Zürcher Nachrichten - Elizabeth II: Queen of the world

EUR -
AED 4.298186
AFN 72.56231
ALL 95.475153
AMD 431.487709
ANG 2.095501
AOA 1074.39962
ARS 1629.148665
AUD 1.616199
AWG 2.10813
AZN 1.992322
BAM 1.955316
BBD 2.357707
BDT 143.693833
BGN 1.954425
BHD 0.441481
BIF 3485.122802
BMD 1.17037
BND 1.490499
BOB 8.088895
BRL 5.85478
BSD 1.170605
BTN 112.162852
BWP 16.487709
BYN 3.270407
BYR 22939.260239
BZD 2.354257
CAD 1.606
CDF 2622.800067
CHF 0.915019
CLF 0.026412
CLP 1039.488204
CNY 7.947927
CNH 7.938096
COP 4439.413967
CRC 531.947929
CUC 1.17037
CUP 31.014816
CVE 110.231604
CZK 24.299816
DJF 208.447534
DKK 7.472651
DOP 69.382833
DZD 155.099369
EGP 61.915521
ERN 17.555556
ETB 182.768789
FJD 2.559949
FKP 0.865712
GBP 0.86622
GEL 3.136335
GGP 0.865712
GHS 13.291541
GIP 0.865712
GMD 85.436664
GNF 10264.197273
GTQ 8.93079
GYD 244.896268
HKD 9.167611
HNL 31.131297
HRK 7.530981
HTG 153.286179
HUF 357.408022
IDR 20520.10458
ILS 3.399657
IMP 0.865712
INR 112.033299
IQD 1533.420592
IRR 1536696.361864
ISK 143.603407
JEP 0.865712
JMD 185.084205
JOD 0.829756
JPY 184.856476
KES 151.34049
KGS 102.348601
KHR 4696.878004
KMF 492.726365
KPW 1053.29904
KRW 1745.794831
KWD 0.360744
KYD 0.975554
KZT 554.110532
LAK 25659.103183
LBP 104824.620223
LKR 380.745794
LRD 214.216082
LSL 19.215546
LTL 3.455799
LVL 0.707945
LYD 7.430162
MAD 10.739567
MDL 20.121763
MGA 4902.682226
MKD 61.646339
MMK 2457.619954
MNT 4190.078508
MOP 9.444142
MRU 46.777426
MUR 54.852363
MVR 18.035696
MWK 2029.389207
MXN 20.12837
MYR 4.60131
MZN 74.788444
NAD 19.215546
NGN 1604.367492
NIO 43.079157
NOK 10.796106
NPR 179.456165
NZD 1.973291
OMR 0.44999
PAB 1.170585
PEN 4.001093
PGK 5.099608
PHP 72.00762
PKR 326.03733
PLN 4.237619
PYG 7133.235055
QAR 4.267035
RON 5.20582
RSD 117.383498
RUB 85.597266
RWF 1712.154425
SAR 4.399509
SBD 9.400717
SCR 16.09235
SDG 702.80427
SEK 10.914699
SGD 1.490303
SHP 0.8738
SLE 28.792583
SLL 24542.084994
SOS 669.003033
SRD 43.530755
STD 24224.304733
STN 24.493835
SVC 10.242203
SYP 129.35956
SZL 19.201167
THB 37.816422
TJS 10.938953
TMT 4.108
TND 3.410656
TOP 2.817971
TRY 53.175488
TTD 7.94783
TWD 36.895939
TZS 3044.602517
UAH 51.45911
UGX 4377.804603
USD 1.17037
UYU 46.617271
UZS 14035.167578
VES 594.623861
VND 30833.408725
VUV 138.194599
WST 3.169973
XAF 655.780735
XAG 0.013474
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.162984
XCG 2.109669
XDR 0.813371
XOF 655.777934
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.279602
ZAR 19.201272
ZMK 10534.734585
ZMW 22.035512
ZWL 376.858798
  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    16.1

