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Queen Elizabeth II’s body makes its way to Edinburgh

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British Queen Elizabeth II‘s body has left her residence in the Scottish highlands in an oak coffin to make its way to Edinburgh. King Charles III has since been proclaimed as the new monarch.

The Queen’s body will lie in state before the official funeral at Westminster Abbey on Monday, September 19.

Accompanied by the Queen’s daughter, Princess Anne, the cortege has made ts way from the remote castle, winding slowly through small towns and villages to Edinburgh where the coffin will be taken to the throne room of the Palace of Holyrood House. Mourners have lined up the streets with flowers.

The coffin will spend one night at the palace before being taken by procession to St Giles Cathedral and then onto London.

The death of Elizabeth, Britain’s longest-reigning monarch, has drawn an outpouring of tributes from the UK and around the globe.

LIVE proceedings below:

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan joined William and wife Kate on a walkabout among crowds near Windsor Castle on Saturday following the death of their grandmother Queen Elizabeth, raising the prospect of a rapprochement between the brothers.

The two sons of King Charles, once so close after the death of their mother Diana in a Paris car crash in 1997, have fallen out in recent years after Harry and Meghan gave up their royal titles to move to the United States.

The couple had been in Britain on a brief visit when the queen, Britain’s longest reigning monarch, died on Thursday.

Like other senior members of the royal family, Harry rushed to be by the queen’s side as she deteriorated at Balmoral Castle in Scotland, and a spokesperson for the heir to the throne said an invitation for the Windsor walk had been extended by William.

A royal source described it as an important show of unity at an incredibly difficult time for the family. They emerged from the same car, all wearing black.

The two couples did not interact much during the 40-minute walkabout near one of the queen’s favourite English homes, as they stopped to read messages left among the flowers, and shake hands and chat with the thousands of people lining the Long Walk.

“I think that really just sort of draws a line under what’s happened historically, and it’s a really strong sense of unity I think for the royal family. It was really lovely to see,” said Raj Kaur, 41, who was in the crowd.

At one point Meghan was hugged by a woman in the crowd while others stretched to shake hands and talk to the four royals in the early evening. William spent some time bending down chatting to children, while Kate and Harry accepted flowers and messages of encouragement from those in the crowd.

Royal observers had been looking for signs of a detente amid the pomp and ceremony of a period of national mourning and Elizabeth’s state funeral.

On Friday Charles used his first address to the nation as king to express his “love for Harry and Meghan as they continue to build their lives overseas”.

He also bestowed on William and daughter-in-law Kate the titles of Prince and Princess of Wales, which he and his late wife Diana previously held.

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