Britain's royals remember Queen Elizabeth II on what would have been her 100th birthday

King Charles III and Queen Camilla visit an exhibition of the late queen's fashion. Britain's royal family will mark what would have been the late Queen Elizabeth II's 100th birthday by unveiling plans for a new charity and memorial in central London.

King Charles III and Queen Camilla visit an exhibition of the late queen's fashion. Britain's royal family will mark what would have been the late Queen Elizabeth II's 100th birthday by unveiling plans for a new charity and memorial in central London. (Aaron Chown, Getty Images via CNN )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The British royal family honors Queen Elizabeth II's 100th birthday with events.
  • King Charles III and Queen Camilla will visit the British Museum Tuesday.

LONDON — Britain's royal family will mark what would have been the late Queen Elizabeth II's 100th birthday by unveiling comprehensive plans for a new charity and memorial in central London.

Several events are planned for Tuesday to honor Britain's longest-serving monarch, who died nearly four years ago at the age of 96.

Her son King Charles III and his wife Queen Camilla will visit the British Museum in London to view designs of the planned memorial, while her daughter Princess Anne will officially open the Queen Elizabeth II Garden in Regent's Park, London. In a video posted on the Royal Family's YouTube channel, Charles also reflected on his mother's legacy.

"Her near century was one of remarkable change, and yet, through each passing decade, through every transformation, she remained constant, steadfast and wholly devoted to the people she served," the king said in his personal message.

The planned memorial will reshape London's St. James's Park, featuring a translucent glass "unity" bridge evoking the tiara she wore on her wedding day, as well as statues of Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Philip.

The statue of Elizabeth will be wrought from bronze by sculptor Martin Jennings, taking inspiration from the famous Pietro Annigoni portrait depicting the queen clothed in the robes of the Order of the Garter and looking into the distance, the United Kingdom's Cabinet Office announced Monday.

As well as the planned memorial in St. James's Park, there will be a digital memorial containing archival material of Elizabeth's reign. People around the world will be able to reflect on their own memories of the late queen and "tag them to events and locations on the site," the Cabinet Office said.

A new charity named the Queen Elizabeth Trust, kick-started by a one-off $54-million endowment, will also continue the late queen's legacy, providing funding for "places at the heart of local life such as community centers and green spaces," the Cabinet Office said.

Later on Tuesday, Charles and Camilla will invite representatives from charities that Elizabeth championed, as well as people celebrating their own 100th birthday, to Buckingham Palace.

Commemorative stamps and coins have also been released, and Buckingham Palace is hosting a months-long exhibition featuring the largest public display of Elizabeth's fashion.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Issy Ronald and Max Foster

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