    +0.62%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    24.55

    +0.65%

  • GSK

    0.0300

    51.02

    +0.06%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2100

    60.79

    -0.35%

  • BTI

    1.7400

    67.09

    +2.59%

  • RIO

    -2.1000

    109.94

    -1.91%

  • AZN

    -2.0300

    185.69

    -1.09%

  • RELX

    0.2150

    31.835

    +0.68%

  • NGG

    0.8400

    87.82

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    0.0950

    15.605

    +0.61%

  • CMSC

    0.0515

    23.1017

    +0.22%

  • BCC

    1.9800

    68.96

    +2.87%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.13

    0%

  • BP

    0.1110

    44.251

    +0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.6

    +0.17%

Elizabeth II: Queen of the world
Elizabeth II: Queen of the world / Photo: Oli SCARFF - POOL/AFP

Elizabeth II: Queen of the world

Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor was not just Queen Elizabeth II. She was simply The Queen.

Text size:

For billions of people, she was the one constant in a world of bewildering change, an omnipresent matriarch linking the past with the present.

While the enormous British Empire she once presided over shrank, her symbolic influence only seemed to grow, her mystique bolstered by films like "The Queen" and the Netflix series "The Crown".

Against the tide of history and logic, she made a medieval anachronism somehow modern, a stoic old lady in a hat onto whom so much could be projected.

Perhaps only the pope held as much sway, and she saw seven of them come and go during her record-breaking seven-decade reign.

- Accident of history -

Although Elizabeth Windsor became the very definition of the word, she was not born to be queen.

An accident of history brought her to the throne.

Until her "Uncle David" -- Edward VIII -- abdicated to marry the twice-divorced American Wallis Simpson in 1936, she had only an outside chance of reigning.

Even as heir apparent, the birth of a baby brother would have sent her back into relative aristocratic obscurity under succession laws in place at the time that gave precedence to males.

All changed for "Lilibet" when she was 10 and her reluctant, stammering father became George VI.

Until the "shock" of the abdication, she had been brought up exactly like her more outgoing younger sister Margaret. The two were often dressed like twins.

Her tough-minded mother, also called Elizabeth, was her emotional lodestar. She made sure the girls had an "insulated and care-free childhood" in contrast to the suffocating Palace strictures their father suffered.

Nevertheless, she learned duty early.

"Princess Elizabeth was quite a good tap dancer and mimic and could be very funny when she wanted to be," said royal biographer Andrew Morton, whose study of her close but often strained relationship with Margaret appeared in 2021.

And she "could be depended upon to do what was asked, keeping her toys and clothes in perfect order".

- 'Magnificent isolation' -

An introvert, she adapted easily to the "magnificent isolation" of royal life spent surrounded by scores of servants and courtiers.

The royal family -- George VI, Queen Elizabeth, princess Elizabeth and princess Margaret -- referred to themselves as "we four", Morton said, and were close.

Yet as queen, Elizabeth looked more to her steely and stolid grandfather George V -- a reformer who believed in leading by example.

Her biographer, Robert Lacey, told AFP that like him she saw the decline of the English class system, and wanted to establish a direct relationship with the people.

George V began the royal broadcasts, which the queen used to hone her own mix of mystery and intimacy, inviting television viewers into Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle for rather stilted fireside chats surrounded by photographs of her children, dogs and horses.

- Young queen -

Her coronation on June 2, 1953 was the first major event of the television age.

The news that morning of New Zealander Edmund Hillary's conquest of Everest made the celebrations all the more giddy.

The Union Jack had been planted on the top of world, as Britain financed the expedition, alongside that of the United Nations and Nepal.

But for all the glamour of the young queen -- then just 25 -- and talk of a second Elizabethan age, Imperial Britain was in trouble.

India -- the so-called "Jewel in the Crown" -- had already gained independence in 1947.

Hard-won victory in World War II had left the country exhausted and virtually bankrupt, its cities bomb-scarred and rationing was in its 14th year.

The Suez Crisis in 1956 would deal Britain's status as a world power a final shattering blow.

While the Tudor-era Elizabeth I in the 16th century oversaw the birth of England's imperial project, Elizabeth II's fate was to watch the flag come down on the biggest empire the world has ever seen.

The latest to go was Barbados, which cut ties with the British Crown after nearly four centuries in 2021.

