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Royals arrive for Royal Family funeral in Oxfordshire village

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Mourners have arrived for the Royal Family funeral of Lady Pamela Hicks in an Oxfordshire village.

The Mourners have arrived for the Royal Family funeral of Lady Pamela Hicks in an Oxfordshire village.

The service for the 97‑year‑old is taking place this afternoon (Saturday, June 13) at St Bartholomew’s Church in Brightwell Baldwin, between Wallingford and Watlington.

Lady Pamela died last week at her home in the village, where she had lived for many years with her late husband, interior designer David Hicks.

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The funeral of Lady Pamela Hicks, aged 97, at Bartholomew's Church, Brightwell Baldwin, in Oxfordshire. (Image: Jason Dawson)

The small parish church is close to The Grove, the family house that became her long‑term base in Oxfordshire.

According to the published order, the funeral was arranged in line with Lady Pamela’s wishes, with rousing hymns but no formal sermon or eulogy during the service.

Lady Pamela was a first cousin of the late Prince Philip, a great‑great‑granddaughter of Queen Victoria and a bridesmaid at the 1947 wedding of the then Princess Elizabeth and Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten.

She later served as a lady‑in‑waiting to Queen Elizabeth II and accompanied the then Princess on the 1952 tour of Kenya, when news came through of King George VI’s death and Elizabeth’s accession to the throne.

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The funeral of Lady Pamela Hicks, aged 97, at Bartholomew's Church, Brightwell Baldwin, in Oxfordshire. (Image: Jason Dawson)

Because of those close ties, her funeral has been described as a royal family occasion, coming on the same day as Trooping the Colour, the King’s official birthday parade in London.

It remains unclear how many senior royals are able to make the journey to Oxfordshire, with Trooping’s balcony fly‑past in London usually ending at around 1pm and the funeral starting two hours later.

Following her death on June 5, King Charles paid a warm tribute, saying he was “greatly saddened to learn of the death of Lady Pamela Hicks, a sorrow tempered by the fondest memories and deepest gratitude for her long life and loyal service to Queen Elizabeth.”

In the statement released by Buckingham Palace, he added that her “warmth, wit and perspicacity always made such an impression” and that she would be “so dearly missed by all those who knew and loved her.”

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The funeral of Lady Pamela Hicks, aged 97, at Bartholomew's Church, Brightwell Baldwin, in Oxfordshire. (Image: Jason Dawson)

Lady Pamela is survived by her three children, Edwina, Ashley and India, and several grandchildren, many of whom were expected to attend today’s village service.

Brightwell Baldwin is a small rural parish in South Oxfordshire, about four and a half miles north‑east of Wallingford and close to the foot of the Chiltern Hills.

The village, whose name comes from the Old English for “bright spring”, had a population of just over 200 at the last census and is centred around a handful of stone cottages, farms and the church.

St Bartholomew’s itself dates back to the 13th and 14th centuries, with later medieval additions, and is regarded as one of south Oxfordshire’s most interesting historic churches.

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