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Fresh from charming leaders at the Group of Seven summit, Queen Elizabeth II was back at her residence at Windsor Castle on Saturday to view a military parade to mark her official birthday.
The 95-year-old monarch sat on a dais to watch the ceremony that despite ongoing social distancing restrictions did not disappoint on the pomp and pageantry front. If she was tired after meeting G-7 leaders, including U.S. President Joe Biden, on Friday evening, it didnтАЩt show.
The ceremony is a gift from the Household Division of army regiments, which has a close affinity with the monarch. It featured soldiers who have played an integral role in the COVID-19 response, as well as those who have been serving on military operations. She was seen beaming from ear to ear as the nine planes of the Royal Air ForceтАЩs Red Arrows flew past in formation and let loose their red, white and blue smoke.
The Queen’s Colour of F Company Scots Guards @scots_guards was trooped at The Queen’s Birthday Parade 2021.
Whilst the format was a little different this year, #TroopingtheColour has marked the official birthday of the British Sovereign for over 260 years. pic.twitter.com/BER4eyoa7J
тАФ The Royal Family (@RoyalFamily) June 12, 2021
The traditional Trooping the Colour ceremony is normally staged in London and features hundreds of servicemen and women and thousands of spectators. However, for the second year running, that was not possible and it was a slimmed-down affair in the grounds of Windsor Castle, which is around 27 miles (44 kilometers) west of the capital.
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Dubbed a mini Trooping the Colour, it featured soldiers in ceremonial scarlet coats and bearskin hats. The servicemen and women on parade numbered almost 275, with 70 horses, compared with the 85 soldiers who took part in the ceremony last summer. A small handful of seated guests lined part of the quadrangle тАФ a change from last year when only the military were present.
The ceremony originated from traditional preparations for battle. The colours тАФ or flags тАФ were тАЬtrooped,тАЭ or carried down the lines of soldiers, so they could be seen and recognized in battle.
Lieutenant Colonel Guy Stone, who planned the queenтАЩs official birthday celebrations in Windsor CastleтАЩs quadrangle, said he wanted to create a тАЬmemorable and uplifting dayтАЭ for the monarch.
The ceremony took place a couple of months after the death of her 99-year-old husband Prince Philip, whose funeral also took place at Windsor Castle.
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Though she has been mourning the loss of her husband of 73 years, the queen has carried on performing her duties, including delivering a government-scripted speech to mark the new session of parliament.
On Friday, she was the star turn at a reception with the G-7 leaders and their spouses at the Eden Project, a futuristic botanical garden housed inside domes that features the worldтАЩs largest indoor rainforest.
She drew laughter from her guests as she chided them during a group photo session: тАЬAre you supposed to be looking as if youтАЩre enjoying yourself?тАЭ
Though the queenтАЩs actual birthday is on April 26, she celebrates another one in June when the British weather тАФ it is hoped тАФ is more conducive to outdoor celebrations. ItтАЩs a royal tradition that goes back to 1748 and the reign of King George II, whose actual birthday was in November.
One of the major parts of the queenтАЩs official birthday is her award of honours to those deemed to have made a positive contribution to society.
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This yearтАЩs honours list┬аhas celebrated those at the forefront of the U.K.тАЩs rapid rollout of coronavirus vaccines over the past few months, which has been credited with turning around the countryтАЩs pandemic response.
Sarah Gilbert, the professor of vaccinology at the University of Oxford who was instrumental in the development of the vaccine being manufactured by pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, and Kate Bingham, the former head of the U.K. Vaccines Taskforce credited for the countryтАЩs successful procurement program, have both been recognized with damehoods.
Though the U.K. has seen EuropeтАЩs highest virus-related death toll, with nearly 128,000 people having lost their lives, its vaccination program has been deemed one of the worldтАЩs speediest and most coherent rollouts.