- Quiet reformer -

Such a retreat would have carried other monarchies with it, but the queen was the embodiment of British stiff upper lip and its "keep calm and carry on" spirit.

She had already done her dynastic duty by giving birth to an "heir and a spare" -- a successor and a younger sibling -- by the time she was crowned.

With the ageing Winston Churchill -- the first of 15 British prime ministers to serve under her -- at her side, she began to slowly reinvent the institution.

Decades sidestepping diplomatic bear traps on never-ending royal tours and state visits made her a formidable operator.

Those skills have been "capital" in holding the Commonwealth of incredibly diverse mostly former British colonies together, Lacey insisted.

Despite crises and conflicts, it still counts 54 countries with a combined population of 2.57 billion people.

- Princess in love -

The queen was 13 when she fell for her 18-year-old third cousin Philip in 1939, then a dashing naval cadet preparing to go to war.

Her nanny noted that "she never took her eyes off him". Letters were soon flying back and forth.

Despite the constant threat, the future queen experienced her greatest freedom during those teenage wartime years.

Relatively safe behind the thick walls of Windsor Castle, west of London, she became a volunteer driver and mechanic.

When victory was declared in 1945, the 19-year-old princess joined the crowds celebrating in central London along with her friends and her sister Margaret.

She later described it as "one of the most memorable nights of my life. I remember we were terrified of being recognised."

Two years later, despite her mother's reservations -- the Queen Mother referred to plain-speaking Philip as "the Hun" because of his German wider family -- she married the impecunious Danish-Greek prince.

She gave birth to Charles 11 months later and Anne followed in 1950. Andrew -- said to be her favourite -- arrived in 1960, with Edward born four years later.

The queen was a one-man woman, who "never looked at anyone else", her cousin and confidant Margaret Rhodes said.

Philip's marital fidelity was reportedly less sure, but his sense of duty was equally iron cast.

Their 73-year partnership, which lasted until his death in April 2021, was her "strength and stay", the queen later confessed.

Both loved horses. The queen's racing stables turned out some 1,700 winners, with the Racing Post occupying pride of place on her desk alongside state papers.

She only missed two Epsom Derbies in her entire reign.

Philip played polo into his 50s and raced carriages into his 90s. Fittingly both were obsessed with breeding.

On her highly sensitive royal visit to Ireland in 2011 -- the first by a British royal since its independence -- the queen met almost as many horses as people after asking to take in two famous stud farms.

- Humanising the royals -

Thoroughbreds can be difficult to handle. And this was also to prove true with members of the royal family, known as "The Firm", who would become more visible than ever under Elizabeth's reign.

The world got its first glimpse of their private lives in 1969 when BBC cameras were allowed around the Buckingham Palace breakfast table.

The documentary was part of a bid to "humanise" the monarchy masterminded by Philip's uncle, Lord Louis Mountbatten, and the former viceroy of India's son-in-law, film producer John Knatchbull, the seventh Baron Brabourne.

Since the beginning of her reign, the Palace had sought to portray the royals as a family like any other, a more well-born, well-appointed version of a modern British household.

But "Royal Family" lifted the veil further than ever before, revealing some surprising quirks -- behind her shy and dutiful exterior, the queen was actually a rather racy driver.

Not for the last time, it was Prince Philip who delivered the biggest bombshell, telling viewers how the queen's father King George VI would take out his rage on the rhododendrons.

"Sometimes I thought he was mad," he deadpanned.

Critics, including Princess Anne -- who called the film "rotten" -- blamed it for opening the door to the tabloid voyeurism that would soon dog the clan.

- Tabloid troubles -

The queen's rather unruly and resentful sister, Margaret, was first in the firing line, her colourful private life making her prime paparazzi material.

All the royals, apart from the "untouchable" queen herself and Prince Philip, would in time feel the swipe of the media's double-edged sword.

Yet the queen seemed to float above it all, her life a carefully guarded secret.

Beyond her love of horses and rather snappy Corgi dogs, along with a fondness for crossword puzzles and a Dubonnet and gin cocktail before lunch, very little about her private life was known.

In later life she developed a fondness for television soap operas, and while self-isolating in Windsor during the coronavirus lockdown is said to have become a fan of the police corruption drama "Line of Duty".

