Nobody puts Harry in a corner… except the royal family.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle did not sit in the front row with Prince William, Kate Middleton and other family members at Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral at Westminster Abbey in London on Monday.
Instead, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex were crammed into a corner at the end of the second row next to Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie and their respective husbands, Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi and Jack Brooksbank.
The estranged brothers were as far away as possible, separated by the church path.
Meanwhile, King Charles III, his wife, Queen Consort Camilla, and the newly appointed Prince and Princess of Wales sat in the front seat.
William and Middleton, both 40, sat gloomily with two of their children, Prince George, 9 and Princess Charlotte, 7. Their youngest, Prince Louis, 4, was not present.
Also notable in the front row was the Queen’s disgraced son Prince Andrew, as well as granddaughter Zara Tindall and her husband, Peter Phillips, who don’t work royals.
Earlier in the procession, Harry, 38, and Markle, 41, morosely followed William and Middleton as they followed the Queen’s coffin.
Harry was not allowed to wear his military uniform as he mourned the loss of his grandmother. Instead, he wore a black suit, while Markle mirrored Middleton’s look in a black dress and black hat.
Harry and Markle, who moved to California in 2020 after resigning from their royal duties, are in the UK to join William and Middleton to mourn the Queen since the longest reigning monarch in British history on September 8 at the age of 96 died.
Harry, who rushed to be with the Queen before she died but arrived hours late, reportedly learned of his grandmother’s death five minutes before it was announced to the public.