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Diana, Princess of Wales

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Diana, Princess of Wales (born Diana Frances Spencer; 1 July 1961 – 31 August 1997), was a member of the British royal family. She was the first wife of Charles III (then Prince of Wales) and mother of Princes William and Harry. Her activism and glamour, which made her an international icon, earned her enduring popularity.

Key Information

Diana was born into the British nobility and grew up close to the royal family, living at Park House on their Sandringham estate. In 1981, while working as a nursery teacher's assistant, she became engaged to Charles, the eldest son of Queen Elizabeth II. Their wedding took place at St Paul's Cathedral in July 1981 and made her Princess of Wales, a role in which she was enthusiastically received by the public. The couple had two sons, William and Harry, who were then respectively second and third in the line of succession to the British throne. Diana's marriage to Charles suffered due to their incompatibility and extramarital affairs. They separated in 1992, soon after the breakdown of their relationship became public knowledge. Their marital difficulties were widely publicised, and the couple divorced in 1996.

As Princess of Wales, Diana undertook royal duties on behalf of the Queen and represented her at functions across the Commonwealth realms. She was celebrated in the media for her beauty, style, charm, and later, her unconventional approach to charity work. Her patronages were initially centred on children and the elderly, but she later became known for her involvement in two particular campaigns: one involved the social attitudes towards and the acceptance of AIDS patients, and the other for the removal of landmines, promoted through the International Red Cross. She also raised awareness and advocated for ways to help people affected by cancer and mental illness. Diana was initially noted for her shyness, but her charisma and friendliness endeared her to the public and helped her reputation survive the public collapse of her marriage. Considered photogenic, she was regarded as a fashion icon.

In August 1997, Diana died after a car crash in Paris; the incident led to extensive public mourning and global media attention. An inquest returned a verdict of unlawful killing due to gross negligence by a driver and the paparazzi pursuing her as found in Operation Paget, an investigation by the Metropolitan Police. Her legacy has had a significant effect on the royal family and British society.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Diana Frances Spencer was born on 1 July 1961, the fourth of five children of John Spencer, Viscount Althorp (1924–1992), and Frances Spencer, Viscountess Althorp (née Roche; 1936–2004).[2] She was delivered at Park House, Sandringham, Norfolk.[3] The Spencer family had been closely allied with the British royal family for several generations;[4] her grandmothers, Cynthia Spencer, Countess Spencer, and Ruth Roche, Baroness Fermoy, had served as ladies-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.[5] Her parents were hoping for a boy to carry on the family line, and no name was chosen for a week until they settled on Diana Frances after her mother and Lady Diana Spencer, a many-times-great-aunt who was also a prospective Princess of Wales as a potential bride for Frederick, Prince of Wales.[6] Within the family, she was also known informally as "Duch", a reference to her duchess-like attitude in childhood.[7]

On 30 August 1961,[8] Diana was baptised at St. Mary Magdalene Church, Sandringham.[6] She grew up with three siblings: Sarah, Jane, and Charles.[9] Her infant brother, John, died shortly after his birth one year before Diana was born.[10] The desire for an heir added strain to her parents' marriage, and Lady Althorp was sent to Harley Street clinics in London to determine the cause of the "problem".[6] The experience was described as "humiliating" by Diana's younger brother, Charles: "It was a dreadful time for my parents and probably the root of their divorce because I don't think they ever got over it".[6] Diana grew up in Park House, situated on the Sandringham estate.[11] The family leased the house from its owner, Queen Elizabeth II, whom Diana called "Aunt Lilibet" since childhood.[12] The royal family frequently holidayed at the neighbouring Sandringham House, and Diana played with Princes Andrew and Edward.[13]

Althorp (pictured in 2006), the Spencer family seat

Diana was seven years old when her parents divorced.[14] Her mother later began a relationship with Peter Shand Kydd and married him in 1969.[15] Diana lived with her mother in London during her parents' separation in 1967, but during that year's Christmas holidays, Lord Althorp refused to let his daughter return to London with Lady Althorp. Shortly afterwards, he won custody of Diana with support from his former mother-in-law, Lady Fermoy.[16] In 1976, Lord Althorp married Raine, Countess of Dartmouth.[17] Diana's relationship with her stepmother was particularly bad.[18] She resented Raine, whom she called a "bully". On one occasion Diana pushed her down the stairs.[18] She later described her childhood as "very unhappy" and "very unstable, the whole thing".[19] She became known as Lady Diana after her father later inherited the title of Earl Spencer in 1975, at which point her father moved the entire family from Park House to Althorp, the Spencer seat in Northamptonshire.[20]

Education and career

[edit]

Diana was initially home-schooled under the supervision of her governess, Gertrude Allen.[21] She began her formal education at Silfield Private School in King's Lynn, Norfolk, and moved to Riddlesworth Hall School, an all-girls boarding school near Thetford, when she was nine.[22] She joined her sisters at West Heath Girls' School in Sevenoaks, Kent, in 1973.[23] She did not perform well academically, failing her O-levels twice.[24][25] Her outstanding community spirit was recognised with an award from West Heath.[26] She left West Heath when she was sixteen.[27] Her brother Charles recalls her as being quite shy up until that time.[28] She demonstrated musical ability as a skilled pianist.[26] She also excelled in swimming and diving, and studied ballet and tap dance.[29]

Coleherne Court in Chelsea, London, where Diana lived between 1979 and 1981. An English Heritage blue plaque is located at the address.

In the mid-1970s, Diana did voluntary work at the psychiatric Darenth Park Hospital near Dartford, Kent.[30] In 1978 Diana worked for three months as a nanny for Philippa and Jeremy Whitaker in Hampshire.[31] After attending Institut Alpin Videmanette (a finishing school in Rougemont, Switzerland) for one term, and leaving after the Easter term of 1978,[32] Diana returned to London, where she shared her mother's flat with two school friends.[33] In London, she took an advanced cooking course and worked at a series of low-paying jobs; she worked as a dance instructor for youth until a skiing accident caused her to miss three months of work.[34] She then found employment as a playgroup pre-school assistant, did some cleaning work for her sister Sarah and several of her friends, and acted as a hostess at parties. She spent time working as a nanny for the Robertsons, an American family living in London,[35][36] and worked as a nursery teacher's assistant at the Young England School in Pimlico.[37] In July 1979, her mother bought her a flat at Coleherne Court in Earl's Court as an 18th birthday present.[38] She lived there with three flatmates until 25 February 1981.[39]

Personal life

[edit]

Diana first met Charles, Prince of Wales, the Queen's eldest son and heir apparent, when she was 16 in November 1977. He was then 29 and dating her older sister, Sarah.[40][41] Charles and Diana were guests at a country weekend during the summer of 1980 and he took a serious interest in her as a potential bride.[42] The relationship progressed when he invited her aboard the royal yacht Britannia for a sailing weekend to Cowes. This was followed by an invitation to Balmoral Castle (the royal family's Scottish residence) to meet his family.[43][44] She was well received by the Queen, the Queen Mother and the Duke of Edinburgh. Charles subsequently courted Diana in London. He proposed on 6 February 1981 at Windsor Castle, and she accepted, but their engagement was kept secret for two and a half weeks.[39]

Engagement and wedding

[edit]
Diana and Charles's wedding commemorated on a stamp by the Post of Seychelles

Their engagement became official on 24 February 1981.[21] Diana selected her own engagement ring.[21] Following the engagement, she left her occupation as a nursery teacher's assistant and temporarily lived at the Queen Mother's residence, Clarence House.[45] She subsequently resided at Buckingham Palace until the wedding,[45] where, according to the biographer Ingrid Seward, her life was "incredibly lonely".[46] Diana was the first Englishwoman to marry the first in line to the throne since Anne Hyde married James, Duke of York and Albany (later James VII and II), over 300 years earlier, and she was also the first royal bride to have a paying job before her engagement.[21][26] Diana's first public appearance with Charles was at a charity ball held at Goldsmiths' Hall in March 1981, where she was introduced to Princess Grace of Monaco.[45]

Diana became Princess of Wales at age 20 when she married Charles, then 32, on 29 July 1981. The wedding was held at St Paul's Cathedral, which offered more seating than Westminster Abbey, a church that was generally used for royal weddings.[21][26] The service was widely described as a "fairytale wedding" and was watched by a global television audience of 750 million people while 600,000 spectators lined the streets to catch a glimpse of the couple en route to the ceremony.[21][47] At the altar, Diana inadvertently reversed the order of his first two names, saying "Philip Charles" Arthur George instead.[47] She did not say she would "obey" him; that traditional vow was left out at the couple's request, which caused some comment at the time.[48] Diana wore a dress valued at £9,000 (equivalent to £43,573 in 2023) with a 25-foot (7.62-metre) train.[49] Within a few years of the wedding, the Queen extended Diana visible tokens of membership in the royal family, lending her the Queen Mary's Lover's Knot Tiara[50][51] and granting her the badge of the Royal Family Order of Elizabeth II.[52][53]

Children

[edit]

The couple had residences at Kensington Palace and Highgrove House, near Tetbury. On 5 November 1981, Diana's pregnancy was announced.[54] In January 1982—12 weeks into the pregnancy—Diana fell down a staircase at Sandringham, suffering some bruising, and the royal gynaecologist George Pinker was summoned from London; the foetus was uninjured.[55] Diana later confessed that she had intentionally thrown herself down the stairs because she was feeling "so inadequate".[56] On 21 June 1982, she gave birth to the couple's first son, Prince William.[57] She subsequently suffered from postpartum depression after her first pregnancy.[58] Amidst some media criticism, she decided to take William—who was still a baby—on her first major tours of Australia and New Zealand, and the decision was popularly applauded. By her own admission, Diana had not initially intended to take William until Australian prime minister Malcolm Fraser made the suggestion.[59]

A second son, Harry, was born on 15 September 1984.[60] Diana said she and Charles were closest during her pregnancy with Harry.[61] She was aware their second child was a boy, but did not share the knowledge with anyone else, including Charles, who hoped for a girl.[62]

Diana gave her sons wider experiences than was usual for royal children.[21][63][64] She rarely deferred to Charles or to the royal family, and was often intransigent when it came to the children. She chose their first given names, dismissed a royal family nanny and engaged one of her own choosing, selected their schools and clothing, planned their outings, and took them to school herself as often as her schedule permitted. She also organised her public duties around their timetables.[65] Diana was reported to have described Harry as "naughty, just like me", and William as "my little wise old man" whom she started to rely on as her confidant by his early teens.[66]

Problems and separation

[edit]
With Charles during the royal tour of Australia in 1983

Five years into the marriage, the couple's incompatibility and age difference became visible and damaging.[67] In 1986, Diana began a relationship with James Hewitt, the family's former riding instructor and in the same year, Charles resumed his relationship with his former girlfriend Camilla Parker Bowles. The media speculated that Hewitt, not Charles, was Harry's father based on the alleged physical similarity between Hewitt and Harry, but Hewitt and others have denied this. Harry was born two years before Diana and Hewitt met and began their affair.[61][68]

By 1987, cracks in the marriage had become visible and the couple's unhappiness and cold attitude towards one another were being reported by the press,[46][69] who dubbed them "the Glums" because of their evident discomfort in each other's company.[70][71] In 1989, Diana was at a birthday party for Parker Bowles's sister, Annabel Elliot, when she confronted Parker Bowles about her and Charles's extramarital affair.[72][73] These affairs were later exposed in 1992 with the publication of Andrew Morton's book, Diana: Her True Story.[74][75] The book, which also revealed Diana's allegedly suicidal unhappiness, caused a media storm. In 1991, James Colthurst conducted secret interviews with Diana in which she had talked about her marital issues and difficulties. These recordings were later used as a source for Morton's book.[76][77] During her lifetime, both Diana and Morton denied her direct involvement in the writing process and maintained that family and friends were the book's main source; however, after her death Morton acknowledged Diana's role in writing the tell-all in the book's updated edition, Diana: Her True Story in Her Own Words.[78]

The Queen and Prince Philip hosted a meeting between Charles and Diana and unsuccessfully tried to effect a reconciliation.[79] Philip wrote to Diana and expressed his disappointment at the extramarital affairs of both her and Charles; he asked her to examine their behaviour from the other's point of view.[80] Diana reportedly found the letters difficult, but nevertheless appreciated that he was acting with good intent.[81] It was alleged by some people, including Diana's close friend Simone Simmons, that Diana and Philip had a tense relationship;[82][83][84] however, other observers said their letters provided no sign of friction between them.[85] Philip later issued a statement, publicly denying allegations of his insulting Diana.[86]

During 1992 and 1993, leaked tapes of telephone conversations reflected negatively on both Charles and Diana. Tape recordings of Diana and James Gilbey were made public in August 1992,[87] and transcripts were published the same month in what became known as Squidgygate.[21] In December 1992, Prime Minister John Major announced the couple's "amicable separation" to the House of Commons.[88][89] Early the following year, the leaked Tampongate tapes, which included intimate exchanges between Charles and Parker Bowles, were published in the tabloids.[90][91]

Carrying out an engagement in South Shields, 1992

Between 1992 and 1993, Diana hired a voice coach, Peter Settelen, to help her develop her public speaking voice.[92] In a videotape recorded by Settelen in 1992, Diana said that in 1984 through to 1986, she had been "deeply in love with someone who worked in this environment".[93][94] It is thought she was referring to Barry Mannakee,[95] who was transferred to the Diplomatic Protection Squad in 1986 after his managers had determined that his relationship with Diana had been inappropriate.[94][96] Diana said in the tape that Mannakee had been "chucked out" from his role as her bodyguard following suspicion that the two were having an affair.[93] Penny Junor suggested in her 1998 book that Diana was in a romantic relationship with Mannakee.[97] Diana's friends dismissed the claim as absurd.[97] In the subsequently released tapes, Diana said she had feelings for that "someone", saying "I was quite happy to give all this up [and] just to go off and live with him". She described him as "the greatest friend [she's] ever had", though she denied any sexual relationship with him.[98] She also spoke bitterly of her husband saying that "[He] made me feel so inadequate in every possible way, that each time I came up for air he pushed me down again."[99][100]

Although she blamed Parker Bowles for her marital troubles, Diana began to believe her husband had been involved in other affairs. In October 1993 Diana wrote to her butler Paul Burrell, telling him that she believed her husband was now in love with his personal assistant Tiggy Legge-Bourke—who was also his sons' former nanny—and was planning to have her killed "to make the path clear for him to marry Tiggy".[101][102] Legge-Bourke had been hired by Charles as a young companion for his sons while they were in his care, and Diana was resentful of Legge-Bourke and her relationship with the young princes.[103] Charles sought public understanding via a televised interview with Jonathan Dimbleby on 29 June 1994. In the interview, he said he had rekindled his relationship with Parker Bowles in 1986 only after his marriage to Diana had "irretrievably broken down".[104][105][106] In the same year, Diana's affair with Hewitt was exposed in detail in the book Princess in Love by Anna Pasternak, with Hewitt acting as the main source.[66] Diana was evidently disturbed and outraged when the book was released, although Pasternak claimed Hewitt had acted with Diana's support to avoid having the affair covered in Andrew Morton's second book.[66] In the same year, the News of the World claimed that Diana had had an affair with the married art dealer Oliver Hoare.[107][108] According to Hoare's obituary, there was little doubt she had been in a relationship with him.[109] However, Diana denied any romantic relationship with Hoare, whom she described as a friend.[110][111] She was also linked by the press to the rugby union player Will Carling[112][113] and private equity investor Theodore J. Forstmann,[114][115] yet these claims were neither confirmed nor proven.[116][117]

Divorce

[edit]
Kensington Palace (pictured in 2018), Diana's home and the site of her 1995 Panorama interview

The journalist Martin Bashir interviewed Diana for the BBC current affairs show Panorama. The interview was broadcast on 20 November 1995.[118] Diana discussed her own and her husband's extramarital affairs.[119] Referring to Charles's relationship with Parker Bowles, she said: "Well, there were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded." She also expressed doubt about her husband's suitability for kingship.[118] The authors Tina Brown, Sally Bedell Smith, and Sarah Bradford support Diana's admission in the interview that she had suffered from depression, bulimia and had engaged numerous times in the act of self-harm; the show's transcript records Diana confirming many of her mental health problems.[118] The combination of illnesses from which Diana herself said she suffered resulted in some of her biographers opining that she had borderline personality disorder.[120][121] It was later revealed that Bashir had used forged bank statements to win Diana and her brother's trust to secure the interview, falsely indicating people close to her had been paid for spying.[122] Lord Dyson conducted an independent inquiry into the issue and concluded that Bashir had "little difficulty in playing on [Diana's] fears and paranoia", a sentiment that was shared by Diana's son William.[123][124]

