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King Charlemagne has recently thrown eggs, but this is not the first time when h...

Eggs, idle cartridges and roses. What attacked the Queen of Elizabeth and her family members

King Charlemagne has recently thrown eggs, but this is not the first time when he and his relatives were attacking. Moreover, the Queen Elizabeth, her son and other relatives sometimes attacked with very unexpected objects. So, in 2001, Prince Charles received a flower on his face. The car of Elizabeth II in 2022 was thrown by eggs during a visit to Nottingham, and the future king - during a visit to Dublin in 1995.

Daily Mail has written about the most famous cases of attack on members of the royal family. In 1981, 17-year-old Marcus Sarjant shot six idle cartridges in Queen Elizabeth II during the Trooping The Color. She was riding the Mall Street, leading from Buckingham Palace to Trafalgar Square on her horse Burma's horse when Marcus shot six times. The horse was scared, but the queen quickly reassured him. Marcus grabbed Corporal Gellova and dragged through the fence where the police were disarmed.

Law enforcement officers said that Sarjant told them, "I wanted to be known. I wanted to be someone. " Sarjant was sentenced to five years under the treason law in 1842. He spent three years in prison and psychiatric clinic and released at 20 years. He changed his name and started a new life. The last person convicted of such a crime was the Nazi collaborator William Joyce during the Second World War.

The treason law was introduced by Queen Victoria after two men were fired in 1842, when she was traveling in a carriage by Mall Street. The Sarjant previously tried to become a police officer, a firefighter and a military, and applied for royal Marines. He became a participant in the anti -pagan movement and bought two imitations of the Colt Python revolver for £ 66. 90. Both weapons could only shoot idle, but the sardant tried and could not get the fighting cartridges for his father's gun.

Sargent sent a letter to Buckingham Palace before the attack. It said, "Your Majesty. Don't go to the ceremony, because the killer awaits you near the palace. " Ironic, but received the letter three days after the attack. Queen and Prince Philip visited New Zealand in 1986. When they rode in a car with an open hippoid of Ellersley in Auckland, they were thrown by eggs. Some of the shells got into the queen, but she just waved the shell and nodded when Philip asked her if she was okay.

The police then took two women in white coats. Later, her majesty joked about this incident on the evening banquet, saying: "Of course, New Zealand has long been famous for its dairy products. Although I have to say that I myself prefer New Zealand eggs for breakfast. " The then Prime Minister of New Zealand called his eggs in the Queen "a shameful act of gross impolite. " When Prince Charles was then a visit to Sydney in 1994, 23-year-old student David King shot him from a starting gun twice.

At this point, Charles started a speech on the occasion of Australia. Kang, who later became a lawyer, later told that he fired at the future king to draw attention to the difficult situation of Cambodia refugees who are in camps in Australia. David Kanga was overthrown on the ground and arrested. Then they were found guilty of the threat of illegal violence and sentenced to 500 hours of community service. Prince Charles visited Latvia in 2001.

When he was in Riga and put a wreath to the monument of freedom, 16-year-old schoolgirl Alina Lebedver (or Lebedev) squeezed him to him and slammed him with a flower on his face. She later informed the reporters that she did a protest against the war in Afghanistan. And she stressed that the UK is an "enemy of the world. " She was charged with a threat to the life of a foreign high -ranking person, and she was threatened with up to 15 years in prison.

But Charles asked not to punish the girl strictly. And she came under the supervision of her mother for a year. It is noteworthy, but later they wrote (and they still write) that the current King Charles III received a rose on his face. Although the photo clearly shows that it was a carnation. We will remind, King Charlemagne and the Queen-Consort of Camilla tossed eggs during their visit to York. However, the king cleverly evaded the "shells".