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By Karen Roe from Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, UK - Frogmore House 16-08-2014, CC BY 2.0, Wiki Commons
In recent years, it’s become something of a go to wedding reception venue for a whole new generation of royals. Frogmore House, settled in the rolling green of the Windsor Castle estate, has seen celebrations following the marriages of several of the Queen’s grandchildren including Peter Philips and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex while Lady Gabriella Windsor also held her wedding party there. But the Windsor favourite has a long and very royal history with plenty of romantic and dramatic twists and turns.
Updated: 24 May 2021, 9:59
CONSIDERING how we grow up learning all about the history of the Royal Family, chances are most Brits would be able to name the first few in the line of succession.
But while The Queen s immediate family mostly live their lives in the spotlight, there s a whole host of step-siblings, nieces and nephews who enjoy all the perks of being royal without the same responsibilities.
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Fabulous takes a look back at the Royal Family s forgotten step-siblings, cousins, nieces and nephewsCredit: Getty Images - Getty
Here Fabulous takes a look at the Royal Family s forgotten relations - and despite being private citizens, they still have lives fit for a King or Queen.
Enthusiastically, Andy Warhol once wrote: ‘I want to be as famous as the Queen of England.’ For the celebrity-obsessed US artist, the Monarch was the ultimate expression of global fame.
The facts bear out his view. No one has been as famous in their lifetime for as long as Her Majesty, nor been the subject of such intense public scrutiny.
Historical giants such as Julius Caesar, Napoleon and even Hitler pale in comparison.
From the moment of her birth in 1926, crowds have surrounded her homes. She learned to wave to strangers while she was still in her pram, took her first salute at three, and attended her first State Opening of Parliament when she was just ten.