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Where Does The British Royal Family Get Their Money

50 Things You Didn't Know About the British Royal Family

Everyone in the British royal family has his or her own quirks, habits, and secrets that you didn't know.

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Queen Elizabeth II travels with supplies of her own blood

The queen travels with her royal Navy doctor everywhere, but not without her own bag of blood, too. This is typical if she travels to a place where the blood supply is questionable. Learn 15 more royal family travel secrets you never knew.

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The family filmed a secret documentary

A documentary that aired in June of 1969 about the royal family will never be shown to the public again. Why? Queen Elizabeth and her advisors thought that showing the public the royals' everyday life could be too dangerous.

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Every trip calls for an all-black outfit

When King George VI died while then-Princess Elizabeth was in Kenya in 1952, she didn't have an all-black outfit handy to signify her mourning. A dress had to be delivered to her plane when she arrived back in the United Kingdom for her to change into before she came out. Now, the Queen (and the rest of the royal family) never flies without an all-black ensemble.

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The Queen never travels alone

Along with her royal doctor, the Queen travels with 34 people, including a private secretary, a hairdresser, press officers, eight bodyguards, and more. Can you guess the 11 things the Queen never travels without?

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No crust for the Queen

Queen Elizabeth II enjoys a tuna sandwich every now and then, but with the crust cut off, of course.

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The royals BYOB

On trips abroad, Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall have their police bodyguard carry a bag of their favorite drinks—gin and tonic for him, and red wine for her.

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Princes Harry and William love American fast food

When Harry and William were young, Princess Diana asked their family chef to cancel lunch for her sons because they wanted to get McDonald's. Here are some other bizarre eating habits of the royal family.

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Fathers weren't always in the delivery room

When the Queen gave birth to Prince Charles in 1948, Prince Philip was playing squash in the palace. It was customary then that a royal birth was an all-female event, but now fathers are often in the delivery room, too.

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Kate Middleton honored Princess Diana when Prince George was born

When the Duchess of Cambridge stepped out with newborn Prince George for their first appearance after his birth, her light blue, polka dot dress was a subtle tribute to the dress Princess Diana wore after Prince William was born. Here are 19 more times Kate basically wore the same outfit as Princess Diana.

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The Queen's birthday is celebrated twice

For over 260 years, over 1,400 soldiers, 200 horses, and 400 musicians gather to parade around for the official celebration of the sovereign's birthday on the second Saturday in June. It's called the Trooping of Colour. But, Queen Elizabeth's actual birthday is April 21.

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Seafood is off the menu

While traveling, the royal family isn't allowed to eat seafood because shellfish has a high chance of giving someone food sickness.

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The Queen eats from to-go containers

Though many royal dinners are served on the most lavish diamond-encrusted plates, the Queen has eaten fruit and Kellogg's from plastic containers.

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The Queen likes having options

At Buckingham Palace, dinner entrees are hardly random. The Queen selects the meals she wants from a menu book.

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Kate Middleton sits the way Diana did

Royal ladies must never sit with their legs crossed at the knee. Instead, their legs and knees should be kept together. Sitting with their ankles crossed is also acceptable. That's the way Princess Diana would sit, and it's how Kate is usually seen sitting, too.

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Prince Charles is the least favorite

Everyone has his or her own favorite royal, but according to this poll, Charles is the least favorite royal family member by far.

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Royal boys don't wear pants until they turn 8

You'll always spot Prince George in shorts because it's an English tradition that only older boys and men wear pants. What a young boy in the royal family wears dates back to a 16th-century tradition.

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Princess Diana's sister made a special wedding appearance

Lady Jane Fellowes, Prince Harry's aunt, attended and read the Song of Solomon at his wedding as a way of "helping to celebrate the memory of the late Princess." Learn about the real relationship Princess Diana had with her sisters.

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The Queen has a sweet tooth

After a lavish royal dinner, Queen Elizabeth likes to indulge in chocolate. Dark chocolate to be exact.

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Meghan wasn't the first to wear her wedding tiara

The tiara Meghan wore down the aisle belonged to Queen Elizabeth II's grandmother, Queen Mary. Other royal family members who have worn it used a sapphire gem in the middle, while Meghan used a diamond.

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Santa delivers Christmas gifts early for the royal family

Following a German tradition, the royal family opens presents during teatime on Christmas Eve.

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Queen Elizabeth signs Christmas cards "Lilibet"

The royal family sends out 800 Christmas cards during the holidays. The Queen's cousins have their cards signed with her nickname, "Lilibet," while politicians and other heads of states have their cards signed "Elizabeth R." (The "R" stands for "Regina" the Latin word for queen.) Find out more royal family holiday traditions you didn't know about.

Garlic will never be on the royal menu

Queen Elizabeth II hates the taste and smell of garlic.

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Princess Diana's engagement ring was called the "commoner's sapphire"

Princess Diana selected her engagement ring from a Garrad jewelry collection catalog instead of custom making it like many royal brides have in the past.

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Prince William was the first royal not to start school in the palace

Princess Diana sent her son to Mrs. Jane Mynor's nursery school at age 3, making him the first British royal heir not to start his education in the royal palace. Have a look at these sweet photos of royals starting their first day of school.

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Princess Diana's first love was ballet

The people's princess began dancing in Norfalk, England and generously supported the English National Ballet after entering the royal family. Check out these 11 stunning and rarely seen photos of Diana.

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Kate Middleton broke royal protocol in Germany

Kate Middleton greeted a group of children warm hugs while visiting a charity in Germany. Typically, there is a "handshake" only rule. Here are 12 times the royal family broke their own protocol.

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The Queen owns gloves from 40 years ago

Each pair of the Queen's gloves cost around £110 ($140), so she often gets them washed and repaired instead of buying new ones. Her glove maker has been the same since her honeymoon in 1947. Find out the real reason the Queen always wears her gloves.

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The royal family member with the highest net worth isn't the Queen

The tiny, adorable Princess Charlotte actually holds the crown for the royal family member with the highest net worth with an estimated worth of $5 billion. Find out which royal family member has the second highest net worth.

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The royal family doesn't waste food

Prince Charles and Princess Diana were known to keep leftover food to be included in their next meal. Take a look at these 12 rare photos of Buckingham Palace, where the royal family often eats.

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Prince Harry and Meghan Markle broke the wedding cake tradition

The couple served a lemon elderflower cake with buttercream frosting at their royal wedding.

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A bagpipe player wakes the Queen each morning

Every morning from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., a Scottish piper plays under Queen Elizabeth II's window, per her request. You would never believe the highest paying job working for the royal family.

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Royal luggage is color coded

To keep the royal luggage secure and organized, the Queen always has a yellow tag, Prince Charles and Prince William will get red, and Princess Anne typically gets green. Find out other royal family travel secrets you never knew.

Originally Published: July 26, 2019

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Where Does The British Royal Family Get Their Money

Source: https://www.rd.com/list/things-didnt-know-about-british-royal-family/

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