The interview proved to be the tipping point. On 20 December, Buckingham Palace announced that the Queen had sent letters to Charles and Diana, advising them to divorce.[125][126] The Queen's move was backed by Prime Minister John Major and by senior privy counsellors, and, according to the BBC, was decided after two weeks of talks.[127] Charles formally agreed to the divorce in a written statement soon after.[125] In February 1996, Diana announced her agreement after negotiations with Charles and representatives of the Queen,[128] irritating Buckingham Palace by issuing her own announcement of the divorce agreement and its terms. In July 1996, the couple agreed on the terms of their divorce.[129] This followed shortly after Diana's accusation that Charles's personal assistant Tiggy Legge-Bourke had aborted his child, after which Legge-Bourke instructed her solicitor Peter Carter-Ruck to demand an apology.[130][131] Diana's private secretary Patrick Jephson resigned shortly before the story broke, later writing that Diana had "exulted in accusing Legge-Bourke of having had an abortion".[132][133] The rumours of Legge-Bourke's alleged abortion were apparently spread by Martin Bashir as a means to gain his Panorama interview with Diana.[134]

The decree nisi was granted on 15 July 1996 and the divorce was finalised on 28 August 1996.[135][136] Diana was represented by Anthony Julius in the case.[137] The couple shared custody of their children.[138] She received a lump sum settlement of £17 million (equivalent to £40 million in 2023) as well as £400,000 per year. The couple signed a confidentiality agreement that prohibited them from discussing the details of the divorce or of their married life.[139][129] Days before, letters patent were issued with general rules to regulate royal titles after divorce. Diana lost the style "Her Royal Highness" and instead was styled Diana, Princess of Wales. As the mother of the prince expected to one day ascend to the throne, she was still considered to be a member of the royal family and was accorded the same precedence she enjoyed during her marriage.[140] The Queen reportedly wanted to let Diana continue to use the style of Royal Highness after her divorce, but Charles had insisted on removing it.[129] Prince William was reported to have reassured his mother: "Don't worry, Mummy, I will give it back to you one day when I am king".[141] Almost a year before, according to Tina Brown, Philip had warned Diana: "If you don't behave, my girl, we'll take your title away." She is said to have replied: "My title is a lot older than yours, Philip."[142]

Post-divorce

[edit]

After her divorce, Diana retained the double apartment on the north side of Kensington Palace that she had shared with Charles since the first year of their marriage; the apartment remained her home until her death the following year. She also moved her offices to Kensington Palace but was permitted "to use the state apartments at St James's Palace".[129][143] In a book published in 2003, Paul Burrell claimed Diana's private letters had revealed that her brother, Lord Spencer, had refused to allow her to live at Althorp, despite her request.[131] The allegations were proven to be untrue as Spencer received legal apologies from different newspapers, including The Times in 2021, which admitted that "having considered his sister's safety, and in line with police advice, the Earl offered the Princess of Wales a number of properties including Wormleighton Manor, the Spencer family's original ancestral home".[144] However, he could not offer Garden House cottage on the Althorp estate to Diana as the home was intended for a member of staff.[144]

Diana was also given an allowance to run her private office, which was responsible for her charity work and royal duties, but from September 1996 onwards she was required to pay her bills and "any expenditure" incurred by her or on her behalf.[145] Furthermore, she continued to have access to the jewellery that she had received during her marriage, and was allowed to use the air transport of the British royal family and government.[129] Diana was also offered security by Metropolitan Police's Royalty Protection Group, which she benefitted from while travelling with her sons, but had refused it in the final years of her life, in an attempt to distance herself from the royal family.[146][147] After her death, it was revealed that Diana had been in discussion with Major's successor, Tony Blair, about a special role that would provide a government platform for her campaigns and charities to make her capable of endorsing Britain's interests overseas.[148]

Diana retained close friendships with several celebrities, including Elton John, Liza Minnelli, George Michael, Michael Jackson, and Gianni Versace, whose funeral she attended in 1997.[149][150] She dated the British-Pakistani heart surgeon Hasnat Khan, who was called "the love of her life" by many of her closest friends after her death,[151][152][153] and she is said to have described him as "Mr. Wonderful".[154][155][156][157] In May 1996, Diana visited Lahore upon invitation of Imran Khan, a relative of Hasnat Khan, and visited the latter's family in secret.[158][159] Khan was intensely private and the relationship was conducted in secrecy, with Diana lying to members of the press who questioned her about it. Their relationship lasted almost two years with differing accounts of who ended it.[159][160] She is said to have spoken of her distress when he ended their relationship.[151] However, according to Khan's testimony at the inquest into her death, it was Diana who ended their relationship in the summer of 1997.[161] Burrell also said the relationship was ended by Diana in July 1997.[82] Burrell also claimed that Diana's mother, Frances Shand Kydd, disapproved of her daughter's relationship with a Muslim man.[162] By the time of Diana's death in 1997, she had not spoken to her mother in four months.[163][164] By contrast, her relationship with her estranged stepmother had reportedly improved.[165][166]

Within a month, Diana began a relationship with Dodi Fayed, the son of her summer host, Mohamed Al-Fayed.[167] That summer, Diana had considered taking her sons on a holiday to the Hamptons on Long Island, New York, but security officials had prevented it. After deciding against a trip to Thailand, she accepted Fayed's invitation to join his family in the south of France, where his compound and large security detail would not cause concern to the Royal Protection squad. Mohamed Al-Fayed bought the Jonikal, a 60-metre multimillion-pound yacht on which to entertain Diana and her sons.[167][168][169] Tina Brown later claimed that Diana's romance with Fayed and her four-month relationship with Gulu Lalvani were a ploy "to inflame the true object of her affections, Hasnat Khan".[66] In the years after her death, Burrell, journalist Richard Kay, and voice coach Stewart Pearce have claimed that Diana was also thinking about buying a property in the United States.[170][171][172]

Princess of Wales

[edit]
In Halifax, Nova Scotia, 1983

Following her engagement to Charles, Diana made her first official public appearance in March 1981 in a charity event at Goldsmiths' Hall.[173][174] She attended the Trooping the Colour for the first time in June 1981, making her appearance on the balcony of Buckingham Palace afterwards. In October 1981, Charles and Diana visited Wales.[26][175] She attended the State Opening of Parliament for the first time on 4 November 1981.[176] Her first solo engagement was a visit to Regent Street on 18 November 1981 to switch on the Christmas lights.[177] Diana made her inaugural overseas tour in September 1982, to attend the funeral of Princess Grace of Monaco.[26] Also in 1982, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands created Diana a Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown.[178] In 1983, Diana accompanied Charles and William on a tour of Australia and New Zealand. The tour was a success and the couple drew immense crowds, though the press focused more on Diana rather than Charles, coining the term 'Dianamania' as a reference to people's obsession with her.[179] While sitting in a car with Charles near the Sydney Opera House, Diana burst into tears for a few minutes, which their office stated was due to jet lag and the heat.[180] In New Zealand, the couple met with representatives of the Māori people.[26] Their visit to Canada in June and July 1983 included a trip to Edmonton to open the 1983 Summer Universiade and a stop in Newfoundland to commemorate the 400th anniversary of that island's acquisition by the Crown.[181] In 1983, she was targeted by the Scottish National Liberation Army who tried to deliver a letter bomb to her.[182]

Diana and Charles with Nancy and Ronald Reagan, November 1985

In February 1984, Diana was the patron of London City Ballet when she travelled to Norway on her own to attend a performance organised by the company.[26] In April 1985, Charles and Diana visited Italy, and were later joined by their sons.[26] They met with President Alessandro Pertini. Their visit to the Holy See included a private audience with Pope John Paul II.[183] In autumn 1985, they returned to Australia, and their tour was well received by the public and the media, who referred to Diana as "Di-amond Princess" and the "Jewel in the Crown".[184] In November 1985, the couple visited the United States,[26] meeting President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan at the White House. Diana had a busy year in 1986 as she and Charles toured Japan, Spain, and Canada.[181] In Canada, they visited Expo 86,[181] where Diana fainted in the California Pavilion.[185][186] In November 1986, she went on a six-day tour to Oman, Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, where she met King Fahd of Saudi Arabia and Sultan Qaboos of Oman.[187]

In 1988, Charles and Diana visited Thailand and toured Australia for the bicentenary celebrations.[26][188] In February 1989, she spent a few days in New York as a solo visit, mainly to promote the works of the Welsh National Opera, of which she was a patron.[189] During a tour of Harlem Hospital Center, she spontaneously hugged a seven-year-old child with AIDS.[190] In March 1989, she had her second trip to the Arab states of the Persian Gulf, in which she visited Kuwait and the UAE.[187]

With Barbara Bush in the Yellow Oval Room, 1990

In March 1990, Diana and Charles toured Nigeria and Cameroon.[191] Cameroonian president Paul Biya hosted an official dinner to welcome them in Yaoundé.[191] Highlights of the tour included visits by Diana to hospitals and projects focusing on women's development.[191] In May 1990, they visited Hungary for four days.[190][192] It was the first visit by members of the royal family to "a former Warsaw Pact country".[190] They attended a dinner hosted by President Árpád Göncz and viewed a fashion display at the Museum of Applied Arts in Budapest.[192] Pető Institute was among the places visited by Diana, and she presented its director with an honorary OBE.[190] In November 1990, she and Charles went to Japan to attend the enthronement of Emperor Akihito.[26][193]

In her desire to play an encouraging role during the Gulf War, Diana visited Germany in December 1990 to meet with the families of soldiers.[190] She subsequently travelled to Germany in January 1991 to visit RAF Bruggen, and later wrote an encouraging letter which was published in Soldier, Navy News and RAF News.[190] In 1991, Charles and Diana visited Queen's University at Kingston, Ontario, where they presented the university with a replica of their royal charter.[194] In September 1991, Diana visited Pakistan on a solo trip, and went to Brazil with Charles.[195] During the Brazilian tour, Diana paid visits to organisations that battled homelessness among street children.[195] Her final trips with Charles were to India and South Korea in 1992.[26] She visited Mother Teresa's hospice in Kolkata, India.[196] The two women met later in the same month in Rome[197] and developed a personal relationship.[196] It was also during the Indian tour that pictures of Diana alone in front of the Taj Mahal made headlines.[198][199][200] In May 1992, she went on a solo tour of Egypt, visiting the Giza pyramid complex and attending a meeting with Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.[201][202] In November 1992, she went on an official solo trip to France and had an audience with President François Mitterrand.[203] In March 1993, she went on her first solo trip after her separation from Charles, visiting a leprosy hospital in Nepal where she met and came into contact with some patients, marking the first time they had ever been touched by a dignitary who had come to visit.[204] In December 1993, she announced that she would withdraw from public life, but in November 1994 she said she wished to "make a partial return".[26][190] In her capacity as the vice-president of British Red Cross, she was interested in playing an important role for its 125th anniversary celebrations.[190] Later, the Queen formally invited her to attend the anniversary celebrations of D-Day.[26] In February 1995, Diana visited Japan.[193] She paid a formal visit to Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko,[193] and visited the National Children's Hospital in Tokyo.[205] In June 1995, Diana went to the Venice Biennale art festival,[206] and also visited Moscow where she received the International Leonardo Prize.[207] In November 1995, Diana undertook a four-day trip to Argentina to attend a charity event.[208] She visited many other countries, including Belgium, Switzerland, and Zimbabwe, alongside numerous others.[26] During her separation from Charles, which lasted for almost four years, Diana participated in major national occasions as a senior member of the royal family, notably including "the commemorations of the 50th anniversaries of Victory in Europe Day and Victory over Japan Day" in 1995.[26]

Charity work and patronages

[edit]

In 1983 Diana confided to the premier of Newfoundland, Brian Peckford, "I am finding it very difficult to cope with the pressures of being Princess of Wales, but I am learning to cope with it".[209] She was expected to make regular public appearances at hospitals, schools, and other facilities, in the 20th-century model of royal patronage. From the mid-1980s, she became increasingly associated with numerous charities. She carried out 191 official engagements in 1988[210] and 397 in 1991.[211] Diana developed an intense interest in serious illnesses and health-related matters outside the purview of traditional royal involvement, including AIDS and leprosy. In recognition of her effect as a philanthropist, Stephen Lee, director of the UK Institute of Charity Fundraising Managers, said "Her overall effect on charity is probably more significant than any other person's in the 20th century."[212]

At the official opening of the community centre on Whitehall Road, Bristol, May 1987

Diana was the patroness of charities and organisations who worked with the homeless, youth, drug addicts, and the elderly. From 1989, she was president of Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children. She was patron of the Natural History Museum[213][214] and president of the Royal Academy of Music[130][215][213] and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[216] From 1984 to 1996, she was president of Barnardo's, a charity founded by Dr. Thomas John Barnardo in 1866 to care for vulnerable children and young people.[217][213] In 1988, she became patron of the British Red Cross and supported its organisations in other countries such as Australia and Canada.[190] She made several lengthy visits each week to Royal Brompton Hospital, where she worked to comfort seriously ill or dying patients.[196] From 1991 to 1996, she was a patron of Headway, a brain injury association.[213][218] In 1992, she became the first patron of Chester Childbirth Appeal, a charity she had supported since 1984.[219] The charity, which is named after one of Diana's royal titles, could raise over £1 million with her help.[219] In 1994, she helped her friend Julia Samuel launch the charity Child Bereavement UK which supports children "of military families, those of suicide victims, [and] terminally-ill parents", and became its patron.[220] Her son William later became the charity's royal patron.[221][a]

In 1987 Diana was awarded the Honorary Freedom of the City of London, the highest honour which is in the power of the City of London to bestow on someone.[226][227] In June 1995, she travelled to Moscow. She paid a visit to a children's hospital she had previously supported when she provided them with medical equipment. In December 1995, Diana received the United Cerebral Palsy Humanitarian of the Year Award in New York City for her philanthropic efforts.[228][229][230] In October 1996, for her works on the elderly, she was awarded a gold medal at a health care conference organised by the Pio Manzù Centre in Rimini, Italy.[231]

The day after her divorce, she announced her resignation from over 100 charities and retained patronages of only six: Centrepoint, English National Ballet, Great Ormond Street Hospital, The Leprosy Mission, National AIDS Trust, and the Royal Marsden Hospital.[232] She continued her work with the British Red Cross Anti-Personnel Land Mines Campaign, but was no longer listed as patron.[233][234]

In May 1997, Diana opened the Richard Attenborough Centre for Disability and the Arts in Leicester, after being asked by her friend Richard Attenborough.[235] In June 1997 and at the suggestion of her son William, some of her dresses and suits were sold at Christie's auction houses in London and New York, and the proceeds that were earned from these events were donated to charities.[26] Her final official engagement was a visit to Northwick Park Hospital, London, on 21 July 1997.[26] Her 36th and final birthday celebration was held at Tate Gallery, which was also a commemorative event for the gallery's 100th anniversary.[26] She was scheduled to attend a fundraiser at the Osteopathic Centre for Children on 4 September 1997, upon her return from Paris.[236]

HIV/AIDS

[edit]

Diana began her work with AIDS patients in the 1980s.[237] Contrary to the prevailing stigmatization of AIDS patients, she was not averse to making physical contact with patients,[196] and was the first British royal to do so.[237] In 1987, she held hands with an AIDS patient in one of her early efforts to destigmatise the condition.[238][239] Diana noted: "HIV does not make people dangerous to know. You can shake their hands and give them a hug. Heaven knows they need it. What's more, you can share their homes, their workplaces, and their playgrounds and toys".[190] To Diana's disappointment, the Queen did not support this type of charity work, suggesting she get involved in "something more pleasant".[237] In July 1989, she opened Landmark Aids Centre in South London.[240][241] In October 1990, Diana opened Grandma's House, a home for young AIDS patients in Washington, DC.[242] She was also a patron of the National AIDS Trust and regularly visited London Lighthouse, which provided residential care for HIV patients (it has since merged with the Terrence Higgins Trust).[190][243] In 1991, she hugged one patient during a visit to the AIDS ward of the Middlesex Hospital,[190] which she had opened in 1987 as the first hospital unit dedicated to this cause in the UK.[238][244] As the patron of Turning Point, a health and social care organisation, Diana visited its project in London for people with HIV/AIDS in 1992.[245] She later established and led fundraising campaigns for AIDS research.[21]

In March 1997, Diana visited South Africa, where she met with Nelson Mandela.[246][247] On 2 November 2002, Mandela announced that the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund would be teaming up with the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund to help people with AIDS.[248] They had planned the combination of the two charities a few months before her death.[248] Mandela later praised Diana for her efforts surrounding the issue of HIV/AIDS: "When she stroked the limbs of someone with leprosy or sat on the bed of a man with HIV/AIDS and held his hand, she transformed public attitudes and improved the life chances of such people".[249] Diana had used her celebrity status to "fight stigma attached to people living with HIV/AIDS", Mandela said.[248]

Landmines

[edit]
With Hillary Clinton at the White House following a landmines campaign fund-raiser, June 1997

