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Torah gave us first Jubilee, but the Queen’s is most special one of all

Sunday marks 70 years to the day since Her Majesty assumed the throne. This year’s celebrations will bring joy to the nation

February 4, 2022 13:52
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Souvenirs marking the Platinum Jubilee of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II are seen in the window of the Buckingham Palace souvenir shop in central London, on January 28, 2022. - Pomp, pageantry and puddings will form the centrepiece of celebrations to mark Queen Elizabeth II's 70 years on the throne. The 95-year-old monarch's Platinum Jubilee begins on February 6 -- the date in 1952 when she became queen after the death of her father, King George VI. Britain's longest-serving monarch will be the only queen or king in the country's long history to have ruled for 70 years. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
5 min read

This Sunday is Accession Day, marking 70 years exactly since the Queen assumed the throne on 6 February 1952. At the time, she was famously in Kenya with her husband Philip when she heard about the death of her father, King George VI. 

The seminal day fires the starting gun on her Platinum Jubilee, the culmination of which will be the four-day bank holiday weekend in early June. No monarch has ever reached this landmark before, the Queen having overtaken her great-great-grandmother, Queen Victoria, as the longest-reigning sovereign in 2015. 

Seven decades as Head of State mean that she’s the only monarch most of us have ever known. The length of her reign is truly remarkable. It spans 14 Prime Ministers, 14 US Presidents, six Archbishops of Canterbury and four Chief Rabbis. 

Royal Jubilees are special occasions — the essayist Walter Bagehot famously wrote: “A royal family sweetens politics by the seasonable addition of nice and pretty events.”