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ROYAL FAMILY

BLOG: Sweden’s Crown Princess Victoria turns 40

The Local live blogged Crown Princess Victoria's birthday celebrations in Stockholm on Friday morning.

BLOG: Sweden's Crown Princess Victoria turns 40
Crown Princess Victoria, her husband Prince Daniel and children Princess Estelle and Prince Oscar. Photo: Stina Stjernkvist/TT

13:20 Happy 40th Birthday, Crown Princess Victoria!

Victoria is now travelling through the streets of Stockholm in a horse-drawn carriage to greet the crowds. She will next head to the island of Öland for a big gala and concert tonight, which you should be able to watch on Swedish public television SVT from 9pm. That means it's time for us to round off this blog. Thanks for reading and Happy Birthday to everyone celebrating your birthday today, whether you are royalty or not!


Crown Princess Victoria and Prince Daniel. Photo: Sören Andersson/TT


Photo: Stina Stjernkvist/TT

12:40 Royal fans

The Local's contributor Nicole Zerrer has been speaking to people waiting outside the Royal Palace. 

“We found on the internet on the website of the Royal Family that there is this ceremony today for the Crown Princess' birthday. We are generally interested in royal families and also saw the Belgian couple a while ago,” said Alex Griep from Germany.

Sara Fritz added: “We are not disappointed about the waiting, we love to watch the people and being here. We even saw the King's dog earlier on the other side of the garden. It's really exciting to be here.”


Alex Griep and Sara Fritz. Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local


People outside the Royal Palace. Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local

12:30 It's a long day

Looks like the youngest members of the Royal Family have had it. Okay, done with all this pomp and circumstance, let's have cake. Yup, that's what we're like too on our birthdays.


Victoria and Princess Estelle. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT


Princess Madeleine with her children Leonore and Nicholas. That's their dad Chris O'Neill in the background. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT

11:50 “It would be nice to see her in person”

The Local contributor Nicole Zerrer is out and about speaking to people outside the Royal Palace. Some have gone there specifically in hope of catching a glimpse of the princess, others have just happened to wander past and spot the crowds waiting outside the palace.

Andreas Eikelmann, 48, from Switzerland is visiting Stockholm with his wife and two children.

“We just figured out it's Victoria's birthday today when we saw all the people waiting here. We saw a documentary on German public television some days ago about Victoria and it would be nice to see her in person today. But since the kids are not too excited we may have to leave before she comes out. We have been waiting for a while already,” he said.


Andreas Eikelmann with part of his family. Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local

Anna-lisa Ehn, 72, from Gävle in Sweden, says she is in Stockholm today with her granddaughter Matilda “because we want to take the ferry to Djurgården and see the Abba museum”. “But we thought since we are here anyway we can try to spot the Crown Princess on her birthday and maybe also the other members of the Royal Family.”


Anna-Lisa Ehn. Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local

11:45 More pictures

The Te Deum service has now ended and a birthday reception is under way.


Princess Estelle greets Sweden's Prime Minister Stefan Löfven. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT


The Swedish Royal Family. From left: Princess Madeleine, Chris O'Neill, Queen Silvia, Prince Daniel and Princess Estelle, Crown Princess Victoria and Prince Oscar, King Carl XVI Gustaf, Princess Sofia and Prince Carl Philip with Prince Alexander. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT


Princess Leonore (Victoria's niece) is known for finding it difficult to sit still. Photo: Stina Stjernkvist/TT

11:26 Meet Sweden's most popular royal

Victoria is by far the most popular member of the Royal Family in Sweden. According to a poll carried out by Sifo on behalf of Svensk Damtidning earlier this year, almost one in two picked her as their favourite royal. Forty percent said they thought her father King Carl XVI Gustaf should retire and hand over the throne to her.

The Local's contributor Nicole Zerrer has spoken to people outside the Royal Palace today. Andreas Lindh, 29, from Gothenburg said she was also his favourite member of the Royal Family. “I like Victoria a lot since she is like a normal human and not on a high horse. She is a good person but also serious enough to handle foreign affairs.”

Kristina Jyric, 24, also from Gothenburg, said: “The princess is a good person and good for Sweden, she does great things. I'm in Stockholm to visit my sister but since all the news was full of the birthday news I thought I would stop by here at the palace as well.”

