Royal Nod for ‘Queen Camilla’ Caps Years of Image Repair
LONDON — The title “queen” looms large in the British public consciousness, never more so than during the rule of the nation’s longest-serving monarch, Queen Elizabeth II.
So when the queen, who is 95, announced that her daughter-in-law Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall and wife of Prince Charles, should become the queen consort when Charles takes the throne, it put to rest years of speculation about Camilla’s future status.
The announcement, which came on Saturday in a letter to mark 70 years since Elizabeth’s ascension, could be seen as an official stamp of approval of their union, as well as an effort to smooth the path for Prince Charles’ own journey to the throne, historians and royal experts say.
“In the royal family, and in the U.K., titles matter in a way that is sometimes hard for Americans to parse,” said Arianne Chernock, an associate professor history at Boston University.
In many ways, the move can be seen as an effort to ensure at least one challenge is removed from Prince Charles’ path as the inevitable transition to his role as monarch looms large.
“It seems increasingly clear to me that as much as he can claim to be working in the tradition of his mother, carrying out her vision, the better for him,” Professor Chernock said.
The queen consort title would elevate Camilla’s status, solidifying her role as the regal partner of Charles. It also means she will also play a more significant role at his coronation and be crowned.
Camilla’s royal role has already expanded since she and Prince Charles married in 2005, but royal watchers were uncertain what it might look like when Prince Charles becomes King. It was the second marriage for both, and Camilla was dragged by Britain’s tabloids for years after her romantic involvement with Charles during his marriage to Diana, the Princess of Wales, became known.
Diana was killed in a car crash in 1997, five years after her separation from Charles and a year after their divorce. Camilla was previously married to Andrew Parker Bowles, but the pair divorced in 1995. In the midst of all of the relationship drama came tell-all interviews and the publication of a recording of a tapped call that offered sordid details about the Charles and Camilla’s private life.
Camilla isn’t the first royal spouse to come up against public skepticism controversy over his or her title. Queen Victoria’s husband, Prince Albert, had to fight for years to be named consort because of wariness over his German background.
“With Camilla, there is a similar kind of wariness and skepticism,” Professor Chernock said. “It doesn’t stem from being a foreigner in her case, obviously. It just stems from the origin story of their relationship.”
But in the nearly 17 years since Camilla and Charles were married, they have worked to cultivate a public image of service, stability and discretion.
“It was all profoundly uncomfortable — we know more than we ever would want to know about this couple — and so this is part of a very careful, very long term rehabilitation strategy,” Professor Chernock said.
Apart from helping repair the couple’s public image, the queen consort announcement also signals full acceptance for a spouse who has been divorced. All of Queen Elizabeth’s children save one are divorced, so it is something to which he family has grown accustomed.
“It could be an opportunity to showcase a more forgiving, more flexible, more modern idea of what the monarchy represents,” Professor Chernock said.
Edward Owens, a historian and the author of “The Family Firm: Monarchy, Mass Media and the British Public, 1932-53,” said the queen’s decision to offer Camilla the queen consort title suggests that the crown is moving with the times when it comes to divorced people.
The queen famously did not attend Charles and Camilla’s wedding, since she is the head of the Church of England, which did not allow divorced people to remarry then (it now does).
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The queens’s intervention, Dr. Owens said, means that Camilla has “the royal stamp of approval.”
“This is the queen dispelling all doubt, by making it known very publicly that it is her personal wish that Camilla take this title,” Dr. Owens said. “To oppose this idea that Camilla would be made queen is now to oppose the personal wish of the queen, so it takes advantage of the public good will toward Elizabeth II.”
Over the years, Camilla’s efforts to quietly serving the public has helped bolster both her and Charles’ image. Along with the queen’s daughter, Princess Anne, she is seen as one of the more active senior members of the royal family, doing the fundamental work that props up the monarchy, like charity events and meeting with the public.
The public perception of Camilla has changed markedly during her marriage to Prince Charles, Simon Heffer, a historian, wrote in The Telegraph. “Her success is not because she has changed as a person to make the people admire her more,” he wrote, “it is because the people have changed their view of her and realized she was a very good sort all along.”
On the streets of London on Monday, many who spoke about the future consort seemed to agree.
“People have accepted her now after that Diana business and what have you,” said Eamon Gunn, 56, who works in the music business.
“She just stays in the background and doesn’t get involved,” he said. “I think she does a good job at what she does. She just minds her own business behind the scenes.”
Popular culture has brought the story of Camilla and Charles to a new generation, with the latest seasons of “The Crown” and films like “Spencer” bringing fictionalized versions of their relationship to the masses.
Stephanie Martin, 36, a screenwriter and playwright, said so many people have watched “The Crown” that they feel “quite invested in their love story.” She said she was glad to see the new title. “I’m up for it,” she said. “For me it’s about a real love story in its final conclusion. Good for her.”
Some felt it was much ado about nothing.
“It wouldn’t bother me either way,” said Oliver Foley, 43, who works as a decorator. Mr. Foley said: “I’m not a royalist. I do admire the queen, but I don’t think about the monarchy on a daily basis.”
Gary Power, 56, an artist, said the royal family has become less important to the British people.
“When it became national news,” he said, “I thought: ‘Really? What else is going on in the world?’”
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