King Charles 'had love' growing up 'but not from his mother' - Ingrid Seward

King Charles 'had love' growing up 'but not from his mother' - Ingrid Seward

Ingrid Stewart said that King Charles "had love but not from his mother"

GB News
Gabrielle Wilde

By Gabrielle Wilde


Published: 20/02/2024

- 19:50

Ingrid Seward has just released a royal biography, named My Mother and I, which is the inside story of the King and his late mother

King Charles "had love" when he was younger but did receive it "from his mother Queen Elizabeth", a royal author has claimed.

It has been reported in the past that The Queen did not form a particularly close relationship with her children because she took on the huge role of Queen when she was just 26 years old.


She was also part of a generation and class that routinely left the daily care of small children in the hands of household staff.

In past biographies, Charles has been quoted saying it was "inevitably the nursery staff" who taught him to play, witnessed his first steps, punished and rewarded him.

Ingrid Seward

Ingrid Seward said that Charles did recieve love as a child

GBN America

Ingrid Seward has just released a royal biography, named My Mother and I, which details the inside story of the King and his late mother.

Speaking to GBN America she said: "Jonathan Dimbleby wrote an authorized biography of Charles.

"He talked about how the fact that his mother had never hugged him, he had a very strained relationship with his father and that the love that he received was really from the royal nannies.

"There was a nanny Lightbody, and nanny Mabel Anderson and they were mothers to him. So he had the love, but not from his mother.

Queen Elizabeth and King Charles

Queen Elizabeth and King Charles became closer as he got older

GETTY

"I think this stuck in his mind for a long time. Then of course they had a rapprochement and the Queen was very proud of Charles and felt more able to express her love for him when she had a little bit more time to do so.

"You have to remember that in the 1950s, parents did not hug their children and coddle them in a way that perhaps we think is completely normal today.

"It wasn't just aristocratic families. It was most families.

"It just wasn't a lot of I love yous and a lot of hugging and kissing. It just didn't happen."

Queen Elizabeth

​Queen Elizabeth ascended to the throne at the age of 26 

GETTY

Earlier in the interview Seward explained: "This was a woman, the Queen, who as Princess Elizabeth had Charles literally a year after her marriage.

She got married in '47, had Charles in '48, and by '52 she was Queen. She had very little time, just four years to enjoy motherhood.

"During that time because her father, King George the 6th, was ill, she and the Duke of Edinburgh were travelling a lot and representing the King on on visits and all kinds of things, in a way perhaps similar to what Prince William is doing now with his father.

"But she wasn't able to enjoy motherhood in the way that perhaps we would like to think that we do today."

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