Diana was patron of the HALO Trust, an organisation that removes debris—particularly landmines—left behind by war.[250][251] In January 1997, pictures of Diana touring an Angolan minefield in a ballistic helmet and flak jacket were seen worldwide.[250][251] During her campaign, she was accused of meddling in politics and called a "loose cannon" by Lord Howe, an official in the British Ministry of Defence.[252] Despite the criticism, HALO states that Diana's efforts resulted in raising international awareness about landmines and the subsequent sufferings caused by them.[250][251] In June 1997, she gave a speech at a landmines conference held at the Royal Geographical Society, and went to Washington, DC to support the American Red Cross's anti-landmine initiative.[26] From 7 to 10 August 1997, just days before her death, she visited Bosnia and Herzegovina with Jerry White and Ken Rutherford of the Landmine Survivors Network.[26][253][254][255]

Diana's work on the landmines issue has been described as influential in the signing of the Ottawa Treaty, which created an international ban on the use of anti-personnel landmines.[256] Introducing the Second Reading of the Landmines Bill 1998 to the British House of Commons, the Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook, paid tribute to Diana's work on landmines:

All Honourable Members will be aware from their postbags of the immense contribution made by Diana, Princess of Wales to bringing home to many of our constituents the human costs of landmines. The best way in which to record our appreciation of her work, and the work of NGOs that have campaigned against landmines, is to pass the Bill, and to pave the way towards a global ban on landmines.[257]

A few months after Diana's death in 1997, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines won the Nobel Peace Prize.[258]

Cancer

[edit]

For her first solo official trip, Diana visited The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, a cancer treatment hospital in London.[223] She later chose this charity to be among the organisations that benefited from the auction of her clothes in New York.[223] The trust's communications manager said she did "much to remove the stigma and taboo associated with diseases such as cancer, AIDS, HIV and leprosy".[223] Diana became president of the hospital on 27 June 1989.[259][260][261] The Wolfson Children's Cancer Unit was opened by Diana on 25 February 1993.[259] In February 1996, Diana, who had been informed about a newly opened cancer hospital built by Imran Khan, travelled to Pakistan to visit its children's cancer wards and attend a fundraising dinner in aid of the charity in Lahore.[262] She later visited the hospital again in May 1997.[263] In June 1996, she travelled to Chicago in her capacity as president of the Royal Marsden Hospital in order to attend a fundraising event at the Field Museum of Natural History and raised more than £1 million for cancer research.[190] She additionally visited patients at the Cook County Hospital and delivered remarks at a conference on breast cancer at the Northwestern University Chicago campus after meeting a group of breast cancer researchers.[264] In September 1996, after being asked by Katharine Graham, Diana went to Washington and appeared at a White House breakfast in respect of the Nina Hyde Center for Breast Cancer Research.[265] She also attended an annual fund-raiser for breast cancer research organised by The Washington Post at the same centre.[21][266]

In 1988, Diana opened Children with Leukaemia (later renamed Children with Cancer UK) in memory of two young cancer victims.[267][268][269] In November 1987, a few days after the death of Jean O'Gorman from cancer, Diana met her family.[267][268] The deaths of Jean and her brother affected her and she assisted their family to establish the charity.[267][268][269] It was opened by her on 12 January 1988 at Mill Hill Secondary School, and she supported it until her death in 1997.[267][269]

Other areas

[edit]

In November 1989, Diana visited a leprosy hospital in Indonesia.[270][237] Following her visit, she became patron of the Leprosy Mission, an organisation dedicated to providing medicine, treatment, and other support services to those who are afflicted with the disease. She remained the patron of this charity[232] and visited several of its hospitals around the world, especially in India, Nepal, Zimbabwe and Nigeria until her death in 1997.[190][271] She touched those affected by the disease when many people believed it could be contracted through casual contact.[190][270] "It has always been my concern to touch people with leprosy, trying to show in a simple action that they are not reviled, nor are we repulsed", she commented.[271] The Diana Princess of Wales Health Education and Media Centre in Noida, India, was opened in her honour in November 1999, funded by the Diana Princess of Wales Memorial Fund to give social support to the people affected by leprosy and disability.[271]

Diana was a long-standing and active supporter of Centrepoint, a charity which provides accommodation and support to homeless people, and became patron in 1992.[272][273] She supported organisations that battle poverty and homelessness, including the Passage.[274] Diana was a supporter of young homeless people and spoke out on behalf of them by saying that "they deserve a decent start in life".[275] "We, as a part of society, must ensure that young people—who are our future—are given the chance they deserve", she said.[275] Diana used to take young William and Harry for private visits to Centrepoint services and homeless shelters.[21][272][276] "The young people at Centrepoint were always really touched by her visits and by her genuine feelings for them", said one of the charity's staff members.[277] William later became the patron of Centrepoint.[272]

Visiting the drug squad of the West Midlands Police, 1987

Diana was a staunch and longtime supporter of charities and organisations that focused on social and mental issues, including Relate and Turning Point.[190] Relate was relaunched in 1987 as a renewed version to its predecessor, the National Marriage Guidance Council. Diana became its patron in 1989.[190] Turning Point, a health and social care organisation, was founded in 1964 to help and support those affected by drug and alcohol misuse and mental health problems. She became the charity's patron in 1987 and visited the charity on a regular basis, meeting the sufferers at its centres or institutions including Rampton and Broadmoor.[190] In 1990 during a speech for Turning Point she said, "It takes professionalism to convince a doubting public that it should accept back into its midst many of those diagnosed as psychotics, neurotics and other sufferers who Victorian communities decided should be kept out of sight in the safety of mental institutions".[190] Despite the protocol problems of travelling to a Muslim country, she made a trip to Pakistan in 1991 in order to visit a rehabilitation centre in Lahore as a sign of "her commitment to working against drug abuse".[190]

[edit]

In November 1980, the Sunday Mirror ran a story claiming that Charles had used the Royal Train twice for secret love rendezvous with Diana, prompting the palace to issue a statement, calling the story "a total fabrication" and demanding an apology.[278][279] The newspaper editors, however, insisted that the woman boarding the train was Diana and declined to apologise.[278] In February 1982, pictures of a pregnant Diana in bikini while holidaying were published in the media. The Queen subsequently released a statement and called it "the blackest day in the history of British journalism".[280]

In 1993 Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) published photographs of Diana that were taken by gym owner Bryce Taylor. The photos showed her exercising in the gym LA Fitness wearing "a leotard and cycling shorts".[281][282] Diana's lawyers immediately filed a criminal complaint that sought "a permanent ban on the sale and publication of the photographs" around the world.[281][282] However, some newspapers outside the UK published the pictures.[281] The courts granted an injunction against Taylor and MGN that prohibited "further publication of the pictures".[281] MGN later issued an apology after facing much criticism from the public and gave Diana £1 million as a payment for her legal costs, while donating £200,000 to her charities.[281] LA Fitness issued its own apology in June 1994, which was followed by Taylor apologising in February 1995 and giving up the £300,000 he had made from the sale of pictures in an out-of-court settlement about a week before the case was set to start.[281] It was alleged that a member of the royal family had helped him financially to settle out of court.[281]

In 1994 pictures of Diana sunbathing topless at a Costa del Sol hotel were put up for sale by a Spanish photography agency for a price of £1 million.[283] In 1996, a set of pictures of a topless Diana while sunbathing appeared in the Mirror, which resulted in "a furor about invasion of privacy".[66] In the same year, she was the subject of a hoax call by Victor Lewis-Smith, who pretended to be Stephen Hawking, though the full recorded conversation was never released.[284] Also in 1996, Stuart Higgins of The Sun wrote a front-page story about an intimate video purporting to feature Diana with James Hewitt. The video turned out to be a hoax, forcing Higgins to issue an apology.[285][286]

Death

[edit]
East entrance to the Pont de l'Alma tunnel, where Diana was fatally injured

Diana died on 31 August 1997 due to injuries resulting from a car crash in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel in Paris while her driver was fleeing the paparazzi.[287] Diana was taken to Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital around 2:00 am and was pronounced dead around 4:00 am[288] The crash also resulted in the deaths of her companion Dodi Fayed and their driver, Henri Paul, who was also the acting security manager of Hôtel Ritz Paris. Trevor Rees-Jones, who was employed as a bodyguard by Dodi's father,[289] survived the crash, suffering a serious head injury. The televised funeral, on 6 September, was watched by a British television audience that peaked at 32.1 million, which was one of the United Kingdom's highest viewing figures ever and a United States television audience that peaked at 50 million.[290][291] The event was broadcast to over 200 countries and was seen by an estimated 2.5 billion people.[292][293]

Tribute, funeral, and burial

[edit]
Flowers outside Kensington Palace

The sudden and unexpected death of an extraordinarily popular royal figure brought statements from senior figures worldwide and many tributes by members of the public.[294][295][296] People left flowers, candles, cards, and personal messages outside Kensington Palace for many months. Diana's coffin, draped with the royal flag, was brought to London from Paris by Charles and her two sisters on 31 August 1997.[297][298] The coffin was taken to a private mortuary and then placed in the Chapel Royal, St James's Palace.[297]

Diana's coffin, draped in the royal standard with ermine border, borne through London to Westminster Abbey

On 5 September, Queen Elizabeth II paid tribute to Diana in a live television broadcast.[26] The funeral took place in Westminster Abbey on 6 September. Her sons walked in the funeral procession behind her coffin, along with the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Edinburgh, Diana's brother Lord Spencer, and representatives of some of her charities.[26] Lord Spencer said of his sister, "She proved in the last year that she needed no royal title to continue to generate her particular brand of magic."[299] Re-written in tribute to Diana, "Candle in the Wind 1997" was performed by Elton John at the funeral service (the only occasion the song has been performed live).[300] Released as a single in 1997, the global proceeds from the song have gone to Diana's charities.[300][301][302]

Round Oval lake at Althorp with the Diana memorial beyond

The burial took place privately later the same day. Diana's former husband, sons, mother, siblings, a close friend, and a clergyman were present. Diana's body was clothed in a black long-sleeved dress designed by Catherine Walker, which she had chosen some weeks before. A set of rosary beads that she had received from Mother Teresa was placed in her hands. Diana's grave is on an island within the grounds of Althorp Park, the Spencer family home for centuries.[303]

The burial party was provided by the 2nd Battalion the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment, who carried Diana's coffin across to the island and laid her to rest. Diana was the Regiment's Colonel-in-Chief from 1992 to 1996.[304] The original plan was for Diana to be buried in the Spencer family vault at the local church in nearby Great Brington, but Lord Spencer said he was concerned about public safety and security and the onslaught of visitors that might overwhelm Great Brington. He decided Diana would be buried where her grave could be easily cared for and visited in privacy by William, Harry, and other relatives.[305]

Conspiracy theories, inquest and verdict

[edit]

The initial French judicial investigation concluded that the crash was caused by Paul's intoxication, reckless driving, speeding, and effects of prescription drugs.[306] In February 1998, Mohamed Al-Fayed, father of Dodi Fayed, publicly said the crash, which killed his son, had been planned,[307] and accused MI6 and the Duke of Edinburgh.[308] An inquest, which started in London in 2004 and continued in 2007 and 2008,[309] attributed the crash to grossly negligent driving by Paul and to the pursuing paparazzi, who forced Paul to speed into the tunnel.[310] In 2003 Diana's butler Paul Burrell published a note that he claimed had been written by Diana in 1995, in which there were allegations that Charles was "planning 'an accident' in [Diana's] car, brake failure and serious head injury", so that he could remarry.[311] She had allegedly expressed similar concerns in October 1995 to Lord Mishcon, her solicitor, that "reliable sources" had told her "that she and Camilla would be put aside" for Charles to marry Tiggy Legge-Bourke.[312] When questioned by the Metropolitan Police inquiry team as a part of Operation Paget, Charles told the authorities that he did not know about his former wife's note from 1995 and could not understand why she had those feelings.[313] On 7 April 2008, the jury returned a verdict of "unlawful killing". On the day after the final verdict of the inquest, Al-Fayed announced that he would end his 10-year campaign to establish that the tragedy was murder; he said he did so for the sake of Diana's children.[314]

Later events

[edit]

Finances

[edit]

Following her death, Diana left a £21 million estate, "netting £17 million after estate taxes", which were left in the hands of trustees, her mother, and her sister Sarah.[315][316] The will was signed in June 1993, but Diana had it modified in February 1996 to remove the name of her personal secretary from the list of trustees and have Sarah replace him.[317] After applying personal and inheritance taxes, a net estate of £12.9 million was left to be distributed among the beneficiaries.[318] Her two sons subsequently inherited the majority of her estate. Each of them was left with £6.5 million which was invested and gathered substantial interest, and an estimated £10 million was given to each son upon turning 30 years old in 2012 and 2014 respectively.[319][320] Many of Diana's possessions were initially left in the care of her brother, who put them on show in Althorp twice a year until they were returned to Diana's sons.[319][315] They were also put on display in American museums and as of 2011 raised two million dollars for charities.[315] Among the objects were her dresses and suits along with numerous family paintings and jewels.[319] Diana's engagement ring and her yellow gold watch were given to William and Harry, respectively. William later passed the ring to his wife, Catherine Middleton. Her wedding dress was also given to her sons.[319][321][322]

In addition to her will,[316] Diana had written a letter of wishes in which she had asked for three-quarters of her personal property to be given to her sons, and dividing the remaining quarter (aside from the jewellery) among her 17 godchildren.[315] Despite Diana's wishes, the executors (her mother and sister) "petitioned the probate court for a 'variance' of the will", and the letter of wishes was ignored "because it did not contain certain language required by British law".[315] Eventually, one item from Diana's estate was given to each of her godchildren, while they would have received £100,000 each if a quarter of her estate had been divided between them.[315] The variance also delayed the distribution of her estate to her sons until they reached age 30. (It had originally been set at age 25.)[315][316] Diana also left her butler Paul Burrell around £50,000 in cash.[318][316]

Subject of US government surveillance

[edit]

In 1999, after the submission of a Freedom of Information request by the Internet news service apbonline.com, it was revealed that Diana had been placed under surveillance by the National Security Agency until her death, and the organisation kept a top secret file on her containing more than 1,000 pages.[323][324] The contents of Diana's NSA file cannot be disclosed because of national security concerns.[323] The NSA officials insisted Diana was not a "target of [their] massive, worldwide electronic eavesdropping infrastructure".[323] Despite multiple inquiries for the files to be declassified—with one of the notable ones being filed by Mohamed Al-Fayed—the NSA has refused to release the documents.[324]

In 2008, Ken Wharfe, a former bodyguard of Diana, claimed that her scandalous conversations with James Gilbey (commonly referred to as Squidgygate) were in fact recorded by the GCHQ, which intentionally released them on a "loop".[325] People close to Diana believed the action was intended to defame her.[325] Wharfe said Diana herself believed that members of the royal family were all being monitored, though he also stated that the main reason for it could be the potential threats of the IRA.[325]

Anniversaries, commemorations, and auctions

[edit]

On the first anniversary of Diana's death, people left flowers and bouquets outside the gates of Kensington Palace and a memorial service was held at Westminster Abbey.[326][327] The royal family and Tony Blair and his family went to Crathie Kirk for private prayers, while Diana's family held a private memorial service at Althorp.[328][329] All flags at Buckingham Palace and other royal residences were flown at half-mast on the Queen's orders.[330] The Union Jack was first lowered to half-mast on the day of Diana's funeral and has set a precedent, as based on the previous protocol no flag could ever fly at half-mast over the palace "even on the death of a monarch".[330] Since 1997, however, the Union Flag (but not the Royal Standard) has flown at half-mast upon the deaths of members of the royal family, and other times of national mourning.[331]

Elton John performing at the Concert for Diana, 2007

The Concert for Diana at Wembley Stadium was held on 1 July 2007. The event, organised by Princes William and Harry, celebrated the 46th anniversary of their mother's birth and occurred a few weeks before the 10th anniversary of her death on 31 August.[332][333] The proceeds from this event were donated to Diana's charities.[334] On 31 August 2007, a service of thanksgiving for Diana took place in the Guards' Chapel.[335] Among the 500 guests were members of the royal family and their relatives, members of the Spencer family, her godparents and godchildren, members of her wedding party, her close friends and aides, representatives from many of her charities, Gordon Brown, Tony Blair and John Major, and friends from the entertainment world such as David Frost, Elton John, and Cliff Richard.[215][336]

In January 2017, a series of letters that Diana and other members of the royal family had written to a Buckingham Palace steward were sold as a part of a collection.[337][338] The six letters written by Diana raised £15,100.[337][338] Another collection of 40 letters written by Diana between 1990 and 1997 were sold for £67,900 at an auction in 2021.[339] In 2023, two of Diana's friends put 32 highly personal letters and cards written by her while she was going through her divorce up for auction, announcing that proceeds of the sale would be donated to charities associated with them or Diana.[340]

