Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
1926–1936
Unexpected Heir
Elizabeth Alexandra Mary was born on 21 April 1926, the first child of the Duke and Duchess of York. Her early life was sheltered, affectionate and not designed around immediate succession. That changed in 1936 when Edward VIII abdicated to marry Wallis Simpson. Elizabeth's father became George VI, and the ten-year-old princess became heir presumptive. The abdication shaped her understanding of monarchy more deeply than any lesson book could. It showed that personal desire could threaten institutional stability, and that duty could fall suddenly on someone not raised to seek it. From that point, Elizabeth's education became more constitutional, more public and more disciplined.
Her future was not chosen early, but once defined, it became the central force shaping her life.
1939–1945
War and Service
The war years gave Elizabeth's generation its moral vocabulary: service, restraint, endurance and shared sacrifice. The royal family stayed in Britain during the Blitz, turning visibility into a form of morale. Elizabeth made her first radio broadcast in 1940, speaking to children separated from their families, and in 1945 joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service, training as a driver and mechanic. The practical military role was limited, but symbolically powerful. She was not governing, yet she was learning what public duty felt like in a national emergency. Later in life, her style often seemed formed by that wartime world: steady, unsentimental, careful with emotion and suspicious of drama for its own sake.
Direct exposure to crisis grounded her sense of responsibility in lived experience rather than ceremony.
1947
Marriage and Partnership
Elizabeth married Philip Mountbatten on 20 November 1947, at a moment when postwar Britain was still rationed and imperial confidence was beginning to fade. Philip brought naval experience, energy and impatience with some court habits. He also had to accept a constitutionally secondary role once Elizabeth became queen, a difficult adjustment for a man trained for command. Their marriage became a working partnership as well as a family relationship. Philip supported tours, charities and household reform, sometimes pushing modernization faster than the institution liked. The marriage gave Elizabeth private steadiness, but it also revealed a recurring truth of her reign: personal life was never merely personal when lived inside the Crown.
Strong personal alliances can quietly reinforce public leadership.
1952
Becoming Queen
Elizabeth was in Kenya when her father died in February 1952. At twenty-five she instantly became queen, inheriting a monarchy still wrapped in imperial ceremony but facing a world of decolonisation, Cold War pressure and domestic change. Her coronation in 1953 was televised, against some hesitation, and turned ancient ritual into a shared modern spectacle. The young queen's task was not to rule politically; it was to embody continuity while elected governments changed around her. Winston Churchill was her first prime minister, born in 1874. Liz Truss was her last, born in 1975. That span explains why Elizabeth's biography is also a timeline of modern Britain.
Her early reign showed that composure can be as important as bold action when stepping into power.
1950s–1970s
Global Role
Elizabeth had been formed in an imperial world, but her reign unfolded through its dismantling. India and Pakistan were already independent before she became queen; across Africa, the Caribbean and Asia, more territories followed. The monarchy could either cling to imperial nostalgia or seek a different role. Elizabeth chose the Commonwealth as one of her central commitments. Through repeated tours, meetings and personal relationships with leaders, she helped give the association symbolic continuity even when political interests diverged. This did not erase the violence, exploitation and inequality of empire, nor did it make every Commonwealth relationship warm. But it allowed the Crown to survive a historic contraction of British power by changing the language from command to connection.
Adaptability allowed her to transform inherited structures into something more sustainable.
1960s–1980s
Adapting the Crown
Elizabeth's reign coincided with the transformation of public life by television. The 1953 coronation created a national viewing experience; later broadcasts, Christmas messages and carefully managed documentaries brought the royal family into living rooms. The monarchy became less remote, but exposure carried risk. The 1969 documentary Royal Family attracted huge audiences yet later seemed to have surrendered too much mystique. Elizabeth's instinct was controlled adaptation: enough access to remain relevant, not enough to become ordinary celebrity. The walkabout, the televised ceremony and the international tour all made monarchy more public-facing. Yet she rarely confused visibility with emotional self-disclosure. That restraint became both her strength and, in moments of crisis, her weakness.
Change, when paced carefully, can preserve institutions rather than weaken them.
1990s
Public Challenges
The monarchy's hardest modern decade came in the 1990s. The marriages of Charles and Diana, Andrew and Sarah, and Anne and Mark Phillips broke down under intense media scrutiny. In 1992, the year Elizabeth called her annus horribilis, Windsor Castle burned and public debate over royal taxation sharpened. The death of Diana in 1997 created the most serious public-relations crisis of the reign. Elizabeth's first response was familial and private: protecting her grandsons at Balmoral. Much of the public wanted visible mourning from the sovereign. Her eventual broadcast and return to London helped steady the moment, but the crisis forced the palace to understand that constitutional dignity no longer worked without emotional intelligence.
Moments of criticism can compel even long-standing institutions to rethink how they relate to the public.
2000s–2015
Record Reign
As Elizabeth aged, the meaning of her reign changed. She was no longer simply a monarch performing inherited duties; she became a living link across generations. The Golden, Diamond and Platinum Jubilees turned duration into public ritual. In 2015 she surpassed Queen Victoria as Britain's longest-reigning monarch. Her authority rested less on intervention than on repetition: weekly audiences, state openings, remembrance ceremonies, tours, messages, small gestures of continuity. This steadiness could look old-fashioned, but it also gave the monarchy a rare asset in a restless media age. People who disagreed about politics could still recognize the same figure standing above party conflict.
Endurance itself became a form of influence, shaping how she was remembered as much as her actions.
2022
A Lasting Presence
Elizabeth II died on 8 September 2022 after seventy years on the throne. Her death produced an immediate sense of historical closure because her reign had outlasted most political careers, cultural fashions and personal memories. Her legacy rests on constitutional discipline. She did not govern policy, but she preserved the habits of nonpartisan monarchy through decolonisation, European integration and withdrawal, social liberalisation, terrorism, war, pandemic and family turmoil. Criticism remains part of the record: monarchy under Elizabeth still carried questions about privilege, empire, wealth and relevance. Yet her personal achievement was considerable. She made duty feel less like a slogan than a daily practice. The challenge for her successors is that no one else can inherit the accumulated trust created by seventy years of showing up.
Her legacy rests on the rare ability to remain constant while the world around her continually transformed.