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Prince Philip helped pave the royal way for Kate Middleton

The impact Philip had on Kate Middleton’s life is a little known and heartwarming secret of the royal family.

Kate Middleton’s powerful new role in royal future

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For nearly two years now, the crises that have buffeted the palace come down to two men who are defined by what they are not.

Both Prince Andrew and Prince Harry - one a self-serving fool, the other a man who first dedicated his life to service and then to Netflix - share the same inglorious status as royal ‘spares’ to the elder brothers as heirs.

But there is another thankless supporting act in the royal house that has come into focus this week with the death of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh - consort - and another member of the house of Windsor staring down the same role - Kate, Duchess of Cambridge.

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Prince Philip has always been fond of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge. Picture: Chris J Ratcliffe
Prince Philip has always been fond of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge. Picture: Chris J Ratcliffe

While officially the next person to hold the title of consort will be Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Clarence House reaffirmed last year that when her husband Prince Charles ascends to the throne, she will be styled as the Princess Consort not Queen Consort.

Given the lingering antipathy towards Camilla, despite her having proven again and again what a dedicated, surprisingly mould-busting HRH she is, the couple will have to accept the lesser title for her.

There is also the question of time - Charles’s reign, given the advanced age at which he will succeed his mother, will be much much shorter.

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It is likely that Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, will not have an extended reign. Picture: Richard Pohle/AFP
It is likely that Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, will not have an extended reign. Picture: Richard Pohle/AFP
The Duke of Edinburgh with Prince Charles and Camilla, who have remembered him as a father, grandfather and great-grandfather. Picture: Instagram
The Duke of Edinburgh with Prince Charles and Camilla, who have remembered him as a father, grandfather and great-grandfather. Picture: Instagram

All of which adds up to, the next person who will step into the lifetime (or thereabouts) consort job will be Kate.

What many people might not appreciate is quite how much the duke, who died at the age of 99 last Friday, has influenced the mum-of-three’s life.

Pivotally, Philip and the Queen’s early years of marriage provided the blueprint for William and Kate.

In 1949 Philip, then an ambitious young naval officer, was posted to Malta where he and the then-Princess Elizabeth enjoyed a taste of quasi-normality. The couple, known as the Edinbughs, socialised with other navy couples, Philip took up polo and his Lilibet would drive herself around the island nation, paying visits to the hairdresser and swimming in the sea.

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Princess Elizabeth and her husband Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, during their honeymoon in Malta. Picture: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Princess Elizabeth and her husband Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, during their honeymoon in Malta. Picture: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, Prince William and Duchess Kate during their visit to the Sydney Opera House. Picture: Phil Hillyard
Their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, Prince William and Duchess Kate during their visit to the Sydney Opera House. Picture: Phil Hillyard

While that ‘ordinary’ period in their life was cut shockingly short by the death of her father King George VI in 1952, it was still a foundational moment in their enduring union.

Knowledge of what a formative role the couple’s so-called ‘Malta moment’ informed the palace’s strategy when it came to the Cambridges.

After their wedding, the Queen gave the newlyweds perhaps the greatest gift of all - time.

Rather than plunging headfirst into their new roles, Her Majesty is said to have offered them the chance to enjoy two years living in Anglesey and a stay of execution in terms of them being expected to step up and throw themselves into working royal life.

Days after more than two billion people watched the Cambridges wed in 2011, they were back on the remote Welsh island of Anglesey they called home, with the newly minted Duchess even photographed shopping into the local supermarket. (And thus made history as the first person to ever marry into the royal family and pop out for a litre of skim milk in the

same week.)

“It’s all very normal. The last time I went round, William was pottering around making tea and toast, very chilled and relaxed,” one of their friends told Vanity Fair in 2012.

All the lovely normality and hot buttered sourdough aside, what fundamentally unites Philip and Kate is that their marriages have also demanded they find and fulfill the unspecified

niche that is being a consort (or future consort).

One of the photos of Prince Philip photos released by the Royal Family after his death. Picture: The Royal Family/Instagram
One of the photos of Prince Philip photos released by the Royal Family after his death. Picture: The Royal Family/Instagram

After the Queen’s coronation, Philip faced endless comparisons to the last man to hold his particular role, Prince Albert (from whom both he and his wife were and are descended), and was left to try and cobble together some sort of schematic of what the job might look like in the 20th century.

While the consort gig comes with precisely zero guidelines, it is riven with pitfalls and opportunities to spectacularly fail.

Consider what is required: To be popular, but not too popular lest it overshadows the sovereign; to work hard but not so hard the person with their face on coins looks workshy; to forge one’s own path but not to never appear to stray too far from the role of devoted supplicant. It is a position which demands a subjugation of ego and a giving of self in lifelong service to a largely redundant, symbolic ideal.

That was the tightrope act which the Greek-born royal ultimately navigated with aplomb and the very same one that Kate herself is now following more than 70 years later.

Prince Philip was a dutiful husband to Queen Elizabeth. Picture: Courier Mail
Prince Philip was a dutiful husband to Queen Elizabeth. Picture: Courier Mail
Prince Philip with Princess Diana With Prince Philip at The Derby. Picture: Tim Graham/Getty Images
Prince Philip with Princess Diana With Prince Philip at The Derby. Picture: Tim Graham/Getty Images

The Duke dutifully walked two paces behind his wife and Kate’s thinking clearly aligns with Philip’s example. As royal biographer Penny Junor recently told the Times, “Kate is being very careful to ensure she doesn’t outstrip William. She is not on an ego trip, and her head has not been turned by celebrity.”

Likewise, Andrew Morton, to whom Diana turned to tell her story in the early 1990s, said of Kate earlier this month: “She sees her role as supporting her husband, just as Prince Philip saw his role supporting the Queen.

“Two couples who supported each other through the vicissitudes of royal life.”

Queen Elizabeth, Prince Philip, Lady Louise Windsor and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge share a laugh on Buckingham Palace’s balcony in 2012. Picture: Leon Neal/AFP
Queen Elizabeth, Prince Philip, Lady Louise Windsor and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge share a laugh on Buckingham Palace’s balcony in 2012. Picture: Leon Neal/AFP

Over the last decade, Kate would often be spotted during outings enjoying a giggle with the Duke. (Who else imagines his jokes would have been gloriously rude and wickedly funny?)

While the elderly duke and the glamorous duchess might outwardly have appeared to have

little in common, remember, they were both outsiders who had, thanks to love, breached the palace gates and found themselves in demanding, exacting roles, with nary a rule book

to be found.

They both had to, and are still having to, work their jobs out as they went along with nothing less than the weight of the monarchy resting on their shoulders and with the judgemental world watching on.

The Queen and her “liege man of life and limb” enjoyed just over 73 years of marriage. As Kate and William get set to celebrate ten years of wedded bliss later this month, they have a way to go yet to equal the indomitable couple but so far, so good.

Only six decades more of best behaviour Kate.

Daniela Elser is a royal expert and writer with more than 15 years experience working with a number of Australia’s leading media titles.

Read related topics:Kate Middleton

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