Queen Elizabeth has a secret ring inscription only 3 people know

Queen Elizabeth has a secret ring inscription only 3 people know

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip will celebrate their 73rd wedding anniversary in November, and it has taken so many years to uncover a secret about their marriage or more specifically the Queen’s wedding band.

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▪︎Back to 1947 ♡Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip Wedding day♡ . 📖⬇️A little bit of their love story⬇️📖 . Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip first met on two separate occasions in 1934 and 1937. The Queen fell in love with the future Duke of Edinburgh in 1939, when she was 13-years-old, and the couple started trading letters. Some eight years later – when Queen Elizabeth II was 21-years-old – the Palace announced their engagement. They married on November 20, 1947, at Westminster Abbey. . Swipe to see a copy of her wedding dress and the Queen herself staring at it. . #weddingdress #queenelizabeth #queenelizabethwedding #elizabethandphilip #royalwedding #royal #britishroyal #royalportrait #queen #oldphotos #westminsterabbey #royalfamily #weddingday #lovestory #royallove #thecrown

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It is common knowledge that the Queen, like Meghan Markle and Kate Middleton, has a ring made of Welsh gold. Most British royal brides wear rings fashioned from the same nugget of Welsh gold which came from a Welsh mine, Clogau St David’s at Bontddu. This gold is more valuable than gold from Australia or South Africa.

While there is only a sliver of the original gold left over, the Queen owns a large nugget of 21 carats Welsh gold which is held by the Crown Jewellers to be used for the royal wedding rings of today. Sarah, Duchess of York, Duchess Kate, and Duchess Meghan Markle all sport wedding bands made from this nugget.

Her engagement ring was made from a tiara that once belonged to Prince Philip’s mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg.  It was a gift from the Prince, who had the tiara taken apart and reassembled into a three-carat solitaire with five smaller diamonds.

An unknown fact about this ring, however, is that it had a secret inscription inside of it. It is so secret that only the Queen, Prince Philip, and the inscriber know what it says.

The inscription was chosen by Prince Philip in 1947.

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В королевских семьях особенно чтят традицию передачи украшений из поколения в поколение. Зачастую их дарят перед важным событием или же в его день, например, при получении нового титула, в день свадьбы или рождения наследника. Вместе с ювелирным домом @diamond_of_love мы решили тебе рассказать, какие украшения можно передавать и как зародить эту традицию в своей семье. Ссылка на материал в шапке профиля и в сториз. ☝️#невеста #ювелирныеукрашения #обручальноекольцокиев #помолвочноекольцо #помолвка #свадьба2019 #королевскаясвадьба #royalwedding #queenelizabethwedding #queenelizabeth #royalweddingring #ring #jewelry #bride #engagementring #weddingring

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In the new biography, ‘Prince Philip: A Portrait of the Duke of Edinburgh’, London-based royal expert and biographer Ingrid Seward explains: “At least Philip didn’t have the expense of a wedding ring, as the people of Wales supplied a nugget of Welsh gold from which the ring as made.

“She never takes it off and inside the ring is an inscription. No one knows what it says, other than the engraver, the Queen and her husband.”

Picture: Instagram / The Royal Family

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