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This Happened

This Happened—November 20: A Royal Wedding

Updated Nov. 20, 2023 at 12:10 p.m.

Princess Elizabeth and Prince Phillip tied the knot in a royal wedding in 1947 that sealed the couple together for more than 70 years, including Queen Elizabeth's record-setting reign.

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When did Elizabeth and Phillip marry?

On Nov. 20, 1947, the bells of Westminster Abbey could be heard ringing all over London as Elizabeth and Philip celebrated their wedding. Two thousand guests attended the ceremony, which was radio broadcast by the BBC to over 200 million people around the world.

Then-princess Elizabeth was just 13 years old when she fell in love with Philip Mountbatten, a former prince of Greece and Denmark, five years her senior. The two exchanged letters for years until getting engaged secretly in 1946.

In order to become her husband, Philip adopted his maternal grandparents’ surname and gave up his titles. He would later be known as Prince Philip Mountbatten, Duke of Edinburgh. Queen Elizabeth II spent almost her entire 70-year reign with Prince Philip by her side, until he died in April of 2021.

Were Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip blood related?

Prince Philip was Queen Victoria’s great-great-grandson through his maternal side, and Elizabeth was related to the same queen through her paternal family. Elizabeth's father, King George VI, was a great-grandson of Queen Victoria, making the couple third cousins.


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FOCUS: Israel-Palestine War

Why Taiwan Backs Israel Even If Its Own Struggle Mirrors Palestine's

Taiwanese, though under the weight of a far more powerful neighbor, have the tendency to idealize Israel and fail to create a self-definition beyond the island nation's anti-China image.

Photo of police forces in Taipei, Taiwan, ahead of clashes during anti-government protests in Nov. 2020

Police forces in Taipei, Taiwan, ahead of clashes during anti-government protests in Nov. 2020

Josephine

TAIPEI — After the October 7 attacks on Israel by Hamas, who killed around 1,200 people and took 200 hostages, Israel imposed a complete blockade on Gaza and began a large-scale counteroffensive. Originally, most Western countries fully supported Israel's right of self-defense. However, sentiments have shifted in a section of the west over the past month, with Israel's counterattacks having caused up to 10,000 deaths in Gaza and pushing the Gazan population into a humanitarian crisis, marked by a dire shortage of water, electricity, food, and medicine. With the opening of a new front by Israel on the Lebanese-Syrian border, there are fears that the fighting could expand even further, resulting in an even greater humanitarian catastrophe.

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After the Hamas raid shocked the world, public opinion in the Chinese-speaking world, like in western society, split into two. One side firmly supported Israel's determination to defend its homeland and national sovereignty, while the other side invoked the region's history and sympathized with the Palestinians.

However, unlike in the west, most Chinese people did not choose a side based on well-considered national interests or humanitarian concern for the disadvantaged, but rather based on their attitudes toward the United States and China. Being anti-American or anti-China has become a fundamental factor determining whether you support Palestine or Israel.

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