The United Kingdom’s Queen Elizabeth II died last Thursday, aged 96. The flowers for her funeral will apparently be shipped from Turkiye. This is not as unusual as it first appears. In 2008, during her first visit to Turkiye after more than 30 years, the Queen delivered a speech at a state banquet in her honour. “Turkiye,” she said, “is uniquely positioned as a bridge between East and West at a crucial time for the European Union and the world in general… playing a key role in promoting peace, political stability and economic development in some of the world’s most unsettled areas.”
The background of Queen Elizabeth’s relationship with Turkiye is interesting. Britain’s longest-reigning monarch used to pay huge importance to Turkiye’s historical sites. Along with her late husband Prince Philip, she toured the Bosphorus by boat on the final day of her visit, accompanied by the then Turkish President Abdullah Gül and his wife Hayrunnia Ozyurt. The royal couple also visited the Istanbul Modern Museum and Kabatas High School in Ortaköy, where they observed a science project event.
(From L) Britain Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip, Turkish President Abdullah Gul and his wife Hayrunnisa pose in front of the Ortakoy mosque on May 15, 2008 in Istanbul. [MUSTAFA OZER/AFP via Getty Images]
(L to R) Queen Elizabeth II accompanied by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his wife Emine Erdogan gives a David Beckham signed football to a Turkish boy during at a garden party held for her birthday at the British Embassy where she was joined by on May 16, 2008 in Ankara, Turkey. [POOL/Anatolia/Getty Images]
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Moreover, she paid homage to the founder of the Republic of Turkiye: “It is a great honour for me to pay my respects to Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, a friend of the United Kingdom who is valued highly as one of the greatest personalities in modern history.”
Now, less than a week after the Queen’s death, the Turkish people continue to show their respect for her. One hotel in Antalya demonstrated this by playing the British national anthem to its guests.
God save the Queen playing at our hotel in Turkey #QueenElizabeth pic.twitter.com/fyxnpfPNjE
— L.A. Matthews (@TheLAMatthews) September 8, 2022
According to official sources, President Erdogan will attend Queen Elizabeth’s funeral next Monday. As soon as news of her death reached him, Erdogan sent his deepest condolences to the royal family, people and government of the United Kingdom.
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