"Diana: Her Fashion Story", an exhibition of gowns and suits worn by Diana, was announced to be opened at Kensington Palace in February 2017 as a tribute to mark her 20th death anniversary, with her favourite dresses created by numerous fashion designers being displayed until the next year.[341][342][343][344] Other tributes planned for the anniversary included exhibitions at Althorp hosted by Diana's brother, Earl Spencer,[345] a series of commemorating events organised by the Diana Award,[346] as well as restyling Kensington Gardens and creating a new section called "The White Garden".[341][342][347]

Legacy

[edit]

Public image

[edit]
Wax statue of Diana at Madame Tussauds in London

Diana remains one of the most popular members of the royal family throughout history, and she continues to influence the younger generations of royals.[348][349][350] She was a major presence on the world stage from her engagement to Charles until her death, and was often described as the "world's most photographed woman".[21][351] She was noted for her compassion, style, charisma, and high-profile charity work, as well as her ill-fated marriage.[352][212][353] Biographer Sarah Bradford commented, "The only cure for her suffering would have been the love of the Prince of Wales ... the way in which he consistently denigrated her reduced her to despair."[100] Despite all the marital issues and scandals, Diana continued to enjoy a high level of popularity in the polls while her husband was suffering from low levels of public approval.[21] Diana's former private secretary Patrick Jephson described her as an organised and hardworking person, and pointed out Charles was not able to "reconcile with his wife's extraordinary popularity",[354] a viewpoint supported by the biographer Tina Brown.[355] He also said she was a tough boss who was "equally quick to appreciate hard work" but could also be defiant "if she felt she had been the victim of injustice".[354] Diana's mother also defined her as a "loving" figure who could occasionally be "tempestuous".[163] She was often described as a devoted mother to her children,[21][356] who are believed to be influenced by her personality and way of life.[357]

In the early years, Diana was often noted for her shy nature.[349][358] Journalist Michael White perceived her as being "smart", "shrewd and funny".[350] Those who communicated with her closely described her as a person who was led by "her heart".[21] In an article for The Guardian, Monica Ali believed that, despite being inexperienced and uneducated, Diana could handle the expectations of the royal family and overcome the difficulties and sufferings of her marital life. Ali also believed that she "had a lasting influence on the public discourse, particularly in matters of mental health" by discussing her eating disorder publicly.[212] According to Tina Brown, in her early years Diana possessed a "passive power", a quality that in her opinion she shared with the Queen Mother and a trait that would enable her to instinctively use her appeal to achieve her goals.[359]

Diana was known for her encounters with sick and dying patients, and the poor and unwanted whom she used to comfort, an action that earned her more popularity.[360] Known for her easygoing attitude, she reportedly hated formality in her inner circle, asking "people not to jump up every time she enters the room".[361] Diana is often credited with widening the range of charity works carried out by the royal family in a more modern style.[212] Eugene Robinson of The Washington Post wrote in an article that "Diana imbued her role as royal princess with vitality, activism and, above all, glamour."[21] Alicia Carroll of The New York Times described Diana as "a breath of fresh air" who was the main reason the royal family was known in the United States.[362] In Anthony Holden's opinion, Diana was "visibly reborn" after her separation from Charles, a point in her life that was described by Holden as her "moment of triumph", which put her on an independent path to success.[203]

Diana's sudden death brought an unprecedented spasm of grief and mourning,[363] and subsequently a crisis arose in the Royal Household.[364][365][366] Andrew Marr said that by her death she "revived the culture of public sentiment".[212] Her son William has stated that the outpouring of public grief after her death "changed the British psyche, for the better", while Alastair Campbell noted that it assisted in diminishing "the stiff upper lip approach".[367] In 1981 and 1997 Diana was one of the runners-up for Time magazine's Person of the Year,[368][369] and in 2020 the magazine included Diana's name on its list of 100 Women of the Year. She was chosen as the Woman of the Year 1987 for her efforts in destigmatising the conditions surrounding HIV/AIDS patients.[370] In 2002 Diana ranked third on the BBC's poll of the 100 Greatest Britons, above the Queen and other British monarchs.[371]

Despite being regarded as an iconic figure and a popular member of the royal family, Diana was subject to criticism during her life.[349] She was criticised by philosophy professor Anthony O'Hear who in his notes argued that she was unable to fulfill her duties, her reckless behaviour was damaging the monarchy, and she was "self-indulgent" in her philanthropic efforts.[277] Following his remarks, charity organisations that were supported by Diana defended her, and Peter Luff called O'Hear's comments "distasteful and inappropriate".[277] Further criticism surfaced as she was accused of using her public profile to benefit herself,[121] which in return "demeaned her royal office".[349] Diana's unique type of charity work, which sometimes included physical contact with people affected by serious diseases, occasionally had a negative reaction in the media.[349]

Diana's relationship with the press and the paparazzi has been described as "ambivalent". On different occasions she would complain about the way she was being treated by the media, mentioning that their constant presence in her proximity had made life impossible for her, whereas at other times she would seek their attention and hand information to reporters herself.[372][373] Writing for The Guardian, Peter Conrad suggested that it was Diana who let the journalists and paparazzi into her life as she knew they were the source of her power.[374] This view was supported by Christopher Hitchens, who believed that "in pursuit of a personal solution to an unhappy private life, she became an assiduous leaker to the press".[375] Tina Brown argued that Diana was in no way "a vulnerable victim of media manipulation", and she found it "offensive to present the canny, resourceful Diana as a woman of no agency".[66] Former News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman, who later hacked the phones of Diana's sons on several occasions, stated in a court in 2014 that in 1992 Diana sent a confidential directory which contained numbers of senior members of the royal household to their office to get back at Prince Charles.[376] Nevertheless, Diana also used the media's interest in her to shine light on her charitable efforts and patronages.[372]

Sally Bedell Smith characterised Diana as unpredictable, egocentric, and possessive.[121] Smith also argued that in her desire to do charity works, Diana was "motivated by personal considerations, rather than by an ambitious urge to take on a societal problem".[121] Eugene Robinson, however, said that "[Diana] was serious about the causes she espoused".[21] According to Sarah Bradford, Diana looked down on the House of Windsor, whom she reportedly viewed "as jumped-up foreign princelings" and called them "the Germans".[374] Tony Blair characterised Diana as a manipulative person and "extraordinarily captivating".[350][364][377]

In an article written for The Independent in 1998, journalist Yvonne Roberts observed the sudden change in people's opinion of Diana after her death from critical to complimentary, a viewpoint supported by Theodore Dalrymple, who also noticed the "sudden shift".[378] Roberts also added that Diana was neither "a saint" nor "a revolutionary" figure, but "may have encouraged some people" to tackle issues such as landmines, AIDS and leprosy.[379] While analysing the impact of Diana's death and her popularity from a gendered point of view, the British historian Ludmilla Jordanova said "no human being can survive the complex forces that impact upon charismatic women." Jordanova also observed that it is "Better to remember her by trying to decipher how emotions overshadow analysis and why women are the safeguards of humanitarian feelings."[353] The author Anne Applebaum believed that Diana had not had any impact on public opinions posthumously;[212] an idea supported by Jonathan Freedland of The Guardian who believed that Diana's memory and influence started to fade away in the years after her death,[380] while Peter Conrad, another Guardian contributor, argued that even in "a decade after her death, she is still not silent",[374] and Allan Massie of The Telegraph believed that Diana's sentiments "continue to shape our society".[381] Writing for The Guardian, Monica Ali described Diana as "fascinating and flawed. Her legacy might be mixed, but it's not insubstantial. Her life was brief, but she left her mark".[212]

Fashion and style

[edit]
Wearing the Travolta dress, one of her most famous ensembles, November 1985

Diana was a fashion icon whose style was emulated by women around the world. In 2012, Time included Diana on its All-Time 100 Fashion Icons list.[382] Iain Hollingshead of The Telegraph wrote: "[Diana] had an ability to sell clothes just by looking at them."[383][384] An early example of the effect occurred during her courtship with Charles in 1980 when sales of Hunter Wellington boots skyrocketed after she was pictured wearing a pair on the Balmoral estate.[383][385] According to designers and people who worked with Diana, she used fashion and style to endorse her charitable causes, express herself and communicate.[386][387][388] Diana remains a prominent figure for her fashion style, impacting recent cultural and style trends.[389][390][341][391]

Diana's fashion combined classically royal expectations with contemporary fashion trends in Britain.[392][393] While on diplomatic trips, her clothes and attire were chosen to match the destination countries' costumes, and while off-duty she used to wear loose jackets and jumpers.[390][394] "She was always very thoughtful about how her clothes would be interpreted, it was something that really mattered to her", according to Anna Harvey, a former British Vogue editor and Diana's fashion mentor.[390][395] Her fashion sense originally incorporated decorous and romantic elements, with pastel shades and lush gowns.[393][396][397] Elements of her fashion rapidly became trends.[390] She forwent certain traditions, such as wearing gloves during engagements, and sought to create a wardrobe that helped her to connect with the public.[388][394] According to Donatella Versace who worked closely with Diana alongside her brother, Diana's interest and sense of curiosity about fashion grew significantly after her marital separation.[386] Her style subsequently grew bolder and more businesslike, featuring structured skirt suits, sculptural gowns, and neutral tones designed to reflect attention toward her charity work.[389][398]

Catherine Walker was among Diana's favourite designers[393] with whom she worked to create her "royal uniform".[399] David Sassoon designed about 70 outfits for her from 1981 until 1997, many of which were influenced by his Jewish heritage.[400][401] Among her favoured designers were Versace, Armani, Chanel, Dior, Gucci and Clarks.[390][391][402] Her famous outfits include the "Black Sheep Sweater",[403][404] the "Revenge dress", which she wore after Charles's admission of adultery,[405] and the "Travolta dress".[390][399][393] Copies of Diana's British Vogue-featured pink chiffon blouse by David and Elizabeth Emanuel, which appeared in the magazine on her engagement announcement day, sold in the millions.[393] She appeared on three British Vogue covers during her lifetime and was featured on its October 1997 issue posthumously.[406] Diana did her own makeup for events, and was accompanied by a hairstylist for public appearances.[386] In the 1990s, she was frequently photographed clutching distinctive handbags manufactured by Gucci and Dior, which became known as the Gucci Diana and Lady Dior.[407][408]

Following the opening of an exhibition of Diana's clothes and dresses at Kensington Palace in 2017, Catherine Bennett of The Guardian said such exhibitions are among the suitable ways to commemorate public figures whose fashion styles were noted due to their achievements. The exhibition suggests to detractors who, like many other princesses, "looking lovely in different clothes was pretty much her life's work" which also brings interest in her clothing.[409] Versace also pointed out that "[she doesn't] think that anyone, before or after her, has done for fashion what Diana did".[386] One of Diana's favourite milliners, John Boyd, said "Diana was our best ambassador for hats, and the entire millinery industry owes her a debt." Boyd's pink tricorn hat Diana wore for her honeymoon was later copied by milliners across the world and credited with rebooting an industry in decline for decades.[410][411]

Memorials

[edit]
Memorial in Harrods Department Store to Diana and Fayed
Tribute to Diana on 1998 Azerbaijan postage stamps
Tributes left outside Kensington Palace for what would have been Diana's 60th birthday

Permanent memorials to Diana include the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fountain in Hyde Park, London;[412] the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Playground in Kensington Gardens;[413] the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Walk, a circular path between Kensington Gardens, Green Park, Hyde Park, and St. James's Park;[414] the Diana Memorial Award, established in 1999 and later relaunched in 2007 by Gordon Brown;[415] the Statue of Diana, Princess of Wales, in the Sunken Garden of Kensington Palace;[416] and the Princess Diana Memorial in the garden of Schloss Cobenzl in Vienna, making it the first memorial dedicated to Diana in a German-speaking country.[417] The Flame of Liberty was erected in 1989 on the Place de l'Alma in Paris above the entrance to the tunnel in which the fatal crash later occurred. It became an unofficial memorial to Diana.[418][419] The Place de l'Alma was renamed Place Diana princesse de Galles in 2019.[420] Following her death, several countries issued postage stamps commemorating Diana, including Armenia, Azerbaijan, Somalia, and Congo.[421][422][423] A bronze plaque was unveiled by Earl Spencer at Northampton Guildhall in 2002 as a memorial to his sister.[424]

There were two memorials inside Harrods department store, commissioned by Dodi Fayed's father, who owned the store from 1985 to 2010. The first memorial was a pyramid-shaped display containing photos of Diana and al-Fayed's son, a wine glass said to be from their last dinner, and a ring purchased by Dodi the day prior to the crash. The second, Innocent Victims, unveiled in 2005, was a bronze statue of Fayed dancing with Diana on a beach beneath the wings of an albatross.[425] In January 2018, it was announced that the statue would be returned to the al-Fayed family.[426] Diana's granddaughters, Charlotte Elizabeth Diana (born 2015)[427][428] and Lilibet Diana (born 2021),[429] as well as her niece, Charlotte Diana Spencer (born 2012),[430] are named after her.

[edit]

Before and after her death, Diana has been the subject of films and television series and depicted in contemporary art. The first biopics about Diana and Charles were Charles & Diana: A Royal Love Story and The Royal Romance of Charles and Diana that were broadcast on American TV channels on 17 and 20 September 1981, respectively.[431] In December 1992, ABC aired Charles and Diana: Unhappily Ever After, a TV movie about marital discord between Diana and Charles.[432] Actresses who have portrayed Diana include Serena Scott Thomas (in Diana: Her True Story, 1993),[433] Julie Cox (in Princess in Love, 1996),[434] Amy Seccombe (in Diana: A Tribute to the People's Princess, 1998),[435] Michelle Duncan (in Whatever Love Means, 2005),[436] Genevieve O'Reilly (in Diana: Last Days of a Princess, 2007),[437][438] Nathalie Brocker (in The Murder of Princess Diana, 2007),[439] Naomi Watts (in Diana, 2013),[440] Jeanna de Waal (in Diana: The Musical, 2019–2021),[441] Emma Corrin (2020) and Elizabeth Debicki (in The Crown, 2022–2023),[442][443] and Kristen Stewart (in Spencer, 2021).[444]

In 2017, William and Harry commissioned two documentaries to mark the 20th anniversary of her death. The first of the two, Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy, was broadcast on ITV and HBO on 24 July 2017.[445][446] This film focuses on Diana's legacy and humanitarian efforts for causes such as AIDS, landmines, homelessness and cancer. The second documentary, Diana, 7 Days, aired on 27 August on BBC and focused on Diana's death and the subsequent outpouring of grief.[447]

In January 2023, rapper Ice Spice, whose looks were noted by the media to be reminiscent of Diana's,[448] released a song named after Diana on her debut EP titled "Like..?". The song was later accompanied by a remix with rapper Nicki Minaj, which charted at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100.[449]

Titles, styles, honours and arms

[edit]

Titles and styles

[edit]
Royal monogram

Diana was born with the style of "The Honourable Diana Frances Spencer". When her father inherited the Earldom of Spencer in 1975, she became entitled to the style of "Lady Diana Spencer".[450] During her marriage, Diana was styled as "Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales". She additionally bore the titles Duchess of Rothesay,[451] Duchess of Cornwall,[451] Countess of Chester,[452][453] and Baroness of Renfrew.[451] After her divorce in 1996 and until her death, she was known as "Diana, Princess of Wales", without the style of "Her Royal Highness".[450] Though popularly referred to as "Princess Diana", that style is incorrect and one she never held officially.[b] She is still sometimes referred to in the media as "Lady Diana Spencer" or colloquially as "Lady Di". In a speech after her death, Tony Blair referred to Diana as "the people's princess".[455][456] Discussions were also held with the Spencer family and the British royal family as to whether Diana's HRH style needed to be restored posthumously, but Diana's family decided that it would be against her wishes and, thus, no formal offer was made.[457]

Honours

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Orders
Foreign honours
Appointments
Fellowships
Freedom of the City

Honorary military appointments

[edit]

As Princess of Wales, Diana held the following military appointments:

Australia
Canada
United Kingdom

She relinquished these appointments following her divorce.[26][129]

Other appointments

[edit]

