Berliner Boersenzeitung - Charles: the outspoken and understated new king

EUR -
AED 4.258072
AFN 74.204637
ALL 94.749231
AMD 426.8157
ANG 2.075878
AOA 1058.709781
ARS 1658.520389
AUD 1.639583
AWG 2.088773
AZN 1.984788
BAM 1.953277
BBD 2.335483
BDT 142.33796
BGN 1.960486
BHD 0.437341
BIF 3466.581435
BMD 1.159447
BND 1.486705
BOB 8.012752
BRL 5.888852
BSD 1.159602
BTN 109.768088
BWP 15.558169
BYN 3.210308
BYR 22725.164109
BZD 2.332127
CAD 1.622009
CDF 2660.931588
CHF 0.921062
CLF 0.026315
CLP 1035.699614
CNY 7.851199
CNH 7.836066
COP 4049.38076
CRC 527.527604
CUC 1.159447
CUP 30.725349
CVE 110.122262
CZK 24.152327
DJF 206.057226
DKK 7.474262
DOP 68.153131
DZD 154.320029
EGP 58.401687
ERN 17.391707
ETB 186.946509
FJD 2.565799
FKP 0.86512
GBP 0.864478
GEL 3.078366
GGP 0.86512
GHS 12.871538
GIP 0.86512
GMD 84.63942
GNF 10158.008619
GTQ 8.839695
GYD 242.598687
HKD 9.08366
HNL 31.008343
HRK 7.537334
HTG 151.556823
HUF 350.072049
IDR 20514.67812
ILS 3.365405
IMP 0.86512
INR 109.847472
IQD 1519.057232
IRR 1595257.246185
ISK 144.420444
JEP 0.86512
JMD 183.802552
JOD 0.822084
JPY 185.888342
KES 150.044066
KGS 101.393666
KHR 4660.060206
KMF 493.924682
KPW 1043.502839
KRW 1762.290106
KWD 0.357319
KYD 0.966368
KZT 567.614061
LAK 25533.344643
LBP 103843.391585
LKR 385.55856
LRD 211.041003
LSL 18.756393
LTL 3.423546
LVL 0.701338
LYD 7.373601
MAD 10.719959
MDL 20.170291
MGA 4817.859073
MKD 61.650166
MMK 2433.784095
MNT 4146.981884
MOP 9.357273
MRU 46.290997
MUR 54.632983
MVR 17.925275
MWK 2010.737079
MXN 19.967422
MYR 4.696112
MZN 74.088281
NAD 18.756312
NGN 1575.318214
NIO 42.675421
NOK 11.028406
NPR 175.62914
NZD 1.989785
OMR 0.446191
PAB 1.159517
PEN 3.943556
PGK 5.078396
PHP 69.971481
PKR 322.613544
PLN 4.251519
PYG 7099.766811
QAR 4.227412
RON 5.233976
RSD 117.324577
RUB 84.031746
RWF 1703.42878
SAR 4.350355
SBD 9.328417
SCR 15.288555
SDG 696.242347
SEK 10.91427
SGD 1.486916
SHP 0.865644
SLE 28.580029
SLL 24313.031227
SOS 662.655368
SRD 43.500118
STD 23998.215058
STN 24.46839
SVC 10.146024
SYP 128.156126
SZL 18.753097
THB 37.775076
TJS 10.749153
TMT 4.069659
TND 3.393587
TOP 2.791671
TRY 53.662812
TTD 7.870968
TWD 36.58137
TZS 3049.343651
UAH 51.986537
UGX 4307.509573
USD 1.159447
UYU 47.030055
UZS 13890.994778
VES 674.749358
VND 30481.865532
VUV 138.55514
WST 3.180935
XAF 655.12197
XAG 0.016565
XAU 0.000269
XCD 3.133464
XCG 2.089827
XDR 0.815527
XOF 655.12197
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.645031
ZAR 18.780146
ZMK 10436.413069
ZMW 20.38393
ZWL 373.341509
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    17.5

    +2.63%

  • GSK

    -0.8100

    52.23

    -1.55%

  • RELX

    -0.9000

    32.84

    -2.74%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.34

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    81.57

    -0.33%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    177.27

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -1.2600

    61.06

    -2.06%

  • VOD

    -0.5300

    15

    -3.53%

  • RIO

    0.5400

    105.89

    +0.51%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.32

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.2369

    24.04

    -0.99%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    71.59

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    0.1135

    12.78

    +0.89%

  • BP

    -1.1900

    41.59

    -2.86%

Charles: the outspoken and understated new king
Charles: the outspoken and understated new king / Photo: ADRIAN DENNIS - AFP

Charles: the outspoken and understated new king

Charles has spent virtually his entire life waiting to succeed his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, even as he took on more of her duties and responsibilities as she aged.

Text size:

But the late monarch's eldest son, 73, made the most of his record-breaking time as the longest-serving heir to the throne by forging his own path.

"The trouble is, there isn't a job description, so you have to rather make it up as you go along," he once said.

Manically active on a range of topics -- though often under the radar -- Charles sees himself as a "dissident" working against the prevailing political consensus, an ex-aide revealed in 2006.

Shouldering the burden of expectation, his life has been plagued by low self-esteem but driven by a relentless drive to do the right thing.

