Buckingham
Palace
Buckingham Palace has served as the
official London residence of Britain's sovereigns since 1837 and today is the
administrative headquarters of the Monarch.
Although in use for the many official
events and receptions held by The Queen, the State Rooms at Buckingham Palace
are open to visitors every year. For visitor information, please visit the Royal Collection website.
Buckingham Palace has 775 rooms. These
include 19 State rooms, 52 Royal and guest bedrooms, 188 staff bedrooms, 92
offices and 78 bathrooms. In measurements, the building is 108 metres long
across the front, 120 metres deep (including the central quadrangle) and 24
metres high.
The Palace is very much a working
building and the centrepiece of Britain's constitutional monarchy. It houses
the offices of those who support the day-to-day activities and duties of The
Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh and their immediate family.
The Palace is also the venue for great
Royal ceremonies, State Visits and Investitures, all of which are organised by
the Royal Household.
Although Buckingham Palace is furnished
and decorated with priceless works of art that form part of the Royal
Collection, one of the major art collections in the world today. It is not an
art gallery and nor is it a museum.
Its State Rooms form the nucleus of the
working Palace and are used regularly by The Queen and members of the Royal
Family for official and State entertaining.
More than 50,000 people visit the Palace
each year as guests to banquets, lunches, dinners, receptions and the Royal
Garden Parties.
For those who do receive an invitation
to Buckingham Palace, the first step across the threshold is into the Grand
Hall and up the curving marble stairs of the Grand Staircase. Portraits are
still set in the walls, as they were by Queen Victoria.
The Throne Room, sometimes used during
Queen Victoria's reign for Court gatherings and as a second dancing room, is
dominated by a proscenium arch supported by a pair of winged figures of
'victory' holding garlands above the 'chairs of state'.
It is in the Throne Room that The Queen,
on very special occasions like Jubilees, receives loyal addresses. Another use
of the Throne Room has been for formal wedding photographs.
George IV's original palace lacked a
large room in which to entertain. Queen Victoria rectified that shortcoming by
adding in 1853-5 what was, at the time of its construction, the largest room in
London.
At 36.6m long, 18m wide and 13.5m high,
the Ballroom is the largest multi-purpose room in Buckingham Palace. It was
opened in 1856 with a ball to celebrate the end of the Crimean War.
It is along the East Gallery that The
Queen and her State guests process to the Ballroom for the State Banquet
normally held on the first day of the visit.
Around 150 guests are invited and
include members of the Royal Family, the government and other political
leaders, High Commissioners and Ambassadors and prominent people who have trade
or other associations with the visiting country.
Today, it is used by The Queen for State
banquets and other formal occasions such as the annual Diplomatic Reception
attended by 1,500 guests.
This is a very formal occasion during
which The Queen will meet every head of mission accredited to the Court of St
James's. For the diplomats it is perhaps the highlight of the annual diplomatic
social calendar.
The Ballroom has been used variously as
a concert hall for memorial concerts and performances of the arts and it is the
regular venue for Investitures of which there are usually 21 a year - nine in
spring, two in the summer and ten in the autumn.
At Investitures, The Queen (or The
Prince of Wales as Her Majesty's representative) will meet recipients of
British honours and give them their awards, including knighting those who have
been awarded knighthoods.
From the Ballroom, the West Gallery, with its four Gobelin tapestries, leads
into the first of the great rooms that overlook lawn and the formal gardens -
setting for the annual Garden Parties introduced by Queen Victoria in 1868.
The State Dining Room is one of the
principal State Rooms on the West side of the Palace. Many distinguished people
have dined in this room including the 24 holders of the Order of Merit as well
as presidents and prime ministers.
Before the Ballroom was added to the
Palace in the 1850s, the first State Ball was held in the Blue Drawing Room in
May 1838 as part of the celebrations leading up to Queen Victoria's Coronation.
The Music Room was originally known as
the Bow Drawing Room and is the centre of the suite of rooms on the Garden
Front between the Blue and the White Drawing Rooms.
Four Royal babies - The Prince of Wales,
The Princess Royal, The Duke of York and Prince William - were all christened
by the Archbishop of Canterbury in the Music Room.
One of its more formal uses is during a
State Visit when guests are presented to The Queen, The Duke of Edinburgh and
the visiting Head of State or for receptions.
The last of the suite of rooms
overlooking the gardens on the principal floor is the White Drawing Room.
Originally called the North Drawing Room, it is perhaps the grandest of all the
State Rooms. The Room also serves as a Royal reception room for The Queen and
members of the Royal Family to gather before State and official occasions.
The Bow Room is familiar to the many
thousands of guests to Royal Garden Parties who pass through it on their way to
the garden. It was originally intended as a part of George IV's private
apartments - to be the King's Library - but it was never fitted up as such.
Instead, it has become another room for
entertaining and is where The Queen holds the arrival lunch for a visiting Head
of State at the start of a State visit.
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