Queen marks 90th with huge birthday lunch in London

The queen celebrates two birthdays as part of a royal tradition which dates back over 250 years


Afp June 12, 2016
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II prepares to inspect the soldiers on Horse Guards Parade during the Queen's Birthday Parade, 'Trooping the Colour', in London on June 11, 2016. Trooping The Colour and the fly-past are part of a weekend of events to celebrate the Queen's 90th birthday. AFP PHOTO

LONDON: Thousands of people were to gather for a special street party outside Buckingham Palace on Sunday to mark Queen Elizabeth II's 90th birthday.

Up to 10,000 people are expected to attend the Patron's Lunch along with the monarch, her husband Prince Philip, Prince William and Prince Harry.

Tickets cost £150 (190 euros, $215) and most of the guests will be from organisations with which the queen has links.

Queen Elizabeth II begins three days of birthday celebrations

The not-for-profit event was organised by the queen's grandson, Peter Phillips, the son of Princess Anne.

"The queen has had many celebrations in her honour over the years but there's never really been an appreciation or recognition of the number of organisations she is personally attached to through her patronage," Phillips said.

Britain is holding several days of celebrations to mark the queen's official 90th birthday, which began on Friday with a special service at St Paul's Cathedral in London.

On Saturday, she took the salute at the Trooping the Colour military parade which drew a crowd of thousands, with her vivid green outfit causing a sensation.

Britain's queen wows in green at 90th birthday parade

After Trooping the Colour, members of the royal family gathered on the balcony of Buckingham Palace to watch a military flypast, including Prince William and Kate with their children George and Charlotte.

The queen celebrates two birthdays as part of a royal tradition which dates back over 250 years.

The actual date of her birth is April 21, 1926.

But her official birthday is also marked in Britain on a Saturday in June with Trooping the Colour.

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