Ultimately,
Security breaches
At least 12 people have managed to gain unauthorised entry into the palace or its grounds since 1914, including Michael Fagan, who broke into the palace twice in 1982 and entered Queen Elizabeth II's bedroom on the second occasion.
She asked him what his name was, and he said Michael, and he asked her what her name was, and she said what do you want. 'And he said he wanted some food and drink, and she was able to summon the police and the rest is history.
How did Fagan break into the Palace? The July 1982 incident was actually the second of Fagan's two successful break-ins into Buckingham Palace. The first came just a month earlier in June, when Fagan claims that he shimmied up a drainpipe, startling a housemaid, who then contacted security.
Despite the Netflix series showing an earnest conversation between Fagan and The Queen about the state of the United Kingdom under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's rule, Fagan says he never actually spoke to the monarch. She quickly fled the room to get help before they could exchange words.
However, Fagan did go on to commit more crimes. He attacked a Welsh police officer in 1984, and three years later, he was found guilty of indecent exposure. In 1997, Fagan, his wife, and their 20-year-old son were charged with conspiring to sell heroin. He served four years in prison.
Michael was sentenced to two years in jail. He served a few months and was let out early for good behavior. It's said the Queen actually sent him a couple of letters while he was in prison. He returned to his hometown of Derry in Northern Ireland.
In the show, Fagan speaks with the Queen about Margaret Thatcher, detailing his problems with her leadership.
Who Is Michael Fagan, the Man Who Broke Into Queen Elizabeth's Bedroom? The intruder snuck into Buckingham Palace in 1982 and created one of Britain's biggest security scandals.
But while The Crown uses the story to dramatize the economic desperation of the Thatcher era, the real-life intentions of Fagan are a bit more nebulous, even to Fagan himself. The real Michael Fagan, played on screen by Tom Brooke, is very much alive, which means he has made his issues with the episode well known.
The Crown takes some liberties, but is otherwise on par with history! The fifth season of the Netflix series, 'The Crown' dropped earlier this month and has received mixed reactions from audiences. The series is inspired by real-life events of Queen Elizabeth II starting in 1947 when she marries Prince Philip.
There was, indeed, tension between the two women during the 11 years Thatcher reigned as prime minister while the queen reigned as the sovereign — an extraordinary period when one of the world's superpowers was led by two supremely powerful women. But hormones weren't the cause of their icy relationship.
And... it turns out, this one is true! It has been reported that the Queen and Prince Phillip didn't share a bed because of a tradition followed by the upper classes. Not only did the monarch and her husband not share a bed, but it's also believed that they each had separate bedrooms altogether.
A German raider had dropped five high explosive bombs on the Palace. The Royal chapel, inner quadrangle, Palace gates, and the Victoria memorial were all hit by the bombs. Four members of the Palace staff were injured, one of whom would die.
Occupied Royal Palaces, such as Buckingham Palace, are not the private property of The Queen. They are occupied by the Sovereign and held in trust by Crown Estates for future generations. The Queen privately owns two properties, Balmoral Castle and Sandringham House, which are not publicly funded.
Queen Elizabeth's coffin came to its final resting place at Windsor on Monday. This completed its long journey from Balmoral Castle to Edinburgh, then from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall and Westminster Abbey, and then finally to St. George's Chapel in Windsor Castle.
Christopher John Lewis (7 September 1964 – 23 September 1997) was a New Zealand criminal who made an unsuccessful attempt to assassinate Queen Elizabeth II in 1981. He planned later attempts at assassinating other British royal family members but was kept away from them by the authorities in New Zealand.
The Queen's private pool at Buckingham Palace
The Queen has a private indoor swimming pool at Buckingham Palace, which has long been a favourite spot for the entire royal family.
Queen Elizabeth II had several lavish residences that she retreated to at different points throughout the year. Up until her husband Prince Philip's passing in April 2021, the monarch primarily lived in private quarters at the famous 775-room Buckingham Palace in London during the week.
Buckingham Palace, for example, features 188 “modest” staff bedrooms on site. At the same time “this is no standard housekeeping role” according to the ad for a live-in housekeeping assistant by the Royal Household. As Time wrote “That means you actually eat and sleep, full-time, at Buckingham Palace.
Queen Elizabeth II never sat down for an interview with a TV journalist, but in 1968, she and her family were persuaded to allow a BBC crew to follow them around for over a year, to make a fly-on-the-wall documentary about their day-to-day lives (we see this TV event in Season 3 of “The Crown”).
Marcus Simon Sarjeant (born 1963/1964) is a British man who fired six blank shots at Queen Elizabeth II as she rode down The Mall to the Trooping the Colour ceremony in London in 1981.
After a historic 70 years on the throne as Britain's longest-serving monarch, Queen Elizabeth II died at the age of 96, at her home at Balmoral Castle in Scotland, on Sept. 8, 2022. Immediately upon her passing, her eldest son, Prince Charles, became the new king.
What Kate called the Queen. While the rest of the world is required to address Queen Elizabeth as Ma'am or your majesty, those closest to her are allowed to refer to her as Mama, according to Ingrid Seward, the editor of Majesty magazine. Sign up to British Heritage Travel's daily newsletter here!
"Without William, Kate would curtsy to Camilla; with him, she would not," the source continued. "That's unless Prince Charles is present, in which case she would." The order of curtsying, however, can change. This could happen when people marry into the family.