Robert Hardman, Andrew Marr, Tanjil Rashid, Anna Whitelock and Gary Younge debate the…
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For decades, as he awaited his turn to ascend the British throne, Charles presided over another kingdom: rural Transylvania. What…
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Forget The Crown – the uncanny veracity of this wild satire rings out like the dinner gong at Balmoral.
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If Charles didn’t stop him pursuing legal action six years ago, who did?
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The new series of the Netflix show is more Hello! magazine than history – and no more exciting for it.…
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Anger at rumours of a “woke” coronation misses the whole point of royalty.
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The memoir appears to have beaten growing “Harry fatigue”.
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In his memoir Harry seeks renewal – but his exposé of the cruelty of royalty is driven by rage.
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After months of turmoil the return to Westminster feels a bit muted – but back I go, well, as soon…
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How a fraternal dispute became a full-blown existential crisis for the monarchy.
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Throughout the book’s 400 pages runs a single theme: the need for closure after a lifetime of repressed trauma.
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