Arms

[edit]
Coat of arms of Diana, Princess of Wales
Notes
During her marriage, Diana used the arms of the Prince of Wales impaled (side by side) with those of her father. This version of her arms was imprinted on the order of service for her funeral.[474]
Adopted
1981
Coronet
Coronet of the heir apparent
Escutcheon
The Royal Arms differenced by a label of three points argent overall an inescutcheon quarterly gules and or, four lions passant guardant counterchanged (for the Principality of Wales / Llywelyn the Great ensigned by the coronet of [Prince Charles's] degree);[475] impaled with quarterly argent and gules in the 2nd and 3rd quarters a fret or over all on a bend sable three escallops of the first [argent][476]
Supporters
Dexter a lion rampant guardant Or crowned with the coronet of the Prince of Wales Proper, sinister a griffin Ermine winged Erminois unguled and gorged with a coronet composed of crosses patée and fleurs de lis a chain affixed thereto passing between the forelegs and reflexed over the back of the First.
Motto
DIEU DEFEND LE DROIT
(Anglo-Norman: God defends the right)
Symbolism
The Spencers were granted a coat of arms in 1504 (Azure a fess Ermine between 6 sea-mews' heads erased Argent), which bears no resemblance to that used by the family after c. 1595, which was derived from the Despencer arms. Writer J. H. Round argued that the Despencer descent was fabricated by Richard Lee, a corrupt Clarenceux King of Arms.[477]
Previous versions
Diana's coat of arms before her marriage was the Spencer coat of arms depicted on a lozenge. It included three escallops argent of the Spencer coat of arms. This version was used only before her marriage and was also applied by her sisters.
Other versions
After her divorce, Diana had resumed her paternal arms with the addition of a royal coronet and two griffin supporters, each gorged with a royal coronet.[476]

Descendants

[edit]
Name Birth Marriage Children
Date Spouse
William, Prince of Wales (1982-06-21) 21 June 1982 (age 43) 29 April 2011 Catherine Middleton
Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex (1984-09-15) 15 September 1984 (age 41) 19 May 2018 Meghan Markle

Ancestry

[edit]

Diana was born into the British Spencer family, different branches of which hold the titles of Duke of Marlborough, Earl Spencer, Earl of Sunderland, and Baron Churchill.[478][479] The Spencers claimed descent from a cadet branch of the powerful medieval Despenser family, but its validity is questioned.[480] Her great-grandmother was Margaret Baring, a member of the German-British Baring family of bankers and the daughter of Edward Baring, 1st Baron Revelstoke.[481][482] Diana's distant noble ancestors included the first Duke and Duchess of Marlborough.[483] Diana and Charles were distantly related, as they were both descended from the House of Tudor through Henry VII of England.[484] She was also descended from the House of Stuart through Charles II of England by Charles Lennox, 1st Duke of Richmond, and Henry FitzRoy, 1st Duke of Grafton, and his brother James II of England by Henrietta FitzJames.[21][485] Other noble ancestors include Margaret Kerdeston, granddaughter of Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk; Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, an English nobleman and a favourite of Elizabeth I of England; and Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, a descendant of Edward III of England through his son Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence.[486][487][488] Diana's Scottish roots came from her maternal grandmother, Lady Fermoy.[486] Her Scottish ancestors included Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon, and his wife Jane, and Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll.[486]

Diana's American lineage came from her great-grandmother Frances Ellen Work, daughter of wealthy American stockbroker Franklin H. Work from Ohio, who was married to her great-grandfather James Roche, 3rd Baron Fermoy, an Irish peer.[486][489] Diana's fourth great-grandmother in her direct maternal line, Eliza Kewark, was matrilineally of Indian descent.[490][491][492][493][494] She is variously described in contemporary documents as "a dark-skinned native woman" and "an Armenian woman from Bombay".[495][496]

Notes

[edit]

References

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Bibliography

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Diana Frances Spencer (1 July 1961 – 31 August 1997), known after her marriage as Diana, Princess of Wales, was a British aristocrat and philanthropist who served as the first wife of Charles, Prince of Wales—the heir apparent to the throne at the time—and mother to their two sons, Prince William (born 21 June 1982) and Prince Harry (born 15 September 1984).[1][2] The couple wed on 29 July 1981 in St Paul's Cathedral, an event viewed by an estimated global television audience of 750 million, but their union dissolved amid mutual infidelities and irreconcilable differences, culminating in a formal divorce on 28 August 1996.[2][3] Born into the Spencer family at Park House near Sandringham, Norfolk, Diana worked as a nursery teacher's assistant before her engagement and entered public life as a symbol of modern monarchy, leveraging her charisma to draw unprecedented media scrutiny and public fascination.[1] Her charitable efforts centered on over 100 organizations, including high-profile advocacy for AIDS awareness—such as her 1987 handshake with an HIV-positive patient at Middlesex Hospital, which challenged prevailing stigmas—and campaigns against antipersonnel landmines, exemplified by her 1997 visit to a cleared minefield in Huambo, Angola, that amplified international momentum toward the Ottawa Treaty banning such weapons.[1] Diana's death on 31 August 1997 resulted from injuries sustained in a high-speed car crash in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel in Paris, where she was a passenger alongside Dodi Fayed; the official inquest attributed the accident to the driver's intoxication and excessive speed while evading paparazzi pursuit, rejecting conspiracy claims lacking empirical support.[1][4] Her passing provoked widespread public grief in the United Kingdom and beyond, prompting reflection on media intrusion's role in her life and highlighting tensions between royal privacy and public entitlement to celebrity.[1]

Early Life

Birth and Aristocratic Background

Diana Frances Spencer was born on 1 July 1961 at Park House, a country house on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, England.[5] She was the fourth child and third daughter of Edward John Spencer, then Viscount Althorp and heir to the Earldom of Spencer, and his wife Frances Ruth Burke Roche.[6] The Spencer family traces its aristocratic lineage to the 15th century, amassing significant wealth through the wool trade during the Tudor era and establishing themselves as one of Britain's oldest noble houses, with their ancestral seat at Althorp in Northamptonshire.[7] Edward John Spencer's father, Albert Spencer, held the title of 7th Earl Spencer until his death in 1975, at which point Edward succeeded as the 8th Earl, elevating Diana's status within the peerage.[7] The family's longstanding ties to the British monarchy included multiple royal godparents and intermarriages, positioning them prominently in aristocratic circles proximate to the royal household.[7] On her mother's side, Frances Roche descended from the Roche family, holders of the Irish peerage as Barons Fermoy since the 19th century, with her father, Maurice Roche, serving as the 4th Baron Fermoy and a personal friend of King George VI.[8] Frances's mother, Ruth Roche, Baroness Fermoy, acted as a lady-in-waiting and close confidante to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, further embedding the family in royal social networks.[8] This dual heritage of English landowning nobility and Anglo-Irish peerage underscored Diana's upbringing within elite strata, where proximity to the Crown was both geographical—via the Sandringham tenancy—and relational through familial service roles.[8]

Childhood and Family Dynamics

Diana Frances Spencer was born on 1 July 1961 at Park House, a tenanted property on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, as the fourth child and third daughter of John Spencer, Viscount Althorp (later 8th Earl Spencer), and Frances Ruth Burke Roche.[9][10] Her siblings included elder sisters Lady Sarah (born 1955) and Lady Jane (born 1957), a younger brother Charles (born 1964), and an elder brother John who died in infancy in 1960.[11][12] The Spencer parents had married in June 1954, but their union, marked by significant age disparity—Frances was 18 and John 30—and growing incompatibilities, began to fracture in the mid-1960s.[6] Frances commenced an extramarital affair with Peter Shand Kydd, prompting separation in 1967 and formal divorce in April 1969, when Diana was nearly eight years old.[6] In the acrimonious custody proceedings, the court granted John sole custody of the four children, citing Frances's adultery and perceived unfitness as a mother, while allowing her restricted access that she often failed to exercise consistently.[13][14] The divorce profoundly disrupted family dynamics, with Diana later recounting a sense of maternal abandonment that contributed to emotional insecurity in her formative years; her brother Charles Spencer has stated that she "suffered greatly" from the parental split.[15] The children remained primarily with their father at Park House, where aristocratic traditions prevailed, including reliance on nannies for daily care amid John's emphasis on duty and heritage tied to the Spencer lineage's royal connections.[16] In 1975, following the death of the 7th Earl Spencer, the family relocated to Althorp House, the 13,000-acre ancestral estate in Northamptonshire that had been the Spencer seat since 1508.[17] John remarried Raine McCorquodale (later Countess Spencer) in July 1976, when Diana was 15; the union introduced tensions, as Diana and her siblings resented Raine's assertive personality and viewed her as an interloper prioritizing social status over familial bonds, leading to reported conflicts including physical altercations.[18][19] Despite these strains, Diana maintained strong ties with her full siblings, often drawing support from Sarah, Jane, and Charles amid the upheaval of parental discord and remarriage.[11]

Education and Early Employment

Diana commenced her formal education in 1968 at Silfield Private School in Gayton, Norfolk, before transferring to Riddlesworth Hall, an all-girls boarding preparatory school near Diss, Norfolk.[20][21] In 1974, she enrolled as a boarder at West Heath School near Sevenoaks, Kent, where she participated in sports such as swimming, tennis, and ballet but struggled academically, leaving in 1977 without O-level qualifications.[1][16] That year, Diana attended the Institut Alpin Videmanette, a finishing school in Rougemont, Switzerland, departing after the Easter term of 1978.[1] After returning to London, she moved into a flat at Coleherne Court in Kensington, purchased by her mother, and took up part-time work suited to her lack of formal qualifications.[1] She served as a nanny, including for an American family's child via a private agency, and briefly as a cleaner for relatives and friends.[1][22] From 1979, she worked three days a week as a nursery assistant at Young England Kindergarten School in Pimlico, earning approximately £5 per hour.[23][24]

Courtship, Marriage, and Family

Relationship with Prince Charles

Diana Spencer first encountered Charles, Prince of Wales, in November 1977 at Althorp, the Spencer family estate in Northamptonshire, England, when she was 16 years old and he was 29.[25][26][27] At the time, Charles was dating Diana's older sister, Lady Sarah Spencer, and their initial interaction was brief and unremarkable; Diana later recalled commenting on his beard during a pheasant shoot, while Charles described her as "a very jolly and amusing and attractive 16-year-old—something like that."[25][28] The encounter did not spark immediate romantic interest, as Diana reportedly told her mother she would not marry Charles even if he proposed, citing the significant age gap.[26] Subsequent contacts remained sporadic over the next few years, with Diana attending Charles's 30th birthday party on November 14, 1978, at Buckingham Palace, though no deeper connection formed at that stage.[29] Diana's awareness of Charles grew through media exposure and her aristocratic social circle, but their paths diverged as she pursued education and employment, including a position as a nursery teacher's assistant in London by 1980.[30] A pivotal reconnection occurred in 1980 at Broadlands, the Mountbatten family estate, hosted by Lord Romsey (a mutual friend), where Charles, recently bereaved by the death of his great-uncle Lord Mountbatten in 1979, found Diana's expressed sympathy particularly touching.[26] This meeting marked the beginning of more intentional courtship, facilitated by shared hunting outings and visits to royal residences, aligning with Charles's dynastic considerations for a suitable consort—emphasizing youth, pedigree, and perceived emotional steadiness amid his ongoing, intermittent association with Camilla Parker Bowles.[31] By mid-1980, their relationship intensified, with Diana invited to Balmoral Castle in September, where she impressed the royal family through her adaptability to country pursuits like fishing and walking, earning approval from Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip.[27][32] Diana, then 19, developed a strong admiration for Charles, confiding to friends her desire to marry him despite limited personal meetings—reportedly only 13 in total before their engagement.[33] The courtship, spanning roughly six months of focused interaction, reflected institutional pressures on Charles to secure the succession with a partner from compatible aristocracy, though Diana's relative naivety and the brevity of their acquaintance later contributed to marital strains.[34][35]

Engagement and Wedding

Prince Charles proposed to Lady Diana Spencer on 3 February 1981 in the nursery at Windsor Castle, presenting her with a 12-carat oval-cut blue sapphire engagement ring flanked by diamonds, designed by Garrard.[36][37] Diana, then aged 19, initially laughed at the proposal, later recalling she thought it a jest given the formality of Charles's words: "Will you marry me?" and his emphasis that she would one day be queen.[37] The couple had been romantically involved for approximately six months, following intermittent acquaintance since 1977 when Diana was 16 and Charles 29.[38][26] The engagement was publicly announced on 24 February 1981 by the Lord Chamberlain at 11 a.m., with Buckingham Palace confirming the news amid widespread media interest.[38] In a subsequent joint television interview with the BBC at Buckingham Palace, Charles described himself as "delighted and frankly amazed," while Diana affirmed she loved him; when asked if they were in love, Charles replied, "Whatever 'in love' means," a remark later scrutinized for its ambiguity.[38] Public response in Britain and globally was enthusiastically positive, portraying the union as a romantic fairy tale that boosted monarchy popularity, though the 13-year age gap and brief courtship drew some private royal family concerns, including reported pressure from Prince Philip for Charles to commit.[31][39] The wedding occurred on 29 July 1981 at St. Paul's Cathedral in London, selected over Westminster Abbey to accommodate a larger congregation of about 3,500 guests.[40][41] Diana arrived in a custom ivory silk gown by David and Elizabeth Emanuel, featuring a 25-foot train embroidered with 10,000 pearls, while Charles wore a Royal Navy uniform.[41] The ceremony, officiated by the Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie, was broadcast live and viewed by an estimated 750 million people worldwide, generating significant commercial interest including souvenirs and stamps commemorating the event.[42] Following the service, a balcony appearance at Buckingham Palace drew cheering crowds, marking a peak in public enthusiasm for the royal family.[40]

Birth and Upbringing of Children

Diana, Princess of Wales, gave birth to her first child, Prince William Arthur Philip Louis, on 21 June 1982 at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington, London, marking a departure from royal tradition as previous heirs had been born at Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle.[43] The delivery occurred at 9:03 p.m. after labor was induced, with William weighing 7 pounds 1½ ounces.[44] Prince Charles attended the birth, a first for a senior royal father, reflecting Diana's influence in modernizing practices.[45] On 15 September 1984, Diana delivered her second son, Prince Henry Charles Albert David—commonly known as Prince Harry—at the same hospital's Lindo Wing.[46] Harry weighed approximately 6 pounds 14 ounces at birth, and his arrival was announced publicly shortly after, with the family posing for photographs outside the hospital.[47] In raising William and Harry, primarily at Kensington Palace, Diana adopted a hands-on parenting style that contrasted with the more formal, nanny-dependent approach of prior generations.[48] She prioritized emotional openness and normalcy, frequently taking the boys on informal outings to places like McDonald's, theme parks, and homeless shelters to instill empathy and awareness of life beyond palace walls.[49] [50] Diana engaged in playful activities, such as board games, dressing up, and "naughty" pranks, which her sons later recalled as fostering a fun, affectionate bond.[51] Despite the privileges of royal life, Diana sought to shield her children from excessive formality, personally handling bedtime routines and school runs when possible, while employing nannies like Tiggy Legge-Bourke for support during her public duties.[52] She emphasized compassion and resilience, warning the boys about media scrutiny and encouraging direct interaction with people from diverse backgrounds, such as those experiencing homelessness or illness.[53] This approach aimed to prepare William, as future king, and Harry for their roles while grounding them in everyday realities, though it occurred amid the strains of her deteriorating marriage to Charles.[54]

Marital Infidelities and Breakdown

The marriage between Diana, Princess of Wales, and Charles, Prince of Wales, exhibited strains from its early years, exacerbated by an age gap of nearly 13 years, differing emotional maturity, and Charles's unresolved attachment to Camilla Parker Bowles, whom he had dated before his engagement to Diana.[31] By 1984, after the birth of their second son, Prince Harry, the couple's incompatibility had deepened, with Diana later alleging in private accounts that Charles expressed regret over the marriage shortly after her pregnancy, stating "now we're a family" but privately wishing for a different outcome.[55] These tensions contributed to Diana's development of bulimia and self-harm behaviors, which she attributed to feeling unloved and isolated within the royal household.[56] Infidelities on both sides commenced around 1986, marking the effective end of the marriage's intimacy despite continued public appearances and the birth of children, Princes William in 1982 and Harry in 1984. Charles resumed his extramarital relationship with Parker Bowles, his former girlfriend, around this time, as he confirmed in a 1994 television interview with Jonathan Dimbleby, stating he had been faithful until the marriage became "irretrievably broken."[31] A leaked telephone conversation from December 1989, known as "Camillagate" or "Tampongate," captured explicit intimacy between Charles and Parker Bowles, including Charles's infamous remark about wishing to be reincarnated as her tampon, which was published in 1993 and confirmed the ongoing affair while both were still married.[57] [58] Diana, meanwhile, engaged in her first rumored affair in 1985 with her protection officer Barry Mannakee, a married police sergeant assigned to her detail, whom she described in later accounts as providing emotional support amid her marital despair; Mannakee died in a 1987 motorcycle accident speculated by some, including Diana, to be deliberate, though officially ruled unintentional.[59] [60] Diana's subsequent affair with Captain James Hewitt, a former Household Cavalry officer, lasted from 1986 to 1991, as Hewitt detailed in his 1994 memoir Princess in Love, claiming physical intimacy and Diana's initiative in the relationship; Hewitt also admitted providing military training to her and speculated on physical resemblances between Hewitt and young Prince Harry, fueling unsubstantiated paternity rumors dismissed by royal confirmations of Harry's birth preceding the affair.[61] A 1989 telephone call between Diana and her friend James Gilbey, dubbed "Squidgygate," was intercepted and leaked in 1992, revealing affectionate terms like "Squidgy" and Diana's complaints about her marriage, including references to suicide attempts and royal family pressures, which she alleged were ignored.[62] These mutual betrayals reflected deeper causal factors: Charles's prioritization of his long-standing bond with Parker Bowles over marital fidelity, and Diana's search for validation in a union lacking mutual emotional reciprocity, as evidenced by her private tapes to biographer Andrew Morton. The public unraveling accelerated with Morton's 1992 book Diana: Her True Story, compiled from Diana's covert recordings, which exposed her bulimia, suicide bids, Charles's neglect, and the "three of us" dynamic with Parker Bowles—claims Diana orchestrated to highlight her victimhood amid perceived palace indifference.[55] [56] Charles's 1994 admission of adultery post-separation, coupled with Diana's 1995 BBC Panorama interview where she asserted "there were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded" and declared the couple "not able to give 100% to our marriage," intensified scrutiny.[63] The marriage formally separated on December 9, 1992, after Prime Ministerial intervention amid leaked tapes and media frenzy, with the couple maintaining separate residences while co-parenting; divorce followed in 1996, driven by irreconcilable differences rather than unilateral fault, though public narrative often emphasized Charles's role due to Diana's sympathetic portrayals in sympathetic media accounts.[29] [64]

