‘Queen Of Our Times: The Life Of Elizabeth II’: 6 Lesser Known Facts Revealed In Her Audio Biography
‘Queen Of Our Times: The Life Of Elizabeth II’: 6 Lesser Known Facts Revealed In Her Audio Biography
Audible has come up with a new audiobook called ‘Queen Of Our Times: The Life Of Elizabeth II’. The book some really interesting insights into the life of the British monarch who ruled for 70 years on the throne.
The longest-serving monarch and a global phenomenon, the life of Queen Elizabeth II has undoubtedly been an eventful one. The audiobook ‘Queen Of Our Times: The Life Of Elizabeth II’, was released on Audible recently. It has been written and narrated by one of Britain’s leading authorities Robert Hardmen. It takes the listeners through the life of one of the most famous women in the world who has gone through good times and bad for longer than most people have been alive.
Here are 6 fascinating facts about Queen Elizabeth II that you probably didn’t know and are worth listening to in the audiobook:
Queen Was Nicknamed Little Lilibet
George V (Grandfather of the Queen) has been credited with inventing the Princess’s lifelong nickname. When the Queen was born, she was called Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor of York, in honour of her mother, paternal grandmother and great-grandmother. “Though others say that it was her own variation on her original name for herself – ‘Tillabet’. Either way, ‘Lilibet’ stuck.” says the author and narrator of the audiobook on Audible.
Queen’s Favourite Was Her Grandpa (George V)
The Queen loved her grandfather immensely. She is also said to have invented her own affectionate name for the King: ‘Grandpa England’. According to George V’s biographer, Kenneth Rose, “There was still a degree of formality to their relationship. On bidding her grandfather goodnight, Elizabeth would reverse towards the door, curtsey and say, ‘I trust Your Majesty will sleep well.’” The Queen also told Elizabeth Longford (a British historian) that “We were much too frightened of him to call him anything other than “Grandpapa”.
Queen Once Decided To Not Have Any More Dogs
The Queen was widely known for her love for dogs, specifically Corgis and Dorgis and has owned over 30 dogs in her lifetime. The audiobook also mentions, “Shortly before her (Queen) the ninetieth birthday, she decided that she would not have any more dogs in future as she did not want any pets to outlive her.” ‘She said for ages that she didn’t want any more dogs,’ as the Countess of Wessex recalled. “After the death of her pet dog Willow in 2018, she was without a corgi for the first time since childhood.” Countess of Wessex further adds, “The decision was overturned during the lockdown when she took on two new puppies, a corgi and a dorgi.”
Queen Fell In Love At First Sight
John Wheeler-Bennett’s biography of George VI includes the following line about Prince Philip. Prince Philips is and was the man with whom Princess Elizabeth had been in love from their first meeting.’ For obvious reasons,the wedding was a landmark moment and it is widely held to be the first time that Princess Elizabeth encountered Prince Philip of Greece, a cousin of the bride. After many successful years of marriage, ‘‘I think the main lesson that we have learned is that tolerance is the one essential ingredient of any happy marriage. You can take it from me that the Queen has the quality of tolerance in abundance.” shared the narrator as per his conversation with Prince Philips. To know more about their exemplary marriage, listen to the audiobook on Audible.in
Queen Taught Michelle Obama A Life Lesson
On their first informal meeting, the Queen and Michelle Obama bonded over a chat about ‘sore feet’ and ‘long receptions’, saying ‘Just two tired ladies oppressed by our shoes’, the First Lady Michelle Obama wrote fondly in her memoirs and captured in the audiobook on Audible. ‘Our friend, the Queen’, the woman who ‘reminded Barack of his no-nonsense grandmother’ and who taught the First lady a lesson for life – ‘Over the course of many visits, she showed me that humanity is more important than protocol or formality.’
Queen Described 1992 As “Annus Horribilus”
On the morning of 20 November 1992, a builder’s lamp had set fire to a curtain in Windsor Castle’s private chapel and by nightfall, much of the Queen’s family home was in ashes. This unfortunate incident had come during the same year in which the Queen had seen the marriages of her three eldest children collapse. A mere four days later, the Queen attended a long-planned civic luncheon at Guildhall in the City of London to mark her forty years on the throne and she stated that ‘Nineteen ninety-two is not a year on which I shall look back with undiluted pleasure. I sometimes wonder how future generations will judge the events of this tumultuous year. I dare say that history will take a slightly more moderate view than that of some contemporary commentators,’ of my more sympathetic correspondents, it has turned out to be an “annus horribilis”.