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New Lady Di Auction: Unseen Photos And Letters From The Time Before She Was Princess Of Wales

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The fascination with Diana, Princess of Wales, and her legacy endures nearly 29 years after her death. From time to time her story is rewritten in the present tense. Not only because new information comes to light—or because past material is rediscovered—but also because tangible memories have become prized possessions for their owners and objects of desire for her fans. From her iconic dresses to personal letters, they are small fragments of a life that continues to attract interest.

On July 7, the British auction house Gorringe’s will sell a collection related to the Princess of Wales and her teenage years. The items in this new lot, which offer a unique view of Diana Spencer before she became Princess of Wales by marrying Prince Charles, were in the possession of Katherine Hanbury, a childhood friend of Lady Di who attended West Heath Girls’ School in London with her between 1973 and 1977. “It represents a genuine personal archive of a real friendship with someone who knew Diana before her public life. Through these objects you can see the princess in the years before she became one of the most famous people in the world: as an innocent, proud, thoughtful and deeply sincere young woman,” the auction house says.

The collection includes four previously unseen color photographs from Diana’s school years: two of her alone in her bedroom, one outside the school and the last with her group of friends, a scene showing them relaxing in the sun by the school. At that stage the future princess was not especially notable for her academic achievement. She left West Heath Girls’ School at 16 in 1977, the same year she met her future husband. They would not begin their relationship until 1980; a year later, on July 29, 1981, they were married.

One of the items up for sale dates from two months after that mass wedding at St. Paul’s Cathedral. Lady Di wrote a letter to Hanbury after returning from her honeymoon, which ended with a stay at Balmoral Castle following a two-week trip aboard the royal yacht Britannia. The missive is dated September 27, 1981: “Dear Katherine, I can’t tell you what a lovely surprise I got opening your card. Thank you so much for putting pen to paper and wishing me well.” It is three handwritten pages on Buckingham Palace stationery, bearing Queen Elizabeth II’s royal seal. The pages are inside an original envelope that is also part of the lot.

The owner of these mementos has also included in the sale a handwritten birthday card signed Diana (S). It appears this was how she and another Diana in her class were distinguished. “She remembers Diana volunteering to clean the house of the headmistress, and it is memories like this, and the collection that has come to light, that present the real young Diana in a way that is completely at odds with the public persona that was created by others,” explains Albert Radford, books and manuscripts specialist at Gorringe’s, in statements to People magazine.

The final item completing this collection is the program for an intimate Thanksgiving service held at St. Martin-in-the-Fields in London on November 19, 1997, in memory of the late Diana, Princess of Wales. The princess died in a tragic car crash in Paris at the age of 36 on August 31, 1997. This service was entirely separate from the state funeral held on September 6 at Westminster Abbey and broadcast worldwide. Only those closest to her attended this last farewell, making this program a unique keepsake that few possess.

The auction house estimates the sale price for the whole collection will range from $4,600 to $6,937. The aim was to time the auction to coincide with what would have been the 45th anniversary of the royal wedding of Charles III and Diana on July 29. In addition, on July 1 the Princess of Wales would have turned 65.

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Alex Batty On Escaping Mum’s Off-Grid Life In Spain And France

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Alex Batty – Then and now. Credit: Archive & screenshot from BBC

Alex Batty, the child who disappeared kidnapped by his own mother and grandfather, has shared the raw details of his disappearance in the new BBC programme Kidnapped By My Mum. The documentary outlines his path across Spain and France after he vanished at age 11 from Oldham in Greater Manchester and escaped the clutches of his mother.

Planned holiday to Marbella turned into a vanishing act

Alex travelled to Spain in October 2017 at age 11 with mother Melanie Batty and grandfather David Batty. Family members had said the outing was a short holiday to Marbella. At the time, his grandmother Susan Caruana was serving as the legal guardian back home in Greater Manchester and expected the trio home within a week after their holiday. Neither Melanie nor David held legal guardianship rights over the boy. Alex was seen for the last time at Malaga port on the scheduled departure day before the group failed to return. This absence quickly turned into a global missing persons alert and abduction suspicions that lasted years.

Isolation defined daily existence for young Alex

Nomadic routines kept Alex away from mainstream society during those years. Hippy communes and caravans in remote areas of Spain, Morocco and south-west France formed his world. Melanie Batty and grandfather David Batty enforced a lifestyle cut off from basic amenities and any formal schooling.

Alex heard school bells ring nearby and felt deep longing for normal childhood routines. At one moment in the filming of the documentary he breaks down in tears and admitted he could no longer continue that lifestyle. Spiritual demands and anti-establishment views dominated conversations with his mother rather than normal childhood mother and child topics. Disagreements often escalated into loud rows that ended with Alex being forced to sleep in a tent while Melanie stayed in a warm campervan.