Separation, Divorce, and Financial Settlements

The separation of Diana, Princess of Wales, and Charles, Prince of Wales, was publicly announced on December 9, 1992, by Prime Minister John Major in the House of Commons, stating that the couple had agreed to separate amicably after 11 years of marriage while intending to continue cooperating in raising their sons, Prince William and Prince Harry.[3][65] The announcement followed years of marital difficulties exacerbated by mutual infidelities, including Diana's public admissions in a 1995 interview and earlier leaked recordings of private conversations, but the palace emphasized no plans for divorce at that stage, with both parties retaining their royal duties.[66][67] Despite the separation, reconciliation efforts persisted intermittently until Queen Elizabeth II intervened in 1996, urging both parties to proceed with divorce proceedings amid ongoing public scrutiny and stalled negotiations.[67] The divorce was finalized on August 28, 1996, dissolving the marriage on grounds of irretrievable breakdown, with shared parental responsibility for their children granted to both Diana and Charles; Diana retained primary physical custody but agreed to consult Charles on major decisions affecting William and Harry.[3][68] Diana described the decree as marking "the saddest day of her life" to a friend, reflecting personal reluctance amid external pressures.[67] Financial terms included a lump-sum settlement of £17 million paid to Diana from the Duchy of Cornwall revenues controlled by Charles, equivalent to approximately $26.5 million USD at prevailing exchange rates, in lieu of ongoing alimony to avoid perpetual financial ties.[69][70] Additionally, Diana received an annual provision estimated at £400,000 (about $600,000 USD) to fund her private office and staff, along with retention of her Kensington Palace apartment as a grace-and-favour residence; she surrendered the style "Her Royal Highness" but kept the title "Diana, Princess of Wales," and both parties signed a confidentiality clause barring public disclosure of settlement details.[71][72] No direct payments were specified for the children beyond existing provisions from the royal household, with Charles maintaining responsibility for their education and upbringing costs.[69] These arrangements, while generous by contemporary standards, drew criticism for originating from public funds via the Duchy, though palace officials maintained they reflected a negotiated resolution prioritizing family stability over litigation.[70]

Public Role and Charitable Activities

Duties as Princess of Wales

Following her marriage to Charles, Prince of Wales, on July 29, 1981, Diana assumed the traditional duties of the Princess of Wales, which involved representing Queen Elizabeth II at public ceremonies, state functions, and official engagements throughout the United Kingdom and Commonwealth realms.[73] These responsibilities encompassed attending investitures, presenting honors, opening public buildings, and participating in royal walkabouts to greet crowds.[1] Diana's official engagements rapidly increased in scope and frequency after her wedding; by 1988, she had completed 191 such duties, rising to 397 by 1991, reflecting her growing prominence in the royal calendar. Her domestic schedule included regular visits to hospitals, schools, and community centers, where she performed ribbon-cuttings and supported local initiatives on behalf of the sovereign.[1] Internationally, Diana undertook overseas tours to strengthen diplomatic ties and promote British interests, often accompanying Prince Charles or conducting solo missions. Her first independent foreign trip occurred in February 1984 to Norway, where she attended a ballet performance by the London City Ballet, of which she was patron.[1] Joint tours with Charles included a 1983 visit to Australia and New Zealand, covering extensive ground to engage with Commonwealth subjects, and a 1988 journey to Australia and Thailand.[74] These travels involved state dinners, cultural exchanges, and public receptions, underscoring her role in soft diplomacy.[75] Throughout her tenure, Diana adapted royal protocol by incorporating personal interactions, such as kneeling to speak with children or shaking hands with patients, which enhanced public accessibility while fulfilling ceremonial obligations.[76] Her final official domestic engagement took place on July 21, 1997, at Northwick Park Hospital in London, focusing on a children's accident and emergency unit.[1]

Engagement with Specific Causes

Diana's engagement with HIV/AIDS awareness began prominently on April 9, 1987, when she opened the United Kingdom's first dedicated HIV/AIDS unit at Middlesex Hospital in London, shaking hands without gloves with a patient terminally ill from the disease, an act that directly challenged prevailing fears of casual transmission and stigma surrounding the condition.[77][78] This gesture, captured by media, contributed to shifting public perceptions, as evidenced by subsequent increases in testing and reduced discrimination reported by organizations like the Terrence Higgins Trust, though her role amplified existing advocacy rather than initiating medical breakthroughs.[79] She continued visits to AIDS patients and wards, including in the United States, emphasizing personal contact to humanize victims amid the epidemic's peak, when over 40,000 cases had been diagnosed in the UK by 1997.[80] In early 1997, Diana focused on the humanitarian crisis of anti-personnel landmines, traveling to Huambo, Angola, on January 15 to observe demining operations with the HALO Trust, where she walked 100 meters through a cleared but uncleared-adjacent minefield to highlight the devices' indiscriminate harm to civilians, particularly children, in post-conflict regions.[81][82] Her presence drew global media coverage, correlating with heightened donations—HALO's funding rose significantly post-visit—and momentum for the Ottawa Process, culminating in the December 1997 treaty banning landmines, ratified by 164 states, though major producers like the United States abstained, underscoring limits to her influence on geopolitics.[83] Critics from military perspectives argued the ban overlooked defensive uses, but empirical data post-treaty showed reduced civilian casualties in signatory nations from 26,000 annually in the 1990s to under 4,000 by 2013.[84] Diana addressed youth homelessness through hands-on involvement with Centrepoint, becoming a trustee in 1992 and delivering a keynote speech on December 7, 1995, at London's Savoy Hotel, where she stressed the need for societal valuation of the vulnerable, drawing from visits that exposed over 100,000 UK youths to rough sleeping risks annually in the 1990s.[1][85] She brought her sons, Princes William and Harry, on private tours of shelters starting in the early 1990s, fostering empathy and correlating with Centrepoint's expanded services aiding thousands, though structural economic factors like housing shortages persisted as root causes beyond charitable intervention.[86] Her commitment to pediatric care manifested in regular visits to Great Ormond Street Hospital, where she served as president from 1989, including a Christmas 1987 event distributing gifts to patients and sealing a time capsule on March 21, 1991, containing 1990s artifacts unearthed in 2025.[87] These engagements, often with her children, provided emotional support to families amid treatments for conditions like leukemia, with hospital records noting her presence boosted staff morale and patient spirits, though quantifiable health outcomes remained tied to medical advancements rather than celebrity involvement.[88]

Patronages and Organizational Involvement

Diana, Princess of Wales, served as patron, president, or vice-president for more than 100 charities and organizations during her marriage to Prince Charles, with initial emphases on children's welfare, the elderly, and the homeless.[89] [90] Her roles extended to causes such as drug addiction support and youth programs, reflecting hands-on engagement beyond ceremonial duties.[91] In 1993, she became vice-president of the British Red Cross, later serving as patron for its 125th Birthday Appeal in 1995, where she supported humanitarian efforts including disaster relief and medical aid.[92] Following her divorce in 1996, Diana relinquished formal ties with approximately 90% of her patronages to focus on a select group, allowing deeper personal involvement amid reduced royal resources.[89] [93] By her death in 1997, her active patronages included six principal organizations: Centrepoint (homeless youth), the English National Ballet (arts and dance therapy), Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital (pediatric care), the Leprosy Mission (global health), the National AIDS Trust (HIV/AIDS awareness), and the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust (cancer treatment and research).[89] [94] These affiliations underscored her commitment to stigmatized issues like leprosy and AIDS, where she personally visited patients and advocated for destigmatization.[90] Her organizational roles often involved fundraising events, public speeches, and direct fieldwork, raising millions for causes through high-profile auctions and galas.[95]

Personal Challenges and Media Dynamics

Mental Health Issues and Self-Destructive Behaviors

Diana experienced bulimia nervosa beginning around the time of her engagement to Prince Charles in February 1981, which she later attributed to overwhelming pressures and feelings of inadequacy in preparing for royal duties.[96] In her November 1995 BBC Panorama interview, she described the disorder as a "secret disease" manifesting as binging followed by self-induced vomiting, occurring as frequently as four or five times daily during its peak intensity in the early 1980s, and serving as a coping mechanism for emotional turmoil rather than mere dietary control.[97] [98] She sought treatment in the late 1980s through psychotherapy, reducing episodes to occasional occurrences, though the condition persisted intermittently amid marital strain.[99] Following the birth of Prince William on 21 June 1982, Diana suffered from severe postpartum depression, characterized by intense loneliness and despair, exacerbated by perceived lack of empathy from Prince Charles and the royal household, who dismissed her symptoms as attention-seeking.[97] She reported throwing herself down a staircase at Buckingham Palace while seven months pregnant with William in an act of desperation, after which Charles accused her of exaggeration, deepening her isolation.[100] This episode, along with reported wrist-cutting and other self-mutilation during periods of acute distress, reflected broader patterns of self-harm linked to mood instability and unmet emotional needs.[101] [97] Accounts from associates, detailed in Andrew Morton's 1992 biography Diana: Her True Story (drawn from her private recordings), allege up to five suicide attempts between 1981 and 1986, including an overdose of aspirin shortly before her wedding and slashing her wrists during honeymoons or separations from Charles; Diana indirectly endorsed the book's veracity post-publication.[102] [103] These behaviors, while not always deemed clinically suicidal by observers, stemmed from chronic depression, borderline-like traits such as emotional volatility and fear of abandonment, and the causal strain of an incompatible marriage where Charles's ongoing relationship with Camilla Parker Bowles amplified her sense of rejection.[101] Despite public poise, private letters and confidants described her as prone to manipulative pleas for attention, interpreting bulimia and self-injury as "cries for help" misinterpreted by the palace as histrionics.[97] Post-separation in 1992, therapy helped mitigate some impulses, though residual issues influenced her vulnerability in later relationships.[104]

Interactions with the Press

Diana initially engaged positively with the press following her engagement to Prince Charles on February 24, 1981, allowing controlled access that fueled widespread public fascination and favorable coverage of her as a youthful, relatable figure.[105] This approach contrasted with the royal family's traditional detachment from media relations, as Diana sought to shape her public image proactively through selective interactions and photo opportunities.[106] During her marriage's deterioration in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Diana strategically leaked information to tabloids via intermediaries to highlight her grievances against Charles and the royal establishment, including stories about his infidelity with Camilla Parker Bowles, thereby influencing public sympathy in her favor.[107] Such tactics were acknowledged as deliberate connivance with the media for personal advantage, though she maintained an expectation of unilateral control over the narrative, leading to frustrations when coverage turned critical or uncontrolled.[107] In response to invasive reporting, she pursued legal action, successfully suing Mirror Group Newspapers in 1993 after they published photographs secretly taken of her exercising at a gym, resulting in an undisclosed settlement.[108] A pivotal interaction occurred on November 20, 1995, when Diana granted a high-profile interview to BBC journalist Martin Bashir for the Panorama program, in which she openly discussed the marital breakdown, stating there were "three of us" in the marriage and expressing doubts about Charles's suitability as king.[97] The interview, viewed by 23 million Britons, was secured through Bashir's deceitful methods, including the use of forged bank statements to falsely implicate royal aides in spying on her, as confirmed by a 2021 independent inquiry that criticized the BBC for lacking integrity and transparency.[109] Despite her role in agreeing to the broadcast, which amplified her public positioning against the monarchy, Diana later voiced regrets over its personal toll on her sons.[109] As separations and divorce proceedings intensified post-1992, press intrusions escalated into relentless paparazzi pursuits, which Diana publicly decried as "ferocious" and unforgiving, contributing to her 1993 announcement of a partial withdrawal from public life amid heightened scrutiny.[110] This dynamic reflected a symbiotic yet adversarial relationship: Diana's earlier cultivation of media attention had normalized intense coverage, but the tabloids' profit-driven aggression—prioritizing high-value photographs—eroded boundaries, culminating in her repeated complaints to editors and the Press Complaints Commission about privacy violations.[111][112] Throughout her marriage and particularly after her 1992 separation from Prince Charles, Diana faced relentless intrusions by paparazzi and tabloid journalists, who employed tactics such as hiding in shrubbery at her residences, tailing her vehicle with motorbikes, and using telephoto lenses to capture images in semi-private settings like gardens or hotel grounds.[113] These invasions escalated post-separation, with photographers camping outside Kensington Palace and pursuing her during vacations, contributing to her expressed distress over the inability to lead a normal life with her children.[114] A prominent example occurred in November 1993, when the Daily Mirror and Sunday Mirror published photographs secretly taken via a hidden camera installed in the ceiling of a west London gym, depicting Diana exercising in a leotard and cycling shorts on equipment.[115] The images, captured without her consent by an individual associated with the gym's owner, Bryce Taylor, were sold to the newspapers for a substantial sum, prompting Diana to initiate legal proceedings against the publishers for breach of privacy and confidence.[116] On November 8, 1993, she secured a High Court injunction prohibiting further publication or dissemination of the photographs, marking a rare instance of her pursuing judicial restraint against media outlets.[117][118] The case progressed to settlements in 1995, with the Mirror Group Newspapers issuing an apology, covering Diana's legal costs estimated at £1 million, and donating an additional £200,000 to charity; the gym owner initially resisted but ultimately settled, with a court order barring any future use or sale of the images.[119][120][121] This action underscored Diana's occasional willingness to litigate despite her general reluctance to engage in prolonged court battles, which she viewed as exacerbating public scrutiny.[113] Broader invasions included unauthorized recordings of private telephone conversations, such as the 1989-1990 "Squidgygate" tapes involving Diana, which were leaked and published by tabloids in 1992 after apparent interception.[122] Diana did not initiate lawsuits over these during her lifetime, though subsequent investigations and claims by her son Prince Harry have confirmed tabloid involvement in such practices targeting her.[122] Following her death on August 31, 1997, French authorities prosecuted paparazzi for privacy violations related to pre-crash intrusions; in 2002, photographer Jason Fraser was fined for capturing images of Diana and Dodi Fayed kissing on a yacht, breaching Dodi's privacy rights under French law.[123] In 2005, three photographers—Jacques Langevin, Christian Martinez, and Fabrice Chassery—were convicted of invading the couple's privacy by photographing them at the Ritz Hotel shortly before the fatal crash, receiving fines and suspended sentences.[124][125] These post-mortem rulings highlighted France's stricter privacy statutes compared to the UK's more permissive approach at the time, though they did not address manslaughter charges against the photographers, which were dropped in 1999.[126]

Post-Divorce Period and Final Years

Romantic Relationships After Divorce

Following her divorce from Charles, Prince of Wales, finalized on August 28, 1996, Diana maintained a private two-year relationship with British-Pakistani heart surgeon Hasnat Khan, which had begun in September 1995 while she was still legally married but separated.[127] Khan, whom Diana reportedly described as "Mr. Wonderful" and the love of her life according to friends' accounts, met her during a visit to Royal Brompton Hospital where he worked; their bond emphasized shared interests in humanitarian work and his reserved demeanor contrasting her public life.[128] The affair remained largely secret due to Khan's aversion to media attention and cultural differences, including his reluctance to relocate or integrate into royal circles, leading to its end in late July 1997 after Diana proposed marriage and he declined, citing incompatibility in lifestyles and family expectations.[129] In the immediate aftermath of the breakup with Khan, Diana entered a brief public romance with Dodi Fayed, son of Egyptian billionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed, beginning in July 1997 during a vacation on the Fayed family yacht Jonikal in the Mediterranean.[130] This relationship, lasting approximately six weeks, involved travel to locations including Sardinia and Saint-Tropez and was marked by paparazzi photographs capturing affectionate moments, such as embraces in Portofino on August 13, 1997.[127] Mohamed Al-Fayed later claimed in public statements that the couple was deeply committed and planning marriage, but contemporaneous reports and subsequent inquiries, including the 2008 British inquest, found no evidence of engagement rings or firm plans beyond the short summer liaison, attributing its intensity to rebound dynamics post-Khan rather than long-term intent.[131] The romance concluded tragically with both Diana and Fayed's deaths in a Paris car crash on August 31, 1997.[132] No other verified romantic involvements followed Diana's divorce, as her post-separation focus shifted toward personal reflection and charitable priorities amid intense media scrutiny, with unsubstantiated tabloid rumors of additional liaisons dismissed for lack of empirical support from primary witnesses or records.[133]

