Yesterday, Kate Middleton made her comeback on ‘Remembrance Day’ (Remembrance Day), a very important date where the British pay tribute to members of the Armed Forces and civilians who have fallen in conflicts and thank them for their services. Among the most important events are a concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, where we were able to see it for the first time in a month.
Although there is no ‘dress code’ as such, for this type of events a formal and solemn attireso the new Princess of Wales appeared with a very ‘lady’ style, but up to the task, with a black ‘total look’.
Middleton appeared at the iconic concert venue in a black blazer dress with long sleeves, a midi length and a front closure with gold buttons, which enhanced her figure and gave a touch of sophistication to the look. A very flattering style that, on the street, was hidden under a cloth coat with a velvet bow around the neck, without missing the pearl earrings and Collingwood diamonds, which the firm gave to Lady Di for your wedding.
The brooch that Kate Middleton wears twice a year
However, there was one detail that did not go unnoticed, its Poppy brooch worn on the left sideabove the heart. The piece has a very special meaning, both for royalty and for the rest of the civilian population, since it is a tribute to those who fell in the war.
Both Kate Middleton and the rest of the British royal family wear this brooch twice a year, the first during Anzac Day (April 25) and the second on Remembrance Day (November 11). both for pay tribute to the fallen, one to the soldiers of the Australian and New Zealand Armed Forces during the battle of Gallipoli in 1915 against the Ottoman Empire and the other to the English fallen in World War II.
However, of all the red flowers such as roses, carnations, tulips or geraniums, they chose the poppies because of their legend. It is said that, during World War I, these Flowers grew wild between the crosses on the soldiers’ graves fallen on the battlefields of Flanders, in Belgium. An image collected by the poet John McCrae in Flanders Fields (In the fields of Flanders).
Wearing this flower during these days is a sign of respect and gratitude towards the fallen, in addition to commemorating the memory of those people who lost their lives in all the war conflicts in which the Commonwealth of Nations has been involved.
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