Hamilton receives royal table lessons from the Queen

Formula One World Champion gets schooled by her Majesty for going against the talking order on the table

Hamilton receiving the MBE from the Queen. PHOTO COURTESY: DAILY MAIL

The Briton Lewis Hamilton might be a wizard on the racing track but the Formule One World Champion received an important lesson on table manners when he was asked to dine with the Queen.

Hamilton received a summons to join Her Majesty for lunch but instead he was gently rebuked by the Monarch over his table etiquette.

Thirty-year-old Hamilton who was invited to sit next to The Queen at lunch said on the BBC’s Graham Norton show:  “I got invited to a lunch and was sitting next to The Queen. I was excited and started to talk to her but she said, pointing to my left, ‘No you speak that way first and I’ll speak this way and then I’ll come back to you.’”

“She is a sweet woman and we talked about how she spends her weekends, houses and music. She is really cool.”

Explaining the Queen’s message, a spokesman for Debrett’s – the society etiquette expert, told the Telegraph: “The Queen would begin to speak to the person on her right, the guest of honour – for the duration of the first course.”


“For the next course she would speak to the person seated to her left. This thus indeed means it is convention at a dinner party to speak to the guest seated to one's left before speaking to the one on the right – also with the Queen."

Read: Rosberg holds off Hamilton in Austria for third win of season

The BCC Sport’s Personality of the year 2014 has received an MBE - Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire from the Queen in 2009 after he became the youngest ever winner of the Formula One World Drivers’ Championship.

Hamilton is not the only high-profile figure to fail to adhere to Royal protocol. Michelle Obama, First Lady of the United States, was reprimanded on a state visit to Britain in 2009 when she hugged The Queen during a photo call and former US president George Bush received criticism when he suggested the 89-year-old Queen had celebrated US bicentennial in 1776.

The story originally appeared on The Independent
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