Shifting Public Priorities

Following her divorce from Prince Charles, finalized on August 28, 1996, Diana, Princess of Wales, redirected her energies toward a more selective array of charitable endeavors, reducing her patronages from over 100 organizations to six primary ones—including the British Red Cross, the National AIDS Trust, and the HALO Trust—to enable greater depth and impact in her advocacy.[134][67] This refocus marked a departure from the broader ceremonial duties tied to her former royal role, emphasizing hands-on humanitarian work unencumbered by official protocol.[135] Freed from the constraints of palace expectations, she positioned herself as an independent global activist, prioritizing issues like the eradication of landmines and support for victims of social ills such as AIDS and homelessness.[67] A pivotal manifestation of this shift occurred in early 1997, when Diana traveled to Angola on January 15 to support demining efforts by the HALO Trust, deliberately walking across a recently cleared minefield in Huambo province to underscore the indiscriminate lethality of anti-personnel mines.[81][83] This symbolic act, captured extensively by media, elevated the issue from niche humanitarian concern to international priority, galvanizing public discourse and pressuring governments toward action.[136] Her involvement amplified fundraising for clearance operations and contributed to the diplomatic momentum culminating in the Ottawa Treaty, an international agreement banning anti-personnel mines, which 122 countries signed on December 3, 1997—months after her death.[84][137] Public attention increasingly aligned with these priorities, viewing Diana not merely as a divorced royal but as a moral force capable of influencing policy on overlooked crises; polls and commentary from the period reflected her approval ratings surpassing those of the monarchy itself, with her landmine advocacy cited as emblematic of a "people's queen" ethos detached from institutional pomp.[3][138] This evolution in perception contrasted with earlier tabloid fixation on her marital scandals, redirecting scrutiny toward her substantive interventions, though media intrusions persisted in blending personal narratives with her causes.[135] By mid-1997, including a follow-up visit to Bosnia in August to meet landmine victims, her efforts had demonstrably swayed donor contributions to demining—rising sharply post-Angola—and prompted parliamentary debates in Britain and elsewhere on mine bans.[137][92]

Events Leading to Death

Following her divorce from the Prince of Wales, finalized on August 28, 1996, Diana, Princess of Wales, pursued a more independent lifestyle, including vacations that drew intense media scrutiny.[131] In July 1997, Mohamed Al-Fayed, the Egyptian-born businessman who owned Harrods department store and the Ritz Hotel in Paris, invited Diana and her sons, Princes William and Harry, to his villa in Saint-Tropez, France, for a holiday.[139] [140] This invitation came amid Diana's recent separation from heart surgeon Hasnat Khan and Al-Fayed's prior unsuccessful attempts to cultivate ties with the royal family, including a rejected offer to buy a property near Balmoral.[141] During the Saint-Tropez stay from July 14 to July 20, Diana met Al-Fayed's son, Dodi Fayed, a film producer and frequent companion of high-profile figures, marking the beginning of their brief romantic involvement.[142] [132] The relationship escalated when Diana and Dodi boarded Al-Fayed's luxury yacht, Jonikal, for a Mediterranean cruise starting around July 25, 1997, visiting ports including Sardinia and Corsica.[127] [131] Paparazzi boats pursued the yacht relentlessly, capturing images published on August 6 showing Diana and Dodi kissing, which ignited a global media frenzy and speculation about an engagement.[143] This intrusion exacerbated Diana's longstanding frustration with press hounding, as she had publicly complained about privacy invasions in prior years, including a 1995 BBC interview where she described feeling "hunted like a fox."[144] Despite warnings from associates about Al-Fayed's reputation—described by some as a "sleazy villain" due to his aggressive business tactics and social ambitions—Diana continued the association, visiting Dodi's London apartment on August 7.[127] [141] By late August, after additional travels including a stop in Sardinia, Diana altered plans to return to London from her landmines advocacy work in Bosnia earlier that month, opting instead to fly with Dodi to Paris on August 30 aboard a private jet from Olbia Airport to Le Bourget Airport.[131] [145] They checked into the Imperial Suite at the Ritz Hotel, owned by Mohamed Al-Fayed, where security measures were implemented amid swarming paparazzi outside.[144] That evening, the couple dined privately in the Ritz's L'Espadon restaurant to evade photographers, a decision influenced by the escalating pursuit that had followed them from the Mediterranean ports.[146] Henri Paul, the Ritz's deputy head of security, was selected to drive them afterward, reportedly sober at the time of departure around 12:23 a.m. on August 31, as they left via a rear exit in a Mercedes S280 to head toward Dodi's nearby apartment at 36 Rue Arsène Houssaye.[131] The route through central Paris, under paparazzi headlights, reflected the causal pressures of fame and evasion tactics that defined the preceding weeks.[143]

Death and Immediate Consequences

The Paris Car Crash

On 30 August 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales, and Dodi Fayed dined at the Ritz Hotel in Paris, where Fayed's father owned the property.[147] To evade pursuing paparazzi, the couple departed the hotel around midnight via a rear service entrance in a black Mercedes-Benz S280 sedan.[148] The vehicle was driven by Henri Paul, the Ritz's deputy head of security, with Trevor Rees-Jones, a bodyguard, in the front passenger seat; Diana and Fayed occupied the rear.[149] [150] The Mercedes accelerated through Paris streets at high speed, estimated at over 100 km/h (62 mph), in an attempt to outrun photographers on motorcycles.[151] At approximately 12:23 a.m. on 31 August, the car entered the Pont de l'Alma underpass along the Seine River, less than half a mile from the Eiffel Tower.[149] It collided with the tunnel's 13th pillar, rebounding before coming to rest against the right wall; the impact deformed the vehicle's radiator into the engine compartment, exacerbating front-seat injuries.[148] [151] Henri Paul and Dodi Fayed were pronounced dead at the scene from massive head and chest trauma.[150] Rees-Jones, the sole survivor, sustained severe injuries including multiple facial fractures requiring 150 titanium plates for reconstruction, chest trauma, and a 10-day coma, though he had been wearing a seatbelt.[152] [153] Diana suffered cardiac arrest at the scene but was resuscitated; she was rushed to Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, where she succumbed to internal bleeding from chest and lung injuries at around 4:00 a.m., with official pronouncement of death at 6:00 a.m.[149] [147] [154] Post-mortem analysis revealed Paul had a blood alcohol concentration of 1.74 grams per liter—three times France's legal limit of 0.5 grams per liter—along with traces of antidepressants and carbon monoxide exposure, contributing to impaired control during the high-speed maneuver.[155] [156] [157] None of the rear passengers wore seatbelts, a factor in the severity of injuries.[150] French emergency services attended promptly, but the crash's dynamics—speed, intoxication, and pursuit—rendered survival improbable for most occupants.[151]

Funeral Arrangements and Public Mourning

Following Diana's death on August 31, 1997, her body was repatriated to London aboard a Royal Air Force aircraft and placed in the Chapel Royal at St James's Palace for private mourning by family and close associates.[158] Funeral arrangements deviated from standard royal protocol, opting for a ceremonial rather than full state funeral to reflect her status as a divorced former member of the royal family, though with significant public input amid widespread grief.[158] The service occurred on September 6, 1997, at Westminster Abbey, beginning at 11:00 a.m., with the cortège departing Kensington Palace at 9:08 a.m. on a gun carriage drawn by horses from the King's Troop Royal Horse Artillery.[159] Approximately 2,000 mourners attended the Abbey service, including royals, dignitaries, and select public figures, while the procession route through central London drew crowds estimated in the millions lining the streets.[158] The funeral featured personal elements, such as Earl John Spencer's eulogy criticizing media intrusion and vowing protection for Diana's sons, and Elton John's rewritten performance of "Candle in the Wind" as a tribute.[158] Following the service, the cortège proceeded to Althorp, the Spencer family estate, where Diana was buried on an island in the estate's lake that evening.[158] Broadcast globally, the event reached an estimated 2 billion viewers, marking one of the most watched funerals in history.[158] Public mourning manifested in unprecedented scale, with millions of floral tributes—estimated at over one million bouquets—piling up outside Kensington Palace, Buckingham Palace, and St James's Palace, creating barriers several feet high.[160] Books of condolence across the UK collected over 1.3 million signatures in the week following her death.[161] A Gallup poll indicated that 50% of Britons grieved as if a personal acquaintance had died, reflecting the intensity of emotional response.[162] Shops, businesses, and entertainment venues closed nationwide during the funeral procession, bringing much of Britain to a halt, while international vigils and media coverage amplified global participation.[163] The Royal Family acknowledged being "deeply touched" by the outpouring, which pressured adjustments in protocol, including the Union Flag at half-mast over Buckingham Palace—a first for a non-royal.[161]

Short-Term Royal Family Response

Following the confirmation of Diana's death in the early hours of August 31, 1997, Prince Charles, who was at Balmoral Castle with the rest of the royal family, was informed around 5:00 a.m. BST and immediately traveled to the residences of Princes William and Harry to break the news to them personally.[164] Later that morning, Charles arranged to fly to Paris aboard a royal jet to retrieve Diana's body, accompanied by her sisters, Lady Sarah McCorquodale and Lady Jane Fellowes, departing from Aberdeen Airport and arriving at Le Bourget Airport before coordinating with French authorities at the hospital.[165] The group viewed the body privately, after which it was transferred to a British Airways BAC One-Eleven for repatriation to RAF Northolt in London, landing around 7:00 p.m. BST, with Charles escorting the coffin to St James's Palace for the initial lying-in-state preparations.[165] The royal family, including Queen Elizabeth II, remained at Balmoral in Scotland for private mourning, adhering to traditions of seclusion during family grief, particularly to shield the young princes from media intrusion; no public flags were lowered to half-mast at Buckingham Palace initially, as protocol reserved the Union Flag there only for the Queen's presence, and exceptions were not invoked amid the family's retreat.[166] This reticence drew mounting public and media criticism by September 2–3, with newspapers like The Daily Mirror headlining "Where is our Queen?" and petitions urging a flag-lowering and national address, reflecting perceptions of emotional detachment from the unprecedented public mourning.[167] On September 4, the Queen issued a brief written statement from Balmoral expressing "deepest sorrow" for Diana's death and gratitude for public condolences, marking the family's first official public acknowledgment, though it avoided direct emotional language or commitments to ceremonial changes.[168] In response to escalating pressure, including from Prime Minister Tony Blair, the family decided to accelerate their return to London on September 5, with the Queen traveling by royal train from Balmoral; upon arrival at King's Cross Station, she approved flying the Union Flag at half-mast over Buckingham Palace for the first time in modern history, breaking precedent to align with public expectations.[166] That evening, at 6:00 p.m., the Queen delivered a televised address from Buckingham Palace, scripted by her advisors, in which she paid tribute to Diana as an "exceptional and gifted human being," emphasized national unity in grief, and endorsed the September 6 funeral as a moment for the "British nation united in grief and respect," while privately prioritizing the princes' emotional needs over spectacle.[169] These adjustments, implemented within five days of the crash, mitigated immediate backlash but highlighted tensions between royal protocol—favoring discretion and family protection—and the demand for visible empathy amid mass floral tributes exceeding 1 million by September 5 outside Kensington Palace and other sites.[166]

Investigations, Theories, and Verdicts

Official Inquiries and Findings

The French judicial investigation into the August 31, 1997, car crash, led by investigating magistrate Hervé Stéphan, concluded on September 3, 1999, that the incident was accidental, attributing primary responsibility to deputy hotel manager Henri Paul, who had a blood alcohol level over three times the French legal limit (1.74 grams per liter) combined with prescription antidepressants and was driving at excessive speed—estimated at 95-110 km/h (59-68 mph) in a 50 km/h zone—while attempting to evade pursuing paparazzi. The probe examined autopsy reports, vehicle forensics, and witness statements from over 200 individuals, ruling out mechanical failure or sabotage of the Mercedes S280, though it noted Diana's lack of seatbelt use contributed to her fatal injuries from a dislodged pulmonary vein.[170] Manslaughter charges against six paparazzi were dropped in 1999 for insufficient evidence of direct causation, with the court finding their pursuit reckless but not criminally culpable; the case against the Ritz's security director, Trevor Rees-Jones (the sole survivor), was also dismissed due to lack of evidence.[171] In response to persistent claims by Mohamed Al-Fayed, Dodi Fayed's father, of a royal conspiracy, the Metropolitan Police launched Operation Paget in January 2004 under former commissioner Lord John Stevens, involving 175 officers who reviewed 20,000 documents, re-interviewed 300 witnesses, and re-examined forensic evidence from France. The 832-page report, released December 14, 2006, found no evidence of murder or orchestration by MI6, the Duke of Edinburgh, or others, confirming the French conclusions: Paul's intoxication (carbon monoxide levels did not invalidate blood tests), high speed, and paparazzi pursuit caused the crash, with no pregnancy for Diana (multiple post-mortem exams negative) and no "white Fiat" as a planted vehicle.[172] It dismissed Al-Fayed's theories as unsubstantiated, noting inconsistencies in his accounts, and attributed crash dynamics to Paul's maneuvers rather than external blinding flashes or braking by a mystery car.[173] The British coroner's inquest, opened in 2004 but formally convened from October 2007 to April 2008 under High Court assistant deputy coroner Lord Justice Scott Baker, incorporated Operation Paget's evidence and heard from 278 witnesses over six months at a cost exceeding £12.5 million. On April 7, 2008, the jury delivered a majority verdict of unlawful killing for Diana, Dodi Fayed, and Henri Paul, citing "gross negligence" by Paul for driving impaired without Diana or Dodi seatbelted, and by the paparazzi for aggressive pursuit that contributed to the loss of control in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel.[174] The ruling rejected conspiracy, pregnancy, or murder claims, emphasizing empirical forensic data like skid marks, impact speeds (up to 104 km/h), and Paul's 3.5 promille alcohol equivalent, while noting Rees-Jones's seatbelt saved him; it marked the first official implication of paparazzi negligence in a manslaughter-equivalent context, though no further prosecutions followed due to prior French closures and jurisdictional limits.[175]

