World’s wildest royals set for King’s coronation as Meghan bows out – from 7,000-car Sultan to ‘Kate of the Himalayas’
KING Charles’s Coronation is only two months away and RSVPs are coming in thick and fast.
Prince Harry announced yesterday he will attend the ceremony, but wife Meghan Markle is set to stay in Los Angeles with their children Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet.
The announcement comes after weeks of indecision - with the Sussexes even missing the April 3 deadline to respond.
As Harry is no longer a working royal, he will not have a formal role in the ceremony and will not join the Royal Family for celebrations after.
The Duchess of Sussex is thought to be ditching the 5,000 mile journey so she doesn't miss Prince Archie's fourth birthday on May 6.
Experts have said it is "unlikely" she will ever attend a royal occasion again.
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But the ceremony will not be short of royal glamour, drama and quirks.
In a break with tradition, King Charles has decided to invite foreign monarchs to the Coronation too.
From the “Kate Middleton of the Himalayas” to ex TV journalists, we look at who will be at the event.
The Playboy Prince
Prince Albert of Monaco had a colourful love life before he made ex-Olympic swimmer Charlene Wittstock his Princess.
He was dubbed a playboy after dating a string of glamorous lovelies from supermodel Claudia Schiffer and singer Kylie Minogue to Roger Moore’s daughter Deborah.
He was mired in scandal after former Air France flight attendant Nicole Coste gave birth to his son Alexandre Grimaldi-Coste in August 2003 - two years before Albert started dating Charlene.
But Alexandre’s existence was only made public in May 2005 when Nicole gave an explosive interview to Paris Match magazine, revealing who her son’s father was
The billionaire car enthusiast
The Sultan of Brunei Hassanal Bolkiah is one of the world’s richest people with absolute power over his subjects.
He and his brother Jefri - who has been involved in a number of sex scandals - are said to own more than 7,000 luxury cars kept in huge warehouses.
As Sultan, Hassanal is also Prime Minister of the tiny, oil-rich nation which was a British protectorate until 1984.
On the death of the Queen last year he became the world’s longest reigning living monarch.
Hassanal, who ascended the throne in 1967, came under fire in 2014 for introducing Sharia law which includes death by stoning, the severing of limbs, and flogging for ‘crimes’ such as adultery, abortion and gay sex.
Celebrities George Clooney, Elton John and Ellen DeGeneres called for a boycott of Dorchester hotels, which the Brunei royal family owns.
In 2015 the Sultan also banned public celebrations of Christmas for local Muslims.
His brother Jefri Bolkiah was accused of keeping ex-Miss USA Shannon Marketic a ‘virtual slave’ in the early 90s after hiring her for promotional work.
She filed a lawsuit against the Prince in 1997 alleging she was drugged and sexually abused but a US court dismissed it on the grounds he had sovereign immunity.
The Sultan’s younger sibling has been dubbed the ‘sex-crazed Prince’ and is also famed for keeping a 40-strong harem. He once commissioned sexually-explicit statues of himself and his then-fiancee.
The brothers' fleet of motors includes rare McLaren F1s and prototypes of the BMW Nazca C2 and Ferrari Mythos, which never made it to market.
The Sultan also owns two Boeings - one decked out with crystal and gold - and an Airbus.
The ex-news hound
Queen Letizia of Spain is a divorcee who once worked as a journalist for ABC before becoming a news anchor at CNN.
Married to King Felipe VI, she was left heartbroken after losing her sister Erika Ortiz, 31, to a drugs overdose in 2007.
Letizia became a royal after a life in the media, covering presidential elections in 2000, broadcasting live from Ground Zero during the 9/11 attacks and filing reports from the Iraq war.
Her husband became King when dad Juan Carlos - said to have bedded 5,000 women - abdicated after close to 40 years on the throne.
He gave up the title after a corruption investigation surrounding his alleged involvement in a controversial high-speed rail contract in Saudi Arabia. He was later cleared of wrongdoing.
The Queen with a family secret
When Queen Maxima of the Netherlands married Prince Willem-Alexander in 2002, the Dutch government refused to invite her father Jorge.
He was a high-ranking official in the right-wing Argentinian government during the ‘Dirty War’, a seven year campaign waged against left-leaning dissidents from 1976.
More than 30,000 people ‘disappeared’ during the campaign.
Baud determined that Máxima's father had not been directly involved in any of the atrocities but that he must have been aware of them.