
The Queen will soon make history when she becomes the longest reigning British monarch - but on the day it will be business as usual for the head of state and her family.
On Wednesday, she will pass
the record set by her great-great-grandmother Queen Victoria who, Buckingham
Palace has calculated, reigned for 23,226 days, 16 hours and 23 minutes.
There has been speculation a celebratory private event is
planned but it is understood that in keeping with the Queen's business-as-usual
approach it will be a normal working day for the monarch with no special dinner
party.
At this time of year the
Queen is taking her traditional summer break at her private Scottish home of
Balmoral.
But on the day she passes
Victoria's milestone, the monarch, joined by the Duke of Edinburgh, will open
the new Scottish Borders Railway and take a steam train ride on the new £294
million railway.
Members of the Royal Family
including the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall will also be working.
Charles will be filming a
documentary with TV presenters Ant and Dec, believed to be about his Prince's
Trust organisation which celebrates its 40th anniversary next year, while
Camilla will visit the ITV studios in London to celebrate the organisation's
60th anniversary.
A royal source said:
"You need to remember for the Queen this is a date whose calculation rests
on the death of her father and great-great-grandmother, that naturally colours
the way she sees it.
"While she
acknowledges it as an historic moment, it's also for her not a moment she would
personally celebrate, which is why she has been keen to convey business as
usual, and no fuss."
Historian Dr Kate Williams
described the length of the Queen's reign as a great source of strength for the
monarch.
"It's a very significant milestone. The Queen will become
the longest reigning British monarch in history. She came to the throne when
she was older than Victoria. Victoria was only 18," Dr Williams said.
"It shows that our
female monarchs last the longest. The Queen's longevity is a great source of
her strength and popularity. She has lived through World War Two and throughout
the 20th century. Many people will not have known a different monarch."
Queen Victoria, who died in
1901, acceded to the throne on June 20 1837 and became the figurehead of a vast
empire amid great industrial, cultural and scientific changes to society.
But she mourned the early
death of her consort Prince Albert in 1861 for the rest of her life.
Princess Elizabeth became
Queen Elizabeth II when she was 25 on the death of her father King George VI on
February 6 1952. Like Victoria, she has acted as a figure of continuity as the
country has modernised.
She is the second-longest serving monarch in the world after
King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand, who took to the throne in 1946 but who is
now rarely seen in public.
The record of length of
time on the throne can be calculated in different ways, but the Palace
considers the total number of days plus hours and minutes to be the most
accurate.
The Queen passes Victoria's
record at around 5.30pm on Wednesday when she will have reigned for 23,226 days
16 hours and approximately 30 minutes - but the exact moment she became Queen
is hard to calculate as George VI died in his sleep in the early hours of the
morning, possibly at around 1am.
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