Why Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip Didn't Go to Charles and Camilla's Wedding Ceremony

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There's more to the story about why Queen Elizabeth missed the first ceremony

<p>Danny Lawson - PA Images/PA Images via Getty, Georges De Keerle/Getty </p> Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip at the opening of the new 350 million headquarters of the Bank of Scotland, Edinburgh in September 2005; Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall leave the civil ceremony at The Guildhall, Windsor on April 9, 2005.

Danny Lawson - PA Images/PA Images via Getty, Georges De Keerle/Getty

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip at the opening of the new 350 million headquarters of the Bank of Scotland, Edinburgh in September 2005; Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall leave the civil ceremony at The Guildhall, Windsor on April 9, 2005.

King Charles and Queen Camilla celebrated their wedding on April 9, 2005 with two ceremonies — but Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip did not attend both festivities.

More than 35 years after their initial meeting and subsequent marriages to other individuals, future King Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles legally tied the knot in a civil ceremony at Windsor Guildhall. The town hall is a stone’s throw from Windsor Castle, but the groom’s parents were not among the 28 guests at the intimate ceremony, which Prince William and Prince Harry attended.

As sovereign, Queen Elizabeth was head of the Church of England and decided it was not appropriate for her to be at the wedding of two people who divorced their previous partners. Charles was married to Princess Diana from 1981 to 1996, while Camilla was married to Andrew Parker Bowles (with whom she shares son Tom and daughter Laura) from 1973 to 1995.

<p>Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty </p> Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall leave the civil ceremony where they were legally married at The Guildhall, Windsor on April 9, 2005.

Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty

Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall leave the civil ceremony where they were legally married at The Guildhall, Windsor on April 9, 2005.

Related: King Charles and Queen Camilla Mark 19th Wedding Anniversary — How Their Lives Have Changed Since Coronation

Though the civil ceremony at Windsor was without the pomp of larger royal weddings — Charles wore a morning suit in lieu of military uniform, while Camilla layered a white coat over a coordinating silk chiffon dress plus Phillip Treacy hat, and the newlyweds did not share a public kiss — The Guardian reported that up to 20,000 people came out to see them.

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip’s absence from the Windsor Guildhall wedding was recreated in the sixth and final season of The Crown, which debuted in two parts on Netflix in late 2023. The last episode imagined that the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh intermittently watched the news coverage of the nuptials live on TV as they prepared to head to the Service of Prayer and Dedication at St. George's Chapel in Windsor Castle later that day, as the Queen obsessed about the speech she'd make at the wedding reception.

<p>Justin Downing/Netfli</p> Charles and Camilla's religious wedding blessing recreated in The Crown, season 6.

Justin Downing/Netfli

Charles and Camilla's religious wedding blessing recreated in The Crown, season 6.

Related: King Charles and Queen Camilla Have an 'Unconditional' Love, According to an Astrologer

As seen on screen, Charles and Camilla — who took the title Duchess of Cornwall upon her marriage to the then-Prince of Wales but did not use the Princess of Wales styling she was also entitled to out of deference to Diana, who died following a car crash in Paris in 1997 — had their marriage blessed in church before a larger congregation.

<p> Bob Collier - PA Images/PA Images via Getty</p> Prince Charles, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall and Queen Elizabeth leave St. George's Chapel at Windsor on April 9, 2005.

Bob Collier - PA Images/PA Images via Getty

Prince Charles, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall and Queen Elizabeth leave St. George's Chapel at Windsor on April 9, 2005.

For the ceremony at St. George’s (where Prince Harry and Meghan Markle would tie the knot in 2018), Camilla changed looks (as many brides do today) into an embroidered blue and gold coat over a matching chiffon gown with dramatic spray of golden feathers in her hair, also by Phillip Treacy. The Queen and Prince Philip made their support for their eldest son and his longtime love clear by attending that event and hosting a reception at Windsor Castle afterwards.

During the religious blessing, which was led by Archbishop of Canterbury, the newlyweds confessed their "manifold sins and wickedness" in a reading from the Book of Common Prayer, The Guardian reported.

<p>ROTA/Tim Graham Picture Library/Getty</p> Prince Charles and his wife Camilla during the Service of Prayer and Dedication blessing their marriage at Windsor Castle on April 9, 2005.

ROTA/Tim Graham Picture Library/Getty

Prince Charles and his wife Camilla during the Service of Prayer and Dedication blessing their marriage at Windsor Castle on April 9, 2005.

Charles and Camilla later left church arm-in-arm and posed for wedding portraits in the White Drawing Room of Windsor Castle. The pictures were taken by Hugo Burnand, who the couple would go on to tap for their coronation day in May 2023.

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<p>Pool Photograph/Corbis/Corbis/Getty</p> Prince Charles and his new bride Camilla with their families, in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle on April 9, 2005.

Pool Photograph/Corbis/Corbis/Getty

Prince Charles and his new bride Camilla with their families, in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle on April 9, 2005.

Though King Charles and Queen Camilla did not release on a photo in honor of their latest wedding anniversary on April 9 as they have in years past, Queen Camilla made a sweet comment about their marriage last year.

"It is hard to believe how quickly time has flown by...!" the royal wrote in reply to a fan who wished her and the King a happy 18th anniversary in April 2023, in a card she personally signed.

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