Yet as a child born into
the turmoil of inter-war Europe, a naval officer decorated for heroism
in World War II, and one half of one of the most-enduring modern royal
marriages, the Duke of Edinburgh is an extraordinary figure in his own
right.
And as Britain celebrates
60 years since the queen succeeded as monarch, celebrations will also
be focused on the man who has rarely left her side during her time in
the spotlight.
Prince Philip's life was
dramatic from the outset. The nephew of Greece's King Constantine I, he
was born in 1921 on the dining room table of a villa on the Greek island
of Corfu.
Known then simply as
Philip -- he had no official surname -- he was forced into exile just 18
months later when the Greek monarchy was overthrown by a military
revolt. Sailors on board HMS Calypso, the British cruiser given the
secret mission to carry his family to safety, made him a crib out of an
old fruit box.
Stateless and (by royal
standards) poor, Philip's family spent the next few years wandering
between the homes of European relatives as the continent descended into
the political and economic upheaval that would lead to World War II.
Continue reading...http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/24/world/europe/prince-philip/index.html?iid=article_sidebar
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