Victoria is generally described in Sweden as quite down to earth. When she married her personal trainer Daniel Westling in 2010 around half a million turned out on the streets of Stockholm to greet the newlyweds. She and Daniel have seemed to adopt a modern, gender equal Swedish take on parenting as well and made headlines when they went on maternity and paternity leave when their children, Estelle and Oscar, were born.

READ ALSO: “Our children should learn how to take the metro and queue”


Andreas Lindh and Kristina Jyric. Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local

11:15 Waiting for the royals

The Local's contributor Nicole Zerrer is at the Royal Palace in Stockholm, where crowds have started to gather in the hope of catching a glimpse of Crown Princess Victoria later.


Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local


Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local

It's a lovely day in Stockholm today: 20C and blue sky.


Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local

The Crown Princess and her family will later head to the Royal Stables in a procession through central Stockholm. People are already waiting along the route. Below is the Strömbron bridge in central Stockholm.


Photo: Nicole Zerrer/The Local

10:40 More pictures from the Te Deum service in the Royal Chapel


Crown Princess Victoria, her husband Prince Daniel and children Princess Estelle and Prince Oscar. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT


Victoria's brother Prince Carl Philip, his wife Princess Sofia and their son Prince Alexander. Photo: Stina Stjernkvist/TT


The birthday girl's parents: Queen Silvia and King Carl XVI Gustaf. Photo: Stina Stjernkvist/TT


Princess Madeleine and a little Princess Leonore. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT

10:15 Let's get this party started

The birthday celebrations have kicked off in the capital with a thanksgiving “Te Deum” religious service at the Royal Chapel inside Stockholm Palace. After that, the princess will receive gifts from visitors in the nearby gardens. Here are some pictures of guests arriving earlier:


Victoria's sister Princess Madeleine, her husband Chris O'Neill and their two children, Princess Leonore and Prince Nicholas. Photo: Erik Simander/TT


Prime Minister Stefan Löfven and Speaker of Parliament Urban Ahlin arriving at the Royal Chapel. Photo: Sören Andersson/TT


Victoria's in-laws, Ewa and Olle Westling, finding their seats in the chapel. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT

10:00 France has Bastille Day, Sweden has Victoria Day

July 14th is known as 'Victoria Day' in Sweden, in honour of the Crown Princess' birthday. It refers to the annual celebrations on the island of Öland, where the Royal Family have their summer house. 

So the day will end with a traditional gala and concert at Borgholm on Öland. Anyone can buy a ticket to the concert, and it is attended by (usually) the entire Royal Family and a host of Sweden's finest performers.


The Royal Family at last year's Victoria Day concert on Öland. Photo: Mikael Fritzon/TT

09:40 Happy Birthday, Victoria!

Good morning, readers! It's Friday, but if that wasn't reason enough to celebrate, it's also a big day for Crown Princess Victoria as the Swedish royal celebrates turning 40, with festivities set to take place across two days in multiple parts of the Nordic country. We're live blogging Friday's celebrations in Stockholm.


Crown Princess Victoria photographed in her home at Haga Palace. Photo: Jonas Ekströmer/TT

WORKING IN SWEDEN

Swedish Royal Guards scrap ceremonial helmets over safety concerns

The King’s mounted Royal Guards will no longer be able to wear their iconic ceremonial helmets on parades, after the Swedish Work Environment Authority warned of serious safety concerns.

Swedish Royal Guards scrap ceremonial helmets over safety concerns

“We take the safety of our employees extremely seriously and we are going to address this immediately,” colonel Stefan Nacksten, head of the Royal Guards, wrote in a statement. 

Employed by the Armed Forces, the Royal Guards are the King’s cavalry and infantry units and are a well-known sight at ceremonies in Sweden, including at the changing of the guard at the Royal Palace of Stockholm every day in summer – a popular spectacle for Stockholmers and tourists alike.

The helmets will no longer be used by Royal Guards on horseback from July 7th, as they do not conform to safety standards for riding helmets, although guards parading on foot will still be permitted to wear them.

They are part of the 1895 parade uniforms and were last modified in 2000. The Armed Forces will now create an entirely new helmet which looks the part, but is also safe for riding.

“We’re working on finding an alternative solution as quickly as possible which meets safety requirements and can also be used during parades,” Nacksten said.

“We’ve been working long-term with this issue but now that it has been assessed [by the Swedish Work Environment Authority] we need to take measures immediately,” he added.

“This is good, and now we’re working to make sure something good comes out of this and we can get a safe riding helmet for parades in place as soon as possible.”

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