In England, A Look At Harry And Meghan's (Relatively) Low-Key Wedding Site

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
St
George's Chapel at Windsor Castle is about the most down-home place for a British royal wedding that American Meghan Markle could have
hoped for
Compared with the spectacular public wedding of Prince Harry's parents at St
Paul's Cathedral, and big brother Prince William's to Catherine Middleton at Westminster Abbey, the May 19 wedding there promises to be
intimate - well, intimate for royalty.The castle is Harry's family home
It's where he and William visited the Queen and Prince Philip, who spend nearly every free weekend at Windsor Castle, when they were in
high school at Eton
They could walk to the castle on a footbridge over the Thames
The Queen's stable at Windsor is where all her grandchildren learned to ride
And 3-month-old Harry was christened Henry Charles Albert David at St
George's Chapel.The chapel, which easily will hold the 600 guests, has seen several royal weddings, including those of many of Queen
Victoria's children and grandchildren, and Harry's uncle, Prince Edward
It's where Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles had their "Service of Prayer and Dedication" following their civil-marriage ceremony
in 2005.The castle grounds will be closed on Meghan and Harry's wedding day, but, as with the wedding of Charles and Camilla, the couple
has invited about 2,640 guests - including representatives of charities for whom they are patrons and Windsor Castle staff - to stand
outside St
George's Chapel for a five-minute "walkabout" by the royal family after the service
Afterward, the couple will board a carriage to ride down Castle Hill, pass the crowds gathered along Windsor's main street, and head back
year
Visitors approach from the town below, where its commanding position makes a strong impression
This is what William the Conqueror intended in 1070, when he built the fortress over a chalk outgrowth high above the Thames, as a part of
the ring of forts he erected around London
It's an uphill climb from the train station and the bus parking lot
Visitors look high above to see whether the red, yellow and blue royal standard is flying, indicating that the queen is there.On a July day,
a Blue Badge Guide, a licensed professional whose expertise can be highly valuable for a tourist, suggested I start my visit to the castle
at the bottom of the hill, just inside the walls, to see St
George's Chapel before it got crowded, and later go up the hill to visit the State Apartments
That turned out to be good advice.St
George's Chapel was built by Edward III as the religious home of the Knights of the Garter, which he created to hold his nobles close and
loyal
While the chapel's earliest walls date to 1240, Edward's improvements came 100 years later, and it wasn't until the 1500s that the
chapel was completed, in the late Gothic English Perpendicular style with its magnificent soaring fan vaulting.The most striking sight is in
the Quire, where the Garter Knights each have permanent, elaborately carved stalls, marked by large enameled brass nameplates in French, the
language the royal court and crusading knights used in the 14th century
Towering above each stall is that knight's symbolic banner (most are primarily scarlet and gold, with dark blue and white) and a crest,
which is a large personalized topping, and below that, a half-drawn sword
Most crests are not quite as fascinating as the one for Sir Edmund Hillary, the New Zealander who climbed Mount Everest - a big blue Kiwi
bird holding an ice ax - but there are plenty of colorful and quirky tributes.Just as it was when Edward created it in 1348, today's Order
is limited to the sovereign and her heir (the Prince of Wales) and 24 additional members she personally chooses
There also are honorary Royal Knights and Ladies of the Garter (members of the royal family) and some monarchs from Europe and Japan
It's believed that the Queen will install Prince Harry as a new knight this year
Markle.Each June, the knights gather at Windsor on the Monday of Ascot Week, the thoroughbred racing meet at nearby Royal Ascot
The Queen exhorts them to loyal service, and after a grand lunch in the castle they proceed down the hill to St
George's Chapel
Many thousands of spectators gather to watch the regimental bands and the Military Knights of Windsor, all in scarlet uniforms with gold
braid, and finally the Garter Knights with their flat black velvet hats and ostrich plumes, their chains and badges over long cloaks.For
more only-in-England sights, the chapel visitor has only to look around
Set into the marble Quire floor is the grave marker of Henry VIII, his third wife, Jane Seymour, and the beheaded King Charles I
Charles I's body was buried by the Cromwell forces who were using the royal chapel as a stable, and was discovered 150 years later
Overlooking the altar is the oriel window, similar to an enclosed balcony, that Henry VIII built for his first wife, Catherine of Aragon
She watched the annual Garter ceremony from the same spot where Queen Victoria often attended services.Down the north aisle, behind the
Quire, there's a poignant small, dark chapel
It's undecorated save for a simple, small altar and a black floor plaque memorializing the current queen's parents, King George VI and
the Queen Mother
Also buried in the same chapel are the ashes of Queen Elizabeth's sister, Princess Margaret
It's believed to be where the queen has planned to be interred after a Westminster Abbey funeral.Also on the north aisle is a very large,
white marble sculpture memorializing Princess Charlotte, who died in childbirth in 1817, a death that is said to have devastated the nation
Charlotte was the only heir to her grandfather, King George III, and her father, George IV
When she and her stillborn son died, the childless sons of George III were pressured to produce an heir, and eighteen months later the baby
who would become Queen Victoria was born
Without Charlotte's death, no Queen Victoria.From the chapel, the visitor heads uphill to the castle and the State Apartments
A grand staircase lined with weapons and suits of armor extending as far as the visitor's eyes can see is the entry for the tourist, as it
has been for visiting heads of state for centuries
Most of the 39 monarchs who have lived at Windsor have expanded or improved it
But credit President Ronald Reagan with one modernization: the queen installed the castle's first shower for his 1981 visit.The castle we
visit today underwent its biggest changes after an enormous 1992 fire caused by a construction crew's spotlight
(It was that blaze, which the queen watched helplessly from the castle grounds, that she referenced a few days later when she gave her
"annus horribilis" speech.) The fire destroyed or damaged many rooms in the castle
Fortunately, much of the royal collection of invaluable art had been removed during the ongoing construction
Princes Philip and Charles headed up plans for rebuilding, and exactly five years later, the restoration was finished
couple will be married May 19 in St
George's Chapel at Windsor Castle
(File)Among Prince Charles's projects was one of the most impressive that tourists see today: a rebuilt medieval hammer-beam oak ceiling
in the vast St
George's Hall, the Castle's largest banquet room, where a table for 160 guests is set for state dinners with King George IV's gold
service
In that hall, the white ceiling is studded with hundreds of colorful coats of arms of the 1,000 members who ever were Knights of the Garter,
and the walls are lined with suits of armor and lists of every knight in history.The queen's private apartments are in another end of the
castle quadrangle
With 1,000 rooms, there's plenty of space for her annual spring Dine and Sleep pajama parties
Coveted invitations go out to eight or 10 international leaders from politics, the arts, education and religion
After cocktails, the guests dress for dinner, with Prince Philip in the velvet "Windsor Uniform," with scarlet collar and cuffs, designed by
King George III
The queen reportedly gives an expert after-dinner tour of the priceless art and manuscripts in the royal collection
The librarian displays rare objects relevant to each guest's family or interests.If recent history is a guide, the queen will go all out
for the castle celebration after Meghan and Harry's wedding
A lunch for the 600 wedding guests will be held in the cavernous St
George's Hall, the one lined with suits of armor
A smaller dinner party for 200 will be given by Prince Charles at the Frogmore House on the Windsor estate, the burial site of Queen
Victoria and Prince Albert, which is rarely open to the public.After Camilla and Charles's ceremony, boisterous cheers were heard
And the queen is known to love a good party
(Reports of her dancing the night away in her stocking feet at Charles's 21st birthday party have lived on.)And the next morning, tourists
will stream through those same regal rooms.(This story has not been edited by staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)