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Inside Prince Philip s impressive library

Inside Prince Philip s impressive library
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Inside the Duke of Edinburgh s understated office

Inside the Duke of Edinburgh s understated office
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How a South Pacific island came to worship Prince Philip as their true messiah

How a South Pacific island came to worship Prince Philip as their true messiah There will be few places where the Duke s loss will be felt as keenly as the island of Tanna where they prayed to him every day 18 April 2021 • 6:00am The people of Tanna have worshipped the Duke since the Sixties Credit:  Richard Shears / Rex Features The Duke of Edinburgh may have garnered numerous illustrious titles over his decades of service, but to a tribe on the South Pacific island of Tanna he was only ever known – and worshipped – as “The Big Man”. For most of his public life, Prince Philip has been regarded as a living deity by a tribe living on the tiny volcanic island which is part of the Vanuatu archipelago. According to local legend, the pale-skinned son of a mountain god once ventured far away across the ocean to marry a powerful woman. In the Sixties, when Vanuatu was an Anglo-French colony known as the New Hebrides, it is believed that tribesmen would have set eyes on a

Remote island tribe that worshipped Prince Philip like a god devises day of rituals to mark death

The tribespeople on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu will mourn by dancing, speeches and the ceremonial drinking of the native plant kava, according to an expert on the culture.

Island tribe who revered the duke like a god will hold ceremony to mark his death

A remote tribe in the island nation of Vanuatu who revered Prince Philip as a god-like figure will mark his death with dancing, speeches and the ceremonial drinking of the native plant kava, according to an expert on the culture. Kirk Huffman is a research associate at the Australian Museum and honorary curator of the National Museum at the nation’s Vanuatu Cultural Centre. Mr Huffman has spent more than 18 years working as an anthropologist in Vanuatu, and is considered an authority on what is known as the Prince Philip Movement – a group based in villages in the south-western part of the island of Tanna in southern Vanuatu.

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