They were very numerous to want to collect themselves.
Hundreds of people rushed Thursday morning for the reopening to the public of Windsor Castle, closed after the death three weeks ago of Queen Elizabeth II, buried in this residence.
Closed like all royal residences after the death of the sovereign, the castle located about forty kilometers west of London and where the queen has lived most of the time since the Covid-19 pandemic, is a mecca for tourism British.
Visitors can see the tombstone of the late monarch at the George VI Memorial, father of Elizabeth II who died in 1952, located in the castle's Gothic chapel.
A ledger stone has been installed at the King George VI Memorial Chapel, following the interment of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth.
The King George VI Memorial Chapel sits within the walls of St George's Chapel, Windsor.
pic.twitter.com/5GdsGoTb27
— The Royal Family (@RoyalFamily) September 24, 2022
The Queen, who died aged 96 after more than 70 years of reign, was buried there alongside her husband Prince Philip, her parents and her sister, on September 19 after her state funeral at the Abbey of Westminster in London.
A long-awaited reopening
Many tourists present on Thursday had booked their tickets well in advance.
They thus find themselves among the first people to gather in this chapel.
Windsor Castle reopens and first in are Anne Daley and Grace Gothard.
They were front of the Lying-in-State queue too.
#windsorcastle #QueenElizabeth pic.twitter.com/f9dewSNcIT
— Laura Bundock (@laurabundock) September 29, 2022
Terence Tan, who came from Singapore to visit London and its surroundings, hastened to obtain a ticket as soon as the reopening date of the castle was known.
"I wanted to see, because it's something important, something that only happens once in a lifetime," he explains.
Like millions of Britons, Julie Davies and her husband Allan, who came from the suburbs of Liverpool, followed the funeral of Elizabeth II in front of their television.
“All of a sudden, when you actually see the castle, everything comes to life,” she explains, visibly moved by a moment they will remember “for the rest of their lives.”
Windsor Castle welcomed, before the drop in tourism caused by the pandemic, around 1.5 million visitors each year.
In London, the Queen's Gallery reopened on September 22 at Buckingham Palace, but parts of the palace that are usually open to the public from July to October will not be reopened, according to the Royal Collection Trust, which manages the residences. royal.