Frustration built until daring break for freedom

Alex reached breaking point after years of fights with his mum. Constant pressure to pursue spiritual and inner work collided with his own independent thinking as he began to grow into an adult at around 15. He became tired of the off-grid existence and just wanted to be a normal kid.

Alex knew the family planned another move soon, so he timed his departure to leave no trace for police. He ended up walking four days across the Pyrenees, travelling at night and resting during daylight hours to stay hidden.

Escape across the Pyrenees led to dramatic discovery

Four days of walking through the French countryside brought Alex to safety in December 2023. A delivery driver spotted the then 17-year-old near Toulouse at 3am carrying only a backpack, torch and skateboard. Alex survived on food scavenged from fields and gardens during his nighttime trek. Police in Greater Manchester launched a criminal investigation into the alleged abduction shortly after his return.

Family chooses closure over prosecution

Greater Manchester Police dropped the child abduction probe in January 2025. Officers cited no realistic chance of successful court action and confirmed the family opposed charges. Alex had long feared imprisonment for his mother and grandfather. His grandmother Susan Caruana, who served as legal guardian, supported that outcome. Melanie Batty and David Batty declined requests for comment in the BBC documentary. French social services also stayed silent on the specific case due to confidentiality rules.

Alex Batty rebuilds life back in Britain

Alex passed maths and English GCSE exams after settling back in the UK. He welcomed a baby daughter in January this year. Speaking directly to the BBC crew, Alex described his bond with Melanie, his mother, as complicated. A feeling of annoyance is still there over missed education opportunities and experiences, yet conversations during filming helped him understand her motivations.

He expressed hope of one day rebuilding ties with his mother and sharing enjoyable moments without past conflicts. Campsite owners in France had contacted social services about the family, but officials said they lacked authority because Alex held foreign status and carried no clear identity details. Alex voiced frustration that authorities took no further steps despite those alerts.

How to stream kidnapped by my mum

The programme aired on BBC Three at 9pm and BBC One at 10.40pm on May 13. Viewing it for those in Spain is difficult, as BBC iPlayer is technically blocked. But, for those who do manage to see it, Alex’s account offers fresh insight into a case that once gripped national attention and provoked global searches.

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Reino Unido Se Vuelca En El Centenario De David Attenborough, El Naturalista Más Querido

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Sir David Attenborough, la persona, la imagen y la voz que mejor simbolizan el amor por la naturaleza y el conservacionismo que profesan numerosos británicos, celebró junto a miles de ellos su 100 cumpleaños este viernes por la noche en el londinense Royal Albert Hall. Junto a él, en el palco, estaba el príncipe de Gales, Guillermo de Inglaterra, encargado de rendir homenaje con los mayores honores posibles a uno de los hombres más queridos del país inglés. “Es un privilegio muy especial poder celebrar 100 años de vida, pero todavía es más único cuando es el cumpleaños de la persona que ha transformado nuestra visión del único hogar que tenemos, el Planeta Tierra”, decía el príncipe.

Miles de personas habían acudido al recinto para celebrar los logros de décadas de Attenborough, y los momentos más especiales e icónicos de las decenas de documentales que ha realizado para la BBC y que han sido emitidos, admirados y galardonados en todo el mundo.

Pero uno de los momentos más especiales de la gala fue el vídeo protagonizado por el rey Carlos III desde el castillo de Balmoral, el lugar preferido de su madre, Isabel II, de una belleza adusta y salvaje incomparable. Al igual que la difunta reina, mejor incluso dada su experiencia de juventud en el teatro, el monarca escribe una bella carta de felicitación a Atttenborough desde el estudio del castillo. Vestido de tweed, el tejido escocés por excelencia con que se asocia a la clase alta y la campiña inglesa, Carlos III escribe a pluma y su voz narra el texto: “A lo largo de las décadas has revelado la belleza y las maravillas de la naturaleza a audiencias de todo el mundo con modos nuevos y maravillosos. Al hacerlo, has compartido mi determinación en resaltar la urgente necesidad de proteger y preservar este precioso planeta nuestro y toda la vida en la Tierra para generaciones futuras”, dice.

Lo mejor viene a continuación. El perro encargado de llevar el sobre hasta su destinatario, a bordo de un todoterreno que recorre el paisaje escocés, ve interrumpido su trayecto por un árbol caído en mitad del camino. A partir de ahí comienza una aventura como la del correo del zar de Strogoff, pero protagonizada por todas las criaturas fascinantes que han poblado durante años los documentales de Attenborough.

El perro entrega la carta a un halcón, cuando ve que los acantilados no le van a dejar seguir su viaje. El halcón arrojará la misiva a un erizo, al que relevará una ardilla, luego un ganso, una nutria, un cisne de los parques londinenses, un pato, un zorro callejero que recorrerá escondido las calles de la metrópoli, un ciervo y un búho, que será el que deposite en el buzó la felicitación.

