Queen and flag: A royal farewell
In death as in life, her likeness was ever-present.
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II died at the age of 96 on Sept. 8 after a 70-year reign. Mourners grieved alongside her familiar image, in pictures that spanned a lifetime as Britain’s longest serving monarch. Wearing a crown or hat, smiling broadly or smiling subtly. A woman making history with her very existence.
Another familiar sight among the mourning public was the Union Jack flag. Across Britain, the flag was flown from trees in parks, worn by people in line to view the Queen’s coffin, and used in everyday items like umbrellas and hair ribbons.
AP’s photo team staffed fixed positions to capture a multitude of carefully choreographed ceremonies marking the Queen’s death. AP also told the story in unscheduled, informal gatherings and outpourings of reverence and grief.
Queen Elizabeth II was not an “influencer” in the modern sense. Not a trend-setter or a trend follower. But as Britain bade farewell to its Sovereign, her image and that of the Union Jack were visibly embraced, as it had been for decades.
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