She even reportedly watched the upper-class period drama "Downton Abbey".

In 2021, when she was forced to slow down because of ill health, The Times reported that late-night television had left her "knackered".

She even stopped drinking her lunchtime gin and martini in the evening.

- 'Annus horribilis' -

For a time, there was much to celebrate in her children's lives.

The "fairytale" marriage of Charles to Lady Diana Spencer in 1981 was a massive global media event, as was the wedding of Andrew to Sarah Ferguson five years later.

Yet the couples' private lives would soon provide endless fodder for the voracious British tabloids.

Both marriages very publicly fell apart in 1992, as did Anne's to Captain Mark Phillips. To top it all, Windsor Castle was badly damaged by fire.

The queen called it her "annus horribilis".

In an effort to win back public support, she began paying tax and Buckingham Palace was opened to the public for the first time.

But the rancour between Charles and Diana became poisonous as they settled scores in rival TV interviews in what became known as the "War of the Waleses".

And then the unimaginable happened. Diana's tragic end in a car crash in Paris in 1997 not only shook confidence in the monarchy, but in the queen herself.

- Diana -

A series of missteps in the days after her daughter-in-law's death left the queen looking cold, uncaring and out of touch.

"Show us you care," said one newspaper front page after the queen opted to stay in her Scottish summer retreat of Balmoral rather return to London.

"Speak to us Ma'am," headlined another, in criticism that would have been unthinkable only a few years before.

And her decision to strip the so-called "People's Princess" of her royal status in the wake of Diana's bombshell 1995 BBC interview came back to haunt the monarch.

But through it all, the queen kept her counsel, sticking doggedly to the royals' reputed mantra of "never complain, never explain".

It may have helped maintain the institution's mystique in past but here it badly backfired.

A major Palace overhaul followed.

Help in restoring faith in the monarch was to come from an unlikely source -- the self-confessed "old republican left-winger" Stephen Frears.

His Oscar-winning 2008 movie "The Queen", set against the backdrop of the Diana crisis, did much to explain her position and rewrite the narrative.

Helen Mirren -- another republican -- won an Oscar for her moving portrayal of the queen's struggle between duty and family, winning her sympathy even from people who had little time for the monarchy.

- The problem with Charles -

Rehabilitating Charles would be trickier. As early as 1977, during her Silver Jubilee marking 25 years on the throne, the queen had vowed to rule until her death.

While this promised stability, it also seemed to undermine the Prince of Wales, whom some saw as unfit to follow her.

His buttonholing of politicians over his hobby horse causes seemed to challenge the unwritten rule that the royals stay out of politics.

However, as many of his once "fringe" ideas, such as on the environment, became mainstream, Charles has shown a more relaxed, self-deprecating side, particularly after his 2005 marriage to his lifelong lover Camilla.

With his mother in her 90s, he began to take over her duties as the most senior royal on overseas trips.

- Family -

Despite the consolation of grandchildren and great grandchildren in the twilight of her reign, her greatest headaches continued to come from within her own family.

Now the longest serving British monarch ever, the marriages of both of her grandsons William and Harry to commoners seemed to offer another phase of modernisation and renewal.

However, within three years of Harry's mould-breaking marriage to the mixed-race American actress Meghan Markle in 2018, a rift with the Palace became horribly public.

A month after allegations of racism within the family were raised in a television interview with Oprah Winfrey, Philip died aged 99 in April 2021, leaving her ever more alone.

With Andrew also mired in underage sex allegations over links with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, it was another "annus horribilis".

- Last of her kind? -

Yet the monarch herself remained hugely popular and admired, an embodiment of traditional values and all that seemed eternal about England.

In his book on her and her sister, Morton recounts how Margaret burst in on the queen's weekly audience with the prime minister early in her reign.

"If you weren't queen, nobody would talk to you," Margaret fumed, angry at being left out.

Time and again since, Elizabeth proved the contrary, that she was infinitely worthy -- the first and perhaps the "last global monarch", as the New York Times put it in 2021.

The unknowable mystique she cultivated in a world ever more demanding of transparency may well die with her.

O.Pereira--NZN