Attenborough, en el palco del Royal Hall, muestra a todo el público la carta, sucia y gastada, que ya tiene en sus manos, y se levanta para mostrarla a todos.

Invitados y música

A lo largo de la velada de homenaje, muchos famosos quisieron enviar, a través de mensajes de vídeo, su felicitación al naturalista. “Gracias por todo lo que has hecho y sigues haciendo por nuestro maravilloso planeta y sus habitantes”, decía el actor Leonardo DiCaprio. “Gracias por todo lo que nos has dado durante estos años. El mundo es un lugar mucho mejor gracias a ti”, añadía la actriz Olivia Colman. Se sumaba a ella la gran dama del cine y el teatro, Judi Dench; el cantante de Coldplay, Chris Martin; la actriz y guionista de la serie Fleabag, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, la cantante Camilla Cabello; el compositor, Hans Zimmer, y hasta el legendario personaje infantil, el osito Paddington.

La orquesta recreó durante la noche la banda sonora que acompañó algunas de las secuencias protagonizadas por Attenborough que han pasado a la historia y permanecido en la retina y la memoria de millones de espectadores, como la batalla entre serpientes e iguanas de Planeta Tierra II.

Todos los asistentes, que vieron en la gran pantalla un repaso completo de la vida y la obra de Attenborough, culminaron la gala cantando a la vez el Cumpleaños Feliz al homenajeado, que no pudo evitar que se trasluciera, a través de los ojos y la sonrisa, la emoción ante el reconocimiento y cariño hacia él y hacia su obra.

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Sir David Attenborough at 100: World’s favourite broadcaster, naturalist, and environmental advocate celebrated

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David Attenborough turns 100 today, Friday, May 8, as the UK honours its favourite broadcaster, naturalist, and environmental advocate through various events and public expressions of admiration.

Millions of viewers are tuning in to programmes on multiple channels that cover details from his remarkable career of more than seven decades of dedicated service to informing the public about the natural world.

Viewers young and old will share personal stories about how his distinctive narration changed their understanding of wildlife and its value.

Tributes reach the centenarian from all quarters

Royalty joins ordinary people in sending messages of appreciation to Sir David Attenborough for his lifetime of outstanding work. Prince William has conveyed personal greetings while the King and Queen add their own words of thanks for everything he has done.

An audio recording features Attenborough expressing how overwhelmed he feels by the volume of good wishes that arrive from preschool children and residents in care homes around the country.

The BBC has organised a special concert at the Royal Albert Hall to celebrate this milestone birthday in grand style.

Childhood episodes that shaped his path

As a young boy, David Attenborough started out by suppling newts to the zoology department at University College Leicester for three pence each as a way to earn some pocket money.

His parents took in two Jewish refugee sisters who had escaped Nazi Germany and looked after them for seven years in their family home.

Attenborough discovered an ammonite fossil as a boy when he split open a rock during one of his explorations, an event that provoked his lasting interest in natural history from an early point.

Quirks and habits little discussed

Possibly one of the most well-travelled Brits in history, Attenborough never actually learned to drive a car despite going on journeys to far-flung locations for filming wildlife documentaries over most of his life.

Surprisingly, of all the animal kingdom, rats terrify him most, following incidents in the Solomon Islands where the creatures ran across his bed and the floor of his hut during a powerful thunderstorm.

His home welcomed various wild animals over the years, including gibbons, chimpanzees, lemurs, snakes, and chameleons that stayed as temporary guests from time to time.

Innovations in television and lasting honours

Attenborough started at the BBC without even owning a television set himself and had seen only one programme in his life before that moment.

At one point, he promoted snooker broadcasts to introduce colour television effectively to British audiences because the multicoloured balls helped demonstrate the advantages of the new format.

Dozens of plants, frogs, and other creatures carry scientific names honouring his work in natural history and his efforts to document species across the globe.

Attenborough is still the sole person to win BAFTAs for programmes produced in black-and-white, colour, high definition, and three-dimensional formats throughout his long career.

Legacy that motivates action on nature

Programmes from his extensive catalogue air once more while new retrospectives examine his childhood inspirations and lesser-known abilities that kept him going. Fans worldwide recall how his storytelling encouraged them to value and protect the natural world in their daily lives.

A newly identified parasitic wasp discovered in Chile gains a name linked to Attenborough in recognition of his lifetime achievements in the field of natural sciences.

His voice and passion for the environment keep motivating people of every age to take practical steps towards conservation and sustainability wherever they live.

Sir David Attenborough, we salute you on this auspicious day, your 100th birthday, as possibly the most celebrated and cherished Brit, and one we can all be proud of.

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