Ray Mill House has recently been willed to Lady Louise Windsor, completely cutting out Queen Camilla, are entirely fictional. No such transfer of ownership has occurred, and no new will has been unveiled to support this narrative.
These sensational headlines originate from YouTube channels and social media accounts that explicitly label their content as "entertainment," "speculation," and "fiction" in their disclaimers, yet present dramatized scripts as breaking news.
The reality of Ray Mill House, the former home of the late Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip in Windsor, is straightforward: it was never part of the Queen’s personal estate to be willed to a granddaughter.
The property is owned by the Crown Estate, a vast portfolio of land and assets held in trust for the nation and the reigning monarch. Upon the Queen’s death, the property reverted to the Crown Estate, not to any individual family member. Consequently, it could not be left to Lady Louise, nor could Camilla be "cut out" of a will for a property she never owned.
Queen Camilla, as the Queen Consort, resides in official royal residences like Buckingham Palace and Clarence House by virtue of her marriage to King Charles III, not through a specific bequest of Ray Mill House. The viral stories invent a dramatic "reading of the will" where legal clauses supposedly bypass the Queen Consort in favor of the King’s niece, creating a false narrative of family betrayal.
.png)
Post a Comment