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		Prince Philip was the gruff figure at heart of Britain's monarchy
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		 [April 09, 2021] 
		By Michael Holden 
 LONDON (Reuters) - A blunt-speaking naval 
		officer who as Queen Elizabeth's dutiful consort helped modernise the 
		British monarchy, Prince Philip might be best remembered for his gruff 
		public persona.
 
 Outspoken and irascible, Philip lived in the shadow of the woman he 
		married at Westminster Abbey in 1947 and always walked a step behind the 
		queen at the thousands of ceremonial events they attended during her 
		reign, the longest in British history.
 
 Though he had no official role, Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, was one 
		of the most influential figures in the royal family for more than 70 
		years. He died aged 99 on Friday.
 
 While Philip was often criticised for his demeanour and sometimes 
		brusque remarks, friends said that as Queen Elizabeth II's closest 
		confidant he brought wit, impatient intelligence and unflagging energy 
		to the monarchy.
 
 "He has, quite simply, been my strength and stay all these years," 
		Elizabeth said in a rare personal tribute to Philip during a speech to 
		mark their 50th wedding anniversary in 1997.
 
 "I, and his whole family, and this and many other countries, owe him a 
		debt greater than he would ever claim, or we shall ever know."
 
		
		 
		
 If Philip harboured frustration at his life as consort, he never 
		publicly showed it.
 
 But in a tetchy interview with the BBC to mark his 90th birthday, he did 
		reveal that in the early days he struggled to find a role for himself.
 
 "There was no precedent. If I asked somebody 'what do you expect me to 
		do?' they all looked blank - they had no idea, nobody had much idea," he 
		said.
 
 Born in an age of deference to monarchy, Philip helped Elizabeth 
		navigate the political and social upheaval of the 20th century to craft 
		a monarchy fit for a different time.
 
 Often facing a deeply traditional court, he reformed the palace and 
		tried to harness the growing power of television to project royal 
		influence.
 
 He pushed for the queen's coronation in 1953 to be televised live and 
		behind the scenes removed outdated behaviour in the palace he regarded 
		as stuffy. He was the first royal to do a TV interview.
 
 However, later in life Philip was criticised for impeding the monarchy's 
		ability to adapt to the times, and detractors partly blamed his 
		overbearing manner for his children's failure to produce happy families.
 
 The couple had four children: Charles, Prince of Wales (born in 1948), 
		Princess Anne,(1950), Prince Andrew (1960) and Prince Edward (1964), 
		three of whose marriages ended in divorce.
 
 STRENGTH AND STAY
 
 For Elizabeth, Philip was a supportive husband who courtiers said was 
		the only person to treat the monarch as a human being.
 
 Despite rumours about his infidelity, the couple stayed together and in 
		old age they clearly enjoyed an affection and regard for each other. 
		They celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary in November 2017.
 
		
		 
		
 However Philip, the son of the exiled Prince Andrew of Greece, a 
		descendant of Elizabeth's great-great-grandmother Queen Victoria and his 
		wife's third cousin, never quite won the hearts of all Britons.
 
 Elizabeth was the sovereign, but in family matters it was Philip who was 
		viewed as the head of the family.
 
 As first Princess Anne, then Prince Andrew and then finally Prince 
		Charles suffered a broken marriage, royal watchers pointed the finger at 
		Philip as a doughty father, calling him domineering and cold, 
		particularly with his sons.
 
 When the popularity of the House of Windsor plunged after the death of 
		Charles's first wife Princess Diana in 1997, he was accused of helping 
		stop the monarchy adapt to a new Britain.
 
 A decade after Diana was killed in a Paris car crash at 36, Philip had 
		to suffer the embarrassment of hearing Mohamed al-Fayed, the former 
		owner of London's luxury Harrods store whose son was the princess's 
		lover, allege the prince had ordered her death.
 
 A jury rejected the claims after hearing no evidence to back them up. 
		But such accusations illustrated the country's mixed feelings about him.
 
 CONTROVERSIAL FIGURE
 
 Philip was also the most controversial member of the royal family until 
		the travails of his children and their spouses became regular tabloid 
		fodder in the 1990s.
 
 The duke was attacked for his views on everything from nuclear power to 
		nature conservation. Critics called him a hypocrite for heading the 
		World Wide Fund for Nature while taking part in blood sports such as 
		pheasant shooting.
 
 "I think that there's a difference between being concerned for the 
		conservation of nature and being a bunny-hugger," he told the BBC.
 
 It was such blunt comments that gained him the greatest attention. A 
		remark about "slitty eyes" during a visit to China in the 1980s became 
		symbolic of his often unguarded manner, which contrasted with the 
		queen's restraint.
 
