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Charles's Wedding Will Lack Mother of Groom

LONDON, Feb. 22 -- Buckingham Palace said Tuesday that Queen Elizabeth II would not attend the civil marriage ceremony of her son Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles -- but that her absence should not be interpreted as a snub.
/ Source: a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/front.htm" linktype="External" resizable="true" status="true" scrollbars="true"><p>The Washington Post</p></a

LONDON, Feb. 22 -- Buckingham Palace said Tuesday that Queen Elizabeth II would not attend the civil marriage ceremony of her son Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles -- but that her absence should not be interpreted as a snub.

The monarch will attend the church blessing at Windsor Castle after the April 8 civil ceremony in the local town hall and will host the wedding reception at the castle.

"The queen will not be attending the civil ceremony because she is aware that the prince and Mrs. Parker Bowles wanted to keep the occasion low key," a palace spokeswoman said. "The queen and the rest of the royal family will, of course, be going to the service of dedication at St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle."

The spokeswoman denied the queen was snubbing her son's second marriage.

"The queen is attending the service of dedication and paying for the reception -- this is not a snub," she said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"The queen's prime concern is that the civil ceremony should be as low key as possible, in line with the couple's wishes," said the palace spokeswoman. "Clearly if the queen were to attend, the occasion would no longer be, by definition, low key."

The palace spokeswoman could not say whether the queen's husband and Charles's father, Prince Philip, would attend the civil ceremony.

A spokesman for Prince Charles's office said Charles's sons, Prince William and Prince Harry, and Parker Bowles's grown children, Tom and Laura, were expected to attend the civil wedding in the Guildhall at Windsor.

A spokesman for Charles said the prince will have no best man. "It's not that sort of wedding. The two boys will have a role throughout the wedding in so much as being by their father's side."