Charles has seen it as his duty to help improve the lives of his mother's subjects, and been outspoken on issues close to his heart, notably architecture, the environment, farming, faith and alternative medicine.

His views were often dismissed and derided as eccentric or unfashionable, but others think he is ahead of the curve.

In January 2020, he warned business leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos about global warming and environmental damage.

"What good is all the extra wealth in the world gained from business as usual if you can do nothing with it, except watch it burn in catastrophic conditions?" he said.

He put his principles into practice by building a new town in southwest England and launching an organic food range.

He bombarded government ministers with lobbying letters on topics ranging from inadequate army equipment to the plight of the Patagonian Toothfish.

A 10-year press freedom battle resulted in the letters' publication in May 2015 described by one commentator as "a plaintive sigh of woe at a world going to the dogs".

The British satirical magazine Private Eye nicknamed him "Brian" after likening a 1969 BBC documentary about the royals' day-to-day family life to a soap opera.

The unwavering worldview of Charles -- and his belief in recycling -- is reflected in his sartorial style.

He has stuck with the same side hair parting from the age of five, shoes from 1968 and coat from 1985 and wears immaculate double-breasted Anderson and Sheppard bespoke suits.

- 'Action man' -

Charles Philip Arthur George was born November 14, 1948 at Buckingham Palace.

He was second in line to the throne and became the heir when his grandfather king George VI died on February 6, 1952, and his mother became Queen Elizabeth II.

As a boy, his governess, Catherine Peebles, described him as "hypersensitive, lonely, excessively shy and given to quiet pursuits like reading and painting".

With his parents often on lengthy overseas tours, he grew close to his grandmother, king George's widow queen Elizabeth, and to his mentor, his great-uncle Lord Louis Mountbatten.

To his bewilderment, at aged nine in 1958 he was created Prince of Wales -- the title reserved exclusively since the early 14th century for the heir apparent.

At 13, Charles was sent to Gordonstoun, the stark Scottish boarding school his father attended. Desperately lonely, he hated it, describing his years there as "absolute hell", a "prison sentence" and "Colditz in kilts".

However, during two enjoyable terms at an Australian grammar school in 1966, he matured and flourished, coming out of his shell.

He went to Trinity College at the University of Cambridge, becoming the first heir to the throne to take a degree, graduating in 1970 with a lower second-class honours.

Charles learnt Welsh for a term before his inauguration as Prince of Wales at Caernarfon Castle in 1969.

He served in the Royal Navy from 1971 to 1976, and while away for eight months in the Caribbean, his girlfriend Camilla Shand married her old boyfriend Andrew Parker Bowles, much to Charles's sorrow.

A qualified pilot, the prince garnered an "Action Man" image, surfing and jumping out of planes.

He launched the Prince's Trust with his £7,400 navy severance pay and the charity had helped more than 825,000 disadvantaged youngsters find a vocation by its 40th anniversary.

"I was always brought up to worry about everybody else," he said. "I have always tried to get it right and do the right thing by everybody."

- Marriage pressure -

In his personal life, girlfriends came and went in the 1970s. Encouraged by Mountbatten, he proposed to his mentor's grand-daughter Amanda Knatchbull in 1979, but she declined.

Under increasing pressure to find a wife, the 32-year-old prince proposed to 19-year-old Lady Diana Spencer in February 1981 following a brief courtship.

Their "fairy tale wedding" on July 29 that year at St Paul's Cathedral in London was televised worldwide and one of the great state occasions of the century.

Their first child, Prince William, was born in 1982, followed by Prince Harry in 1984.

The marriage was already shaky by then, as Diana struggled with the pressures of royal duty.

Both strayed from the marriage -- Charles rekindling his relationship with old flame Camilla.

Six months after a book conveying a vengeful Diana's version of events came out in June 1992, the couple separated.

Charles refused to retaliate in the so-called "War of the Waleses".

But in 1994, with speculation still raging, he said the marriage breakdown was "the last possible thing that I ever wanted to happen".

- Visibly happier -

Following Diana's explosive, tell-all BBC interview in November 1995, his mother urged the couple to divorce, which they did on August 28, 1996.

When Diana was killed in a car crash in 1997, Charles repatriated her body from Paris and insisted she be granted full royal honours in death.

Camilla was gradually introduced to an initially hostile public as Charles's non-negotiable companion.

Their engagement was announced in 2005, with polls showing support for the marriage. They wed at Windsor Guildhall in a civil ceremony on April 9, 2005. She became Duchess of Cornwall.

Charles has since cut a visibly happier figure with his "darling wife" at his side and become a grandfather.

In 2022, the queen settled the thorny issue of what Camilla would become when Charles is king, giving her blessing for her to be called "queen consort".

The couple said they were "deeply conscious of the honour represented by my mother's wish", with Charles praising Camilla for being his "steadfast support throughout".

William's son George arrived first in 2013, followed by Charlotte in 2015, and Louis in 2018. Harry's son Archie was born in 2019, then daughter Lilibet in 2021.

Charles has taken a close interest in their development, although he has reportedly become estranged from Harry after he quit royal life, and moved to the United States.

From there he has made a series of criticisms, including how his father and brother were trapped in the strictures of royal life, and how he had not spoken to his father in months.

In March 2020, with Britain and the rest of the world in lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic, it was announced Charles had tested positive but only had mild symptoms.

He contracted the virus again in February 2022.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)