 Those who knew him said his reputation hid an urbane wit, devotion to 
		his family, love of sport and a dedication to the business of being 
		royal.
 
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			Britain's Prince Philip leaves the King Edward VII's Hospital in 
			London, Britain December 24, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay 
            
			 
            Descended himself from a royal family that had lost its throne, he 
			knew that monarchies could come unstuck if they lost the respect of 
			the people.
 He once said during a Canadian trip: "If at any stage people feel 
			that the monarchy has no further part to play, then for goodness 
			sake let's end the thing on amicable terms."
 
            CHILDHOOD ON THE MOVE
 Philippos Schleswig-Holstein Sonderburg-Glucksburg was born on a 
			dining room table on the Greek island of Corfu on June 10, 1921, the 
			fifth child and only son of Prince Andrew of Greece.
 
 His parents went into exile when he was 18 months old. They sailed 
			from Corfu with the little boy sleeping in a cot made hurriedly from 
			orange boxes.
 
 Philip had British and German blood through his mother, a great 
			grand-daughter of Queen Victoria. She was born Princess Alice of 
			Battenberg and became a nun after drifting apart from her husband, 
			who died virtually penniless in 1944.
 
 Philip lived his early life on the move around Europe. It was a 
			troubled childhood.
 
 He was educated at Gordonstoun, where his son Prince Charles was 
			later an unwilling pupil, and became a naturalised British citizen, 
			looking and sounding every bit the English gentleman.
 
 But to his detractors he remained "Phil the Greek".
 
            
			 
            
 A DASHING YOUNG SAILOR
 
 Philip joined the Royal Naval College at Dartmouth as a cadet in 
			1939. He served in warships during World War Two, was mentioned in 
			dispatches, took part in the Allied landings in Sicily and was in 
			Tokyo Bay when Japan surrendered in 1945.
 
 He and Elizabeth first met at the wedding of Philip's cousin in 
			1934. Five years later the dashing young sailor attracted the 
			attention of his future wife when the then-princess was 13 and 
			visited Dartmouth with her parents.
 
 "The colour drained from her face and then she blushed. She stared 
			at him and for the rest of the day followed him everywhere. She was 
			in love from the beginning," the late Earl Mountbatten, Philip's 
			uncle, recalled later.
 
 They were married at Westminster Abbey on Nov. 20, 1947, in a 
			ceremony attended by statesmen and royalty from around the world.
 
 He continued his naval career until 1951, then took leave and 
			devoted himself full-time to public duties when Elizabeth became 
			queen a year later.
 
 "I suspect for Prince Philip it was quite difficult in the very 
			early years of the reign because he had to sacrifice his naval 
			career which is something he did mind about," royal historian Hugo 
			Vickers said.
 
 There was one place where he outshone his wife - on the Pacific 
			island of Tanna in the Vanuatu group, where people believed he was a 
			god with magical powers and was the fount of all goodness.
 
 MARRIAGE RIFTS
 
 Rumours of extra-marital activities and a rift with the queen were 
			firmly denied in the 1950s.
 
 In his biography of the queen, Robert Hardman said that during a 
			royal tour of Australia in 1954, a camera crew witnessed Philip 
			running out of a chalet with a pair of tennis shoes and a racquet 
			flying after him.
 
 The crew destroyed the film and later the queen herself approached 
			them. "I'm sorry for that little interlude but, as you know, it 
			happens in every marriage," the queen told them, according to 
			Hardman.
 
 Decades later, their grandson Prince Harry said the queen had 
			depended on Philip.
 
 "Personally, I don't think that she could do it without him," he 
			said.
 
            
			 
			In latter years, Philip eased up on royal duties as his health 
			deteriorated.
 
 He spent Christmas in 2011 in hospital after an operation to clear a 
			blocked artery in his heart and he missed the end of celebrations to 
			mark his wife's 60th year on the throne in 2012 after being 
			hospitalised with a bladder infection.
 
 In August 2017 he retired from active public life altogether.
 
 In January 2019, he escaped unhurt when his Land Rover car flipped 
			over after a collision with another car close to the royals’ 
			Sandringham residence in eastern England.
 
 "I reckon I've done my bit," he told the BBC in 2011. "I want to 
			enjoy myself for a bit now."
 
 Asked whether he felt he had been a success in his role, he gave a 
			typically phlegmatic response.
 
 "I couldn't care less," he said. "Who cares what I think about it, I 
			mean it's ridiculous."
 
 (Editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Sonya Hepinstall and Angus MacSwan)
 
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