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Who was the last royal buried at Westminster Abbey?

The tomb of Mary Queen of Scots is also in this aisle. Boy king Edward VI lies just in front of the altar. George II was the last monarch to be buried in the Abbey, in a vault under the central aisle of this chapel, with his queen Caroline.



The last monarch to be buried at Westminster Abbey was King George II, who was interred there in 1760. He lies in a burial vault beneath the central aisle of the Lady Chapel, alongside his wife, Queen Caroline. Before this time, the Abbey was the traditional resting place for English royalty, housing 17 monarchs including Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scots. However, by the mid-18th century, the Abbey had become significantly overcrowded, leaving no space for the grand monuments and vaults required for royal burials. Consequently, subsequent monarchs, starting with George III, were buried at St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle, which remains the primary royal burial site today. While the Abbey continues to host royal weddings and coronations, its role as a cemetery for the royal family ended with George II, making his tomb a significant historical marker for the end of an era in British royal funeral traditions.

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Who are some of the most notable figures buried in the tombs of Westminster Abbey? A. Westminster Abbey is the last abode of many British monarchs, including Edward the Confessor and Elizabeth I, as well as well known figures such as Sir Isaac Newton and Charles Dickens.

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George II was the last monarch buried in the Abbey in 1760 and he lies in the Hanoverian burial vault under the central aisle of the Lady Chapel beside his queen Caroline. Due of lack of space later monarchs were buried at St George's chapel, Windsor Castle or in the Frogmore mausoleum in the grounds.

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Why was Princess Margaret cremated? In the aftermath of her death, “royal watchers” told The New York Times that Princess Margaret had opted to be cremated so that her remains could fit alongside her father King George VI's grave in a vault that was made especially to hold him specifically.

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The King George VI Memorial Chapel is part of St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle in England. The chapel was commissioned by Queen Elizabeth II in 1962 as a burial place for her father, King George VI, and was completed in 1969.

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Embalming is a process which has long been used by the royals; it involves preservative fluids being injected into bodies to delay decomposition. Queen Elizabeth I was embalmed after her passing in 1603 and her coffin was placed in Whitehall Palace for three weeks before her burial.

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Westminster Abbey, formally titled the Collegiate Church of Saint Peter at Westminster, is an Anglican church in the City of Westminster, London, England. Since 1066, it has been the location of the coronations of 40 English and British monarchs, and a burial site for 18 English, Scottish, and British monarchs.

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Where does the matter go in such a situation? In the actual chapel above ground, we have the sarcophagi of King George V and Queen Mary, King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra, the in-ground burial of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother.

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