The third season of the hit Netflix show was
released on Sunday, portraying events around Elizabeth and her
family from the mid-1960s until 1977.
Its creator Peter Morgan has said the series, whose first two
seasons cost about $130 million to make, is based on known facts
and imagined private conversations.
However, royal historian Hugo Vickers has penned a book "The
Crown Dissected", to expose the fiction, saying the show
features ludicrous events, misrepresents characters and includes
some "idiotic scenes".
"What I like is fiction to help us to understand the truth but
not to pervert it and twist it around so you get a completely
false view about what happened," Vickers told Reuters.
"I think there is a subtle subversive republican message. If you
want to find out more about that, go and look at what Peter
Morgan has been saying in order to promote the series. He's
quite rude about all of them."
Vickers, a passionate monarchist who has written numerous books
on the royals, said he was "not a pawn of Buckingham Palace" but
was concerned about the public believing that everything it
watched had really happened.
"It seeps into the psyche and people believe it to be true and
it isn't," he said.
The worst error so far, Vickers said, was the account of the
death of the sister of Elizabeth's husband Prince Philip, who
was killed with her family in an airplane crash in 1937. He said
parts of that account were "absolutely outrageous".
The drama series about the royals has recently been overshadowed
by intrigue surrounding the Windsors themselves.
Last month Prince Harry, the queen's grandson, and his wife
Meghan Markle began legal action against a national newspaper
over what they said was "bullying" by sections of the British
media.
In the last few days, Elizabeth's second son Prince Andrew has
dominated headlines after he gave an interview, described by
British media as a car crash, in which he denied accusations of
having sex with an underage girl.
(Writing by Michael Holden; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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