The 14th wedding anniversary of Kate Middleton and Prince William is next week, and they will spend it far from their home and where they met and fell in love – Scotland.
The prince and the princess of Wales gathered in 2001 as first -year student at the University of St. Andrews and became friends – and even roommates – before falling in love. They finally married on April 29, 2011 and will mark their birthday next week when it all started.
Photo: The Middleton family / Clarence House / Getty Images
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In Scotland, Kate and William are called the Duke and the Duchess of Rothesay. They will go there to their real wedding anniversary on April 29, and will go to the island of Mull, a distant island in the northwest of the country, People reported. Depending on the point of sale, the visit will celebrate rural communities and artisanal and agricultural work communities. They will spend the night there before returning home for the children Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis at home in Adelaide Cottage in Windsor.
While Kate went to places like Mustic and the Alps for the private family holidays, it is the first night trip to royal service that the princess of Wales has undertaken since her diagnosis of cancer last year. After announcing her diagnosis on March 22 of last year, Kate said on September 9 that she finished chemotherapy and announced on January 14 that she was in remission.
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The telegraph reported that Kate and William would also have a private visit to the neighboring island of Iona during the two -day trip before its end on April 30. The couple’s opportunity to spend a lot of time in nature while she is in Scotland aligns with the recent remarks of the Princess of Wales, who declared in a social media position marking Mother’s Day that “in the past year, nature has been our solution”. By The telegraphShe described the campaign as “significant for me as a place to balance and find a kind of sense of peace and reconnection in what is also a very busy world.”
According to a spokesperson for the Kensington Palace, “landscapes and communities of the Scottish islands give a lively contrast to the way in which we live in more urban environments.
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This seems exactly the type of place that the Prince and the Princess of Wales – Errr, the Duke and the Duchess of Rothesay – could spend a day so special for them. Interesting, The telegraph underlined that in the United Kingdom, the 14th traditional birthday gift of the 14th marriage is ivory, but William – an “eminent militant against the illegal fauna trade”, according to the point of sale, described ivory as a “symbol of destruction, no luxury”. As such, the publication said that “the couple should find an alternative inspiration for any private gift exchange”.
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