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The Royal Wedding Kate and William

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Prince William and Kate Middleton kiss on the balcony of Buckingham Palace

Continue reading the main story Royal wedding


Prince William and Kate Middleton have kissed twice on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after their wedding service in Westminster Abbey.
They were cheered by 500,000 well-wishers who gathered outside the palace, as RAF planes flew past in honour of the new royal couple.
Police estimate a million people lined the procession route from the abbey to the palace.
The bride will now known as Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cambridge.
Prince William drove his new bride back to Clarence House, following a buffet reception at Buckingham Palace, at the wheel of his father's classic blue Aston Martin.
The vehicle was decked in ribbons and balloons with "Just Wed" on the number plate.
Later in the evening the couple returned to the Palace for a black tie dinner and dance which is expected to continue into the early hours.
The dress was designed by Sarah Burton
The church service, watched by 1,900 guests, ran smoothly but the prince did struggle to place the wedding ring on the duchess's finger.
Following a long tradition, the ring has been fashioned from Welsh gold given to Prince William by the Queen.
After the couple said their vows, in which the bride did not promise to obey her husband, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Reverend Rowan Williams, declared: "I pronounce that they be man and wife together, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen."
They spent a private moment together with their families, as they signed the marriage register.
Prince William has been given the title of the Duke of Cambridge by the Queen, and Miss Middleton has become Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cambridge on their marriage.
The duchess, who managed to keep her wedding dress a secret, wore an ivory and lace gown by Sarah Burton at Alexander McQueen. The prince wore the red tunic of an Irish Guards colonel - his most senior honorary appointment.
Continue reading the main story At the scene

Sarah Bell BBC News, in central London
The excitement, which had been building throughout the morning, peaked at about 1330 BST when the prince kissed his new bride.
The crowd, decked in union jacks, tiaras, and fascinators, reacted with deafening cheers and demands for more.
Much neck-craning was required for the best view of the spectacle, which was obscured by a sea of cameras, periscopes and flags.
Some people had tears in their eyes as they watched the fly-past, with "amazing" a common response when asked about the day's events.

As one American spectator put it, "No-one does pageantry like the British - you can't help being infected by the energy and emotion."
Among the guests at Westminster Abbey were singer-songwriter Sir Elton John and his partner David Furnish, former England rugby coach Sir Clive Woodward, and former England football captain David Beckham and his wife Victoria.
Actor Rowan Atkinson, a close friend of Prince Charles, Prince Harry's friend Chelsy Davy and film director Guy Ritchie were also there.
UK Prime Minister David Cameron and his wife Samantha, Australian prime minister Julia Gillard and former British PM Sir John Major were among the politicians present.

For those lining the route, large speakers broadcast the wedding service, and hundreds of millions of people were estimated to watch the proceedings worldwide on television.
  • According to a lip-reading expert, Prince William told his bride she looked "beautiful" as she joined him at the altar and joked to his father-in-law Michael: "We're supposed to have just a small family affair"
  • The fly-past at Buckingham Palace involved Lancaster, Spitfire and Hurricane aircraft from the RAF's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight
  • Out of the 1,900 guests at the Abbey, 1,000 were friends and family, who were given some of the best seats in the house. The others included overseas royals, politicians, military personnel and representatives of various faiths and charities
  • After the service, the newly-weds travelled in an open-topped carriage for the 15-minute journey from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace, past London landmarks, including the Houses of Parliament, Big Ben and Horse Guards Parade
  • More than 1,000 military personnel and musicians lined the procession route
  • Thousands of street parties were held around the UK, and big screens were put up in many towns and cities. The BBC has been bringing viewers and listeners comprehensive coverage across TV, radio and online, in the UK and around the world
  • 5,000 police officers were on duty, with more than 900 along the wedding route
  • Police made 57 arrests in and outside the security zone and questioned masked protesters in central London.
  • About two square miles of central London were closed to traffic.
  • A yellow RAF Sea King rescue helicopter flew over The Mall as the couple drove to Clarence House. It was a surprise for the groom, a search and rescue helicopter pilot.
Royal officials said the couple were involved in planning their wedding day, from the music at the ceremony to the flowers and the cake.
Inside Westminster Abbey, an avenue of trees lined the red carpet leading up to the altar.
The bride walked up the aisle to coronation anthem I Was Glad, by Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, from Psalm 122. Her brother James Middleton gave the Lesson, reading Romans 12: 1-2, 9-18.

