Queen Elizabeth II and her family made their first joint public appearance in eight months on Sunday for a Remembrance Sunday service.
The 94-year-old monarch was joined by the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, the Earl and Countess of Wessex, the Duke of Kent and the Princess Royal for the service, which took place in the cenotaph. in London and saw the royal family lead the nation in remembering those who died in world wars and other conflicts.
Elizabeth watched the service from the balcony of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office building, where she remained socially estranged from her family members due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
Celebrations were curtailed this year due to the global health crisis, and the monarch’s family’s attendance marks the first time all royals have come together for an engagement since the Commonwealth Day service in March.
The queen wore five poppies pinned to her black coat, said to represent every service in the war: the Army, Navy, RAF, Civil Defense and women.
During the service, the royal family observed a two-minute silence to honor those who have fought for Britain, before the monarch’s son, Prince Charles, places a wreath in his mother’s name at the base of the Cenotaph .
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The #RemembranceSunday, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge joined the Queen and members of the royal family for the annual Remembrance Day service at The Cenotaph. This year @RoyalBritishLegion encouraged all of us to come to our windows and doors for a two-minute silence at 11am. M. From Sunday, November 8, to remember and honor those who have sacrificed to secure and protect our freedom. Swipe to see more of the whole of the UK: Image 3: 94-year-old Merchant Marine veteran Bill Bennett wears his medals while at his home in Kidderminster. Image 4: Jim Healy, 95-year-old D-Day veteran from Manchester. Jim was a corporal in the Royal Marines and helmsman on a landing craft assault on June 6, 1944. Image 5: Veteran Charlie MacVicar, who served 23 years with the Royal Scots, at the Royal British Legion Remembrance Garden in Grangemouth. Image 6: A camera phone is set up to film and livestream a closed and socially estranged remembrance service at Exeter Cathedral. Image 7: Seymour ‘Bill’ Taylor, 95, of Colchester in Essex, who served as a trained sailor in the Royal Navy aboard HMS Emerald during the D-Day landings, joins neighbors on the street to watch the two minutes of silence. Image 8: The National Memorial Arboretum, where a virtual event commemorating the Armed Forces Memorial was streamed online.
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A squire placed one on behalf of the queen’s husband, Prince Philip, 99, who retired from public office in 2017.
The service came after Queen Elizabeth was photographed on Saturday wearing a face mask to protect her from the coronavirus while making a deeply personal visit to the tomb of the unknown warrior at Westminster Abbey.