Conspiracy Claims and Empirical Rebuttals

Prominent conspiracy theories allege that Diana's death on August 31, 1997, in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel was orchestrated by British intelligence or the royal family, often citing motives such as preventing her marriage to Dodi Fayed or silencing her on issues like landmine campaigns.[176] Mohamed Al-Fayed, Dodi's father, claimed MI6 acted on orders from Prince Philip to avert a union producing a Muslim child, asserting Diana was pregnant and the crash involved a staged bright flash or sabotage.[177] These narratives gained traction through Al-Fayed's campaigns and media, including assertions of tampered evidence like absent CCTV footage and a mysterious white Fiat Uno allegedly ramming the Mercedes.[178] The 1999 French judicial inquiry, involving forensic analysis and witness testimonies, determined the crash resulted from Henri Paul's impaired driving—his blood alcohol level measured 1.74 grams per liter, exceeding France's legal limit of 0.5 grams, with traces of antidepressants and carbon monoxide effects from a prior fire—while speeding at approximately 196 km/h (121 mph) in a 50 km/h zone, exacerbated by paparazzi pursuit but without evidence of deliberate interference.[155] Post-mortem examinations confirmed Diana was not pregnant, directly contradicting claims of a motive tied to gestation, and no foreign substances indicating poisoning were found in the victims.[179] Operation Paget, a 2004-2006 Metropolitan Police investigation reviewing over 175 conspiracy allegations, including Al-Fayed's, analyzed 20,000 documents and interviewed global witnesses, concluding no credible evidence supported murder by state actors; the white Fiat Uno's paint traces on the Mercedes were traced to a vehicle owned by a photographer uninvolved in orchestration, and non-functional tunnel CCTV stemmed from routine maintenance rather than suppression.[172] The 2008 British inquest, drawing on Paget's findings and testimony from 278 witnesses over six months, returned a verdict of unlawful killing by gross negligence of Paul and the paparazzi, explicitly rejecting assassination theories after scrutinizing alleged "bright flash" accounts as unreliable recollections amid chaos.[175][180] Al-Fayed's assertions, dismissed by both inquiries for lacking substantiation and motivated by personal grievance, highlight how grief and distrust can amplify unverified narratives, yet forensic mechanics—such as the Mercedes' collision dynamics matching high-speed loss of control without external impact sufficient for causation—align consistently with accidental causation over engineered plots.[181] Independent reconstructions, including vehicle simulations, corroborated Paul's evasion maneuvers leading to the pillar strike, underscoring human error and pursuit pressure as proximal causes absent institutional complicity.[182] In 2004, the Metropolitan Police launched Operation Paget to examine conspiracy allegations surrounding the 1997 Paris car crash, prompted primarily by claims from Mohamed Al-Fayed that British intelligence and the royal family orchestrated the deaths of Diana and his son Dodi Fayed.[172] The three-year inquiry reviewed over 175 conspiracy theories, including assertions of pregnancy, pregnancy termination, and assassination plots involving MI6 or the Duke of Edinburgh, but found no credible evidence supporting murder; instead, it corroborated forensic and witness data indicating a tragic accident exacerbated by Henri Paul's intoxication and paparazzi pursuit.[172] The report, released publicly on December 14, 2006, dismissed Al-Fayed's specific accusations—such as a faked pregnancy or white Fiat involvement—as unsubstantiated, noting inconsistencies in his narrative driven by personal vendettas against the establishment.[172] The subsequent inquest, opened in 2004 but substantively held from October 2007 to April 2008 under Lord Justice Scott Baker, incorporated Operation Paget's findings and additional archival materials, including Diana's October 1995 handwritten note to her butler Paul Burrell expressing fear that "XX [likely Charles] my husband" planned to kill her via a staged car accident.[183] Testimonies from over 250 witnesses, including security experts and French investigators, reinforced that the crash resulted from Paul's blood alcohol level (1.74 g/L, three times the French limit) and speeding, with no mechanical sabotage or external interference detected in vehicle examinations.[184] On April 7, 2008, the jury returned a verdict of "unlawful killing" attributable to Paul's grossly negligent driving and the paparazzi's reckless actions, rejecting murder or conspiracy; MI6 confirmed under oath it held no files on Diana or Dodi at the time of the crash, countering intelligence involvement claims.[183] [184] Post-inquest legal actions dwindled, with Al-Fayed abandoning his decade-long private judicial review bid on April 8, 2008, citing concern for Princes William and Harry amid ongoing media scrutiny, though he maintained his theories publicly until his death in 2023.[185] Archival releases remained limited; a 2016 Freedom of Information disclosure of Foreign Office reports from 1997-1998 detailed diplomatic handling of the aftermath but revealed no new causal insights beyond confirmed accident circumstances.[186] U.S. Freedom of Information Act requests for CIA records, initiated in 1998, yielded partial declassifications by the 2020s, but these contained routine surveillance notes on Diana's public activities without evidence of foreknowledge or involvement in her death, underscoring the absence of empirical support for long-term conspiracy narratives.[187] These proceedings collectively affirmed causal realism in attributing the crash to human error and pursuit dynamics, while highlighting Al-Fayed's claims as empirically refuted despite their persistence in non-official discourse.[172]

Enduring Legacy and Assessments

Impact on the Monarchy and Family

Diana's high public approval ratings contrasted sharply with those of Prince Charles and the broader royal family during the 1990s, exacerbating perceptions of institutional rigidity. Polls from the period showed Diana enjoying favorability ratings above 70% in the lead-up to her 1996 divorce, while Charles's hovered around 36% as beneficial to the monarchy by 1997, amid revelations of his affair with Camilla Parker Bowles.[138][188] Her 1995 BBC Panorama interview, viewed by 23 million Britons, amplified marital discord by claiming "there were three of us in this marriage" and questioning Charles's fitness for kingship, prompting royal dismay and accelerating the divorce finalized on August 28, 1996, which stripped her of the style "Her Royal Highness."[189] This public airing of private grievances eroded the monarchy's aura of untouchability, contributing to a post-divorce poll where only 19% approved of the family's handling of the separation.[190] The immediate aftermath of Diana's death on August 31, 1997, triggered a crisis for the monarchy, with public outrage over the family's initial reticence—such as the Queen's delay in returning from Balmoral and absence of a Union Flag at half-mast over Buckingham Palace—fueling anti-royal sentiment.[191] Over a million mourners converged on London, and tabloid campaigns like "Show Us You Care" pressured the royals, leading Queen Elizabeth II to deliver a televised address on September 5, 1997, expressing sorrow and justifying the family's private grieving process while endorsing the princes' involvement in the funeral.[192] This episode, which saw support for the monarchy dip to historic lows with only 44% believing Britain worse off without it by 2000, compelled adaptations including media access to royal estates and overt emotional displays, marking a shift from stoic tradition to perceived accessibility.[193][194] On the family level, Diana's death profoundly shaped Princes William and Harry, then aged 15 and 12, who walked behind her coffin on September 6, 1997, amid global scrutiny that compounded their grief.[195] She had instilled in them a hands-on approach to charity and warnings about institutional pitfalls, influencing William's emphasis on mental health initiatives and Harry's eventual advocacy for veterans, though their ongoing rift highlights unresolved tensions from shared trauma.[196] Long-term, her legacy prompted Charles to integrate more public-facing elements into his role post-2002, with approval rebounding to 74% shortly after her death, aiding the institution's survival by aligning it closer to Diana's emotive style without her personal volatility.[138][191]

Cultural and Stylistic Influence

Diana, Princess of Wales, emerged as a global fashion icon during the 1980s and 1990s, blending royal elegance with accessible style that influenced designers and public trends. Her wardrobe choices, from high couture to casual athleisure, popularized elements like cycling shorts paired with oversized sweaters and pussy-bow blouses, which saw revivals in contemporary fashion.[197][198] Designers such as Virgil Abloh drew direct inspiration from her looks for Off-White's Spring-Summer 2018 collection, while brands like Rowing Blazers launched womenswear lines echoing her preppy aesthetic.[199][200] Specific outfits amplified her stylistic impact; the black Versace "revenge dress" worn to a 1994 Vanity Fair dinner after Prince Charles's adultery admission became a symbol of bold defiance, boosting Versace's visibility.[201] The Victor Edelstein-designed blue velvet gown, dubbed the "Travolta dress" for her 1985 White House dance with John Travolta, fetched £300,000 at auction in 2019, demonstrating enduring market value driven by her association.[201] Her evolution from demure, romantic early styles—featuring feathered hats and pastel suits—to confident 1990s minimalism with sleek shift dresses reflected broader shifts in women's fashion toward empowerment and simplicity.[202][203] In beauty and personal style, Diana favored voluminous hairstyles, collaborating with stylist Sam McKnight on feathered bobs and teased volumes suited to 1980s trends, which she later simplified into softer cuts.[204] She often applied her own makeup, emphasizing mascara for lash volume—preferring Lancôme's Hypnôse—and subtle warmer tones around the eyes, establishing a classic, ethereal look that avoided heavy contouring.[205][206] Her twice-daily skincare routine of cleansing, toning, and moisturizing underscored a practical approach to maintenance, influencing perceptions of royal beauty as approachable rather than unattainable.[207] Culturally, Diana's style democratized monarchy imagery, mixing affordable high-street pieces with couture to project relatability, which contrasted with prior royal stiffness and inspired a wave of "people's princess" aesthetics in media and celebrity wardrobes.[208] Post-1997, her influence persisted through auctions; in June 2025, Julien's Auctions sold over 200 of her garments and accessories in "Princess Diana's Style & A Royal Collection," with items like frocks and handbags commanding prices up to hundreds of thousands, signaling sustained demand among collectors.[209][210] This revival, seen in younger demographics recreating her sporty off-duty looks, affirms her role in cyclical fashion trends without reliance on transient hype.[199][198]

Balanced Evaluations of Character and Actions

Diana exhibited profound empathy and charisma in her public engagements, particularly through her humanitarian initiatives, which elevated awareness of stigmatized issues. In April 1987, she shook hands with an AIDS patient without gloves at Middlesex Hospital, a gesture that challenged prevailing fears and misconceptions about HIV transmission, contributing to reduced public stigma.[90] Her patronage of over 100 charities, including extensive work with the British Red Cross, involved hands-on visits to leprosy clinics and homeless shelters, where her personal involvement—such as embracing patients—humanized causes often ignored by royalty.[93] In January 1997, her visit to Angola to walk through a minefield underscored her commitment to anti-landmine advocacy, influencing the Ottawa Treaty signed later that year and prompting increased global funding for demining efforts.[92] These actions stemmed from her innate warmth and sensitivity, traits that endeared her to the public and staff who observed her genuine interactions with the vulnerable.[211] Despite these strengths, Diana's personal character revealed significant instabilities and self-destructive tendencies, notably her long-term battle with bulimia nervosa, which she publicly disclosed in a 1995 BBC interview as a coping mechanism for marital dissatisfaction and emotional voids predating her 1981 wedding.[96] This disorder, characterized by binge-purge cycles, persisted for years and was exacerbated by her reported feelings of inadequacy within the royal framework, leading to physical health declines including electrolyte imbalances.[212] Contemporaries and biographers have described her as fragile and insecure, with behaviors suggestive of emotional volatility, including frequent staff dismissals—over 30 household employees were reportedly fired during her tenure—often amid accusations of paranoia or capricious demands.[213] Her extramarital affairs, including with James Hewitt from 1986 to 1991, reflected impulsivity and contributed to the public unraveling of her marriage, prioritizing personal gratification over discretion.[31] Diana's adeptness at media engagement bordered on manipulation, as she selectively leaked stories to sympathetic outlets to shape narratives, a tactic acknowledged in leaked communications from the early 1990s where she and Prince Charles vied for favorable coverage.[214] This savvy, while effective in amplifying her charitable profile, often prioritized image control over institutional loyalty, straining relations with the royal household and fostering a culture of tabloid dependency.[107] Critics, including former aides, portrayed her as willful and prone to vindictiveness, using her vulnerability as leverage in conflicts, such as involving her sons in media spectacles to underscore familial grievances.[215] In assessment, Diana's character embodied a duality: her courageous advocacy yielded tangible societal benefits, outshining personal frailties in historical impact, yet her insecurities fueled destructive patterns that undermined private stability and professional conduct. Empirical accounts affirm her as neither flawless icon nor villain, but a product of unresolved emotional needs intersecting with unparalleled public platform.[216][217]

Recent Commemorations, Auctions, and Developments

In June 2025, Julien's Auctions held "Princess Diana's Style & A Royal Collection," featuring over 140 items from her wardrobe and memorabilia, including childhood photographs and fashion pieces, which collectively sold for millions, underscoring ongoing market interest in her personal artifacts.[209] A floral "Caring Dress" worn by Diana during hospital visits to children fetched $520,000, exceeding expectations and highlighting the premium placed on garments linked to her charitable work.[218] This event followed record-breaking sales in 2023, where a dress worn by Diana twice exceeded $1.1 million, reflecting sustained demand driven by collectors seeking tangible connections to her legacy rather than mere celebrity memorabilia.[219] Annual death anniversaries continue to prompt public tributes, with the 28th observance on August 31, 2025, drawing fans to Kensington Palace, where floral shrines and messages expressed enduring sentiment, including notes from heartbroken admirers.[220] Diana's brother, Charles Spencer, marked the date by laying a bouquet at her burial site on the Althorp estate, a private gesture consistent with family traditions.[221] Earlier, the 25th anniversary in 2022 saw flowers and mementos placed at her former London home and the Paris tunnel site of the fatal crash, though such acts have been critiqued for potentially romanticizing the tragedy without addressing evidentiary findings from official inquiries.[222] Ongoing exhibitions preserve and reinterpret Diana's image through artifacts and installations. The "Princess Diana: Accredited Access Exhibition" at the Arlington Museum of Art, running from January 17 to April 13, 2025, showcased bespoke photography, art, and larger-than-life installations focused on her public persona.[223] In Las Vegas, the "Princess Diana & The Royals: The Exhibition" displays over 700 authentic items, including evening gowns, emphasizing her stylistic influence amid broader royal history.[224] The Princess Diana Museum's virtual 3D platform and traveling shows, including outfits slated for a U.S. presidential library in September 2026, aim to educate on her life from childhood to death, though their interpretive framing prioritizes inspirational narratives over comprehensive biographical scrutiny.[225] Additionally, 2025 marked the 25th anniversary of the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Playground in Kensington Gardens, celebrating its role in child-focused legacy projects established post-1997.[226]

Titles, Honors, and Heraldry

Formal Titles and Styles

Born Diana Frances Spencer on 1 July 1961, she was initially styled The Honourable Diana Spencer as the daughter of Viscount Althorp, heir to the Earldom of Spencer.[1] In 1975, following her father's succession to the Earldom of Spencer upon the death of her grandfather, she received the style Lady Diana Spencer, reflecting her status as the daughter of an earl.[1][5] Upon her marriage to Charles, Prince of Wales, on 29 July 1981, Diana acquired the title and style of Her Royal Highness The Princess of Wales, as the wife of the heir apparent to the British throne.[227] This entitled her to the precedence and privileges associated with that position, including the courtesy title of Princess in official contexts, though she was not a princess by birthright or creation.[227] The decree absolute of her divorce from Charles was issued on 28 August 1996, after which she relinquished the style Her Royal Highness per the terms agreed upon in the settlement, primarily at the insistence of Charles despite reported preferences from Queen Elizabeth II to retain it.[228][227] She was thereafter styled Diana, Princess of Wales, a courtesy reflecting her former status as wife of the Prince of Wales, allowing continued use of the princess title without royal highness precedence or security privileges.[1][227] The informal appellation "Princess Diana," widely used in media, was never an official style and stemmed from public familiarity rather than protocol.[5]

Awards and Appointments

Diana held several honorary military appointments during her marriage to the Prince of Wales. She was appointed Colonel-in-Chief of the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment in 1992, a role she retained until her divorce in 1996.[229] She also served as Colonel-in-Chief of the 13th/18th Royal Hussars, a British Army unit formed in 1922 from merged hussar regiments.[230] Additionally, Diana was Colonel-in-Chief of the Princess of Wales' Own Regiment, a Canadian infantry unit, from 17 August 1985 until 16 July 1996.[231] In the Royal Air Force, she held the position of Honorary Air Commodore at RAF Wittering.[232] Civic honours included the Honorary Freedom of the City of London, awarded on 22 July 1987 at the Guildhall—the highest distinction the City of London could confer, recognizing her public service.[233] For her humanitarian efforts, particularly with children and disabilities, Diana received the Humanitarian of the Year Award from United Cerebral Palsy on 11 December 1995, presented by Henry Kissinger at a gala in New York.[234] Diana's charitable appointments encompassed over 100 organizations at her peak involvement, initially emphasizing children and the elderly before expanding to AIDS awareness, landmine clearance, homelessness, leprosy, and cancer care.[95] She became president of the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust (a cancer hospital) in 1989 and held similar leadership roles with Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children.[94] Following her divorce, she relinquished most royal patronages but maintained six principal ones until her death: the National AIDS Trust, Centrepoint (youth homelessness), Great Ormond Street Hospital, the Royal Marsden Hospital, the English National Ballet, and the Leprosy Mission.[89] These roles involved hands-on advocacy, such as publicizing AIDS stigma reduction and anti-personnel mine bans through field visits and international campaigns.[235]

Coat of Arms and Symbolism

Diana's coat of arms derived from the Spencer family heraldry, which originated in a grant dated 1504 and featured charges adopted by the 16th century, including three escallops (scallop shells) on a bend.[236] The full blazon for her paternal arms, as used by Lady Diana Spencer prior to marriage, was quarterly argent and gules in the second and third quarters a fret or, over all on a bend sable three escallops argent; as a female, these were typically displayed on a lozenge without crest or supporters. Following her marriage to Charles, Prince of Wales, on July 29, 1981, Diana received a formal grant of arms from the College of Arms, adapting the Spencer blazon for her new status and ensigning the lozenge with a coronet of the Princesses of Wales—alternating crosses patée and fleurs-de-lis.[237] This version, used from 1981 to 1996, maintained the core Spencer elements without impalement of the Prince's arms, reflecting heraldic tradition for royal consorts who bore their own family achievements augmented for rank. After her divorce on August 28, 1996, Diana reverted to the undifferenced Spencer arms, presented on a lozenge with a plain coronet, though she more frequently employed a personal cypher of intertwined "D" and ostrich feathers in public contexts.[237] The escallops served as the principal symbolic charge, emblematic of the Spencer's enduring noble heritage rather than carrying esoteric meaning; they appeared consistently in family arms since the 16th century and were later incorporated into the coat of arms of her son, Prince William, as a deliberate tribute to her lineage upon his grant in 2002.[238] The fret or in the quarters alluded to ancient Spencer alliances, while the overall sable bend connoted strength and defense, aligning with standard heraldic conventions without unique personal augmentations beyond marital status. No evidence exists of additional symbolism imposed by Diana herself, as her heraldry remained tethered to familial precedent.[239]

References

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