Continue reading the main story
Classical compositions by Elgar, Britten and Vaughan Williams featured during the ceremony, alongside the hymn Jerusalem and the English melody Greensleeves.
A canape reception was held for 650 guests at Buckingham Palace in the afternoon.
Later, about 300 close friends and relatives were invited to a dinner and disco, hosted by Prince Charles.
The couple changed outfits for the event - Prince William was in black tie while his bride wore a strapless white satin gazar evening gown with diamante embroidered detail round the waist, by the same designer, Sarah Burton.
But the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh left for a weekend away after hosting the lunchtime reception.
They will miss Prince Harry's best man speech and Michael Middleton's father of the bride address.
Despite predictions of showers, the weather stayed dry for the royal couple. Temperatures in London reached around 18C (64.4F) at 2pm.

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Comments

  1. Fonixx's Avatar
    I live in UK and we probably have less interest in our royal family than nearly any other country, I mean we the ones that have to fund that highest form of institutional elitism just so they can be a face to bring in the tourists and now watch that Kate be nothing more than a clothes horse and baby machine.
  2. VampDude's Avatar
    The royal family are nothing but tyrants, which a majority of the country couldn't care less about the wedding.

    But there are those wondering why the wedding cost £40billion of our tax money, the royal family is all about war and greed.

  3. Kaiser's Avatar
    Both replies I disagree with wholeheartedly but VampDude's is outright offensive and factually incorrect. I'm not going to go into the political benefits the monarchy gives the Westminster system of governance but I'll start where every ignorant republican usually starts their argument over abolishing the monarchy, good old money.

    First of all the Royal Family MAKES money for the commonwealth realms (particularly Britain). The Royal Family adds around 200+ million dollars of profit that their estates earn directly into the yearly budget of the UK and this doesn't take into consideration the extra money they pump into the economy via tourism, memorabilia et cetera.


    Tyrants? You do understand you vote for your government in the UK? The monarchy is apolitical and doesn't meddle into the affairs of the government. By the government I mean the PMO and the cabinet surrounding it. If you have an issue with how your country is being run than take it up with the governing politicians. Also, please tell me how Prince William marrying Kate caused the tyrannical governments of China and Libya from murdering their own people as well.

    I'd also love to see a wedding costing £40billion. That's an absolutely ridiculous claim. If anything the wedding pumped a hundred times (a VERY conservative guess) more into the British economy than it took out. The Royal Family also footed the overwhelming majority of the bill themselves btw, only the security was paid for by the state.

    Long live the monarchy and whatnot, I pray it's never abolished in Canada nor Britain.
  4. Fonixx's Avatar
    Well yeah that's exactly what i meant, a tourist attraction. they just wheel them out because the tourists like the idea of Royalty and that brings the profit in, but there's no way in Hell i'd ever say that institutional elitism is a good thing, because it goes against everything I believe in about earning your position in society and not just winning some genetic lottery, so on 1 side I agree Britain offer to keep our image of traditionalism because without that image our economy would take a massive nose-dive but on the other I wish society could change so we could just get rid of the lot of them and try to survive with the normal upper classes.
  5. AprilP's Avatar
    When I saw the news that says about the engagement of the royal couple, I was happy and excited because another historical event that will happen again. It was a little bit surprising how two people meet regardless of their status in life. Then last April 29,2011, Friday they finally exchanged their vows at London's Westminster Abbey. This event was one for the books, you could not have taken out a payday advance to attend in person if you wanted to.

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