Prince George has joined his mother, the Princess of Wales, and other senior members of the royal family at this year’s Festival of Remembrance, which honours the service and sacrifice of British and Commonwealth Armed Forces personnel, past and present. Among the other royals at the event were King Charles,
Queen Camilla and the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh. Princess Anne and her husband, Vice-Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence, were among the royals absent from the ceremony, with the pair in Australia to celebrate the centenary of the Royal Australia Corps of Signals.
Also absent from the ceremony was Prince William. HELLO! understands this is because the royal is flying commercially back from Belem, In Brazil, which has limited flight options. It’s also understood that the route was chosen for the Prince of Wales to ensure that he was in the country for the Remembrance Service at the Cenotaph on Sunday.
George has been stepping up into a more senior role over recent months, and in May, the young royal made a surprise appearance at a Buckingham Palace tea party at the start of VE Day commemorations. George, 11, was dressed smartly in a navy suit and a blue tie, and was seen chatting to one of the veterans with his father. The youngster asked one of the veterans, named Alfred: “What was it like when you were coming in?”, to which Alfred replied: “Pretty awful”.

Another veteran, Dougie, praised George for his questions. “I was very impressed with the lad’s interest,” he said. “I told him luckily I wasn’t ever shot at but we did lose one of our fleet in the Channel. He was very polite and listened with interest. Whenever I used to do talks to young kids, that’s all you ever wanted, for them to listen and have a little understanding of those days. I think it’s so important for us to remember and they put on a lovely spread.”
It has been a difficult few months for the royal family following the sad death of the Duchess of Kent in September and the stripping of Andrew Mountbatten Windsor’s titles. The disgraced royal was officially stripped of his titles with an entry in the Letters Patent reading: “THE KING has been pleased by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm dated 3 November 2025 to declare that Andrew Mountbatten Windsor shall no longer be entitled to hold and enjoy the style, title or attribute of ‘Royal Highness’ and the titular dignity of ‘Prince’.”