Millions miss Princess Diana decades after her death. Her sudden death startled the world, and her funeral was one of the most-watched TV broadcasts.
Diana nearly left the Royal Family due to Charles and Camilla’s affair. Diana allegedly had an affair.
The “People’s Princess” discussed abuse in the Royal Family. Two additional Diana letters are up for auction after their recent discovery.
Princess Diana reveals a hidden side. After writing to the King of Greece, her wickedness would have shocked Queen Elizabeth and other royals.
Diana had a rough royal life. After marrying Prince Charles, their relationship worsened.
Queen Elizabeth II repeatedly sought to save Diana and Charles’ marriage. The late queen advised the couple to divorce a month after Diana’s infamous BBC appearance.
Princess Diana writes
According to royal researcher and author Katie Nicholl, Queen Elizabeth saw the “damage it was causing to the monarchy as an institution” and needed to safeguard its reputation.
Finally, Charles and Diana divorced. Diana loved Egyptian film producer Dodi Al Fayed, who died in the 1997 car tragedy with Diana.
Princess Diana received many letters. Two new letters sold for $169,663 in February. Her true feelings regarding her divorce from Charles are shown.
The Mirror reported that Diana wrote 32 “emotionally” frank letters to Susie and Tarek Kasseem, her two friends, during the painful divorce. Diana stated she was “on my knees” after the divorce settlement and feared royal phone tapping.
A letter from April 28, 1996, illuminated Diana and Charles’ divorce. Her mental health forced her to cancel a trip to Italy and apologize to pals.
“All sides are pressuring me. Diana stated, It’s hard to hold one’s head up, and tonight I’m on my knees, longing for this divorce because it’s so expensive.
Diana wrote again a few weeks later: “Since I don’t have a mobile, my lines here are constantly recorded and passed on, making personal issues difficult to discuss.
If I had realized what I would go through, I would never have agreed to this divorce a year ago. Desperate and ugly.”
Queen Elizabeth advised Charles and Diana to divorce.
Diana also thanked them for letting her spend 1995 Christmas with them while Harry and William stayed with Charles at Sandringham.
Letters sold for $110,000. Susie and Diana donated some of their money. On December 18, 1995, the queen advised Charles and Diana to divorce. Diana wrote another letter for sale the next day.
Princess Diana said, “I may have been described as a butterfly but I don’t want to fly away from this loving family,” referring to the Kassems.
Your protection overwhelms me… I’m not used to it,” she added, adding that she had never felt such love and support from a married couple.
Mimi Connell-Lay of Lay’s Auctioneers termed the letters “frankly astonishing.”
“Susie met Diana at the Royal Brompton Hospital, and it is obvious that they clicked straight away; Diana says as much in one of her letters,” she told the Mirror.
Diana cherished their friendship, support, and wisdom during a difficult emotional time.
Connell-Lay said, “She wrote a lot about her life at the time, especially her divorce, and repeatedly referred to not having Royal family support.”
Princess Diana’s tragic death
Diana’s car crashed in Paris’ Pont de l’Alma tunnel at 12.23 am. After lengthy treatment by site medics, she experienced cardiac arrest in the ambulance.
Princess Diana arrived at the hospital at 6:02.
An X-ray at the hospital revealed serious internal injuries. So she had a blood transfusion right away.
Diana’s death was national tragedy. A tragedy victim recently spoke up.
15 minutes after arriving at the hospital, Diana had another heart attack. Diana died in Paris while surgeon MonSef Dahman tried to save her. Diana’s injuries were too severe for surgery.
Her heart wouldn’t restart.
“We tried electric shocks several times and, as I had done in the emergency room, cardiac massage,” Dahman told the Daily Mail in a lengthy interview.
Adrenaline from Professor Riou. We couldn’t restart her heart.”
Dahman’s doctors fought to save Diana. They had little options. He was “happy and proud” to serve patients at France’s top critical care hospital, Pitié-Salpêtrière.
Diana worried about murder.
Diana gave him hope. Her rescue failed.
Former Diana butler Paul Burrell preserved several disturbing letters, which surfaced in 2003.
She told him to retain her letters “just in case,” 10 months before her death, of a car crash plot to kill her. Diana believed her death was staged so Charles could remarry, reports alleged.
She predicted her death ten months before her car crash.
For years, people have questioned whether the crash was an accident. Diana predicted her death from “brake failure and serious head injury.”
I’m sitting at my work in October, wanting a hug and support to stand tall. In 2003, Daily Mirror published a letter saying this is my most dangerous period.
“XXXXX plans ‘an accident’ in my car, brake failure and serious head injury.”
Despite 15 years of systemic mental abuse, I’m not angry. I’m strong within, which may bother enemies.
“Thank you Charles for putting me through such hell and for teaching me from your cruelty.”
Job of former butler Paul Burell
The newspaper claimed to know the blacked-out name but would not print it for legal reasons.
“With the benefit of hindsight, the content of that letter has bothered me since her death,” Burrell told the newspaper.
Burrell, who previously stated why he thinks Prince Harry married Meghan Markle, exposed the letters’ content after his 2002 theft conviction.
He told the queen after Diana died that he had stolen several of her papers for safety, ending the trial quickly.
Burell worked with Diana until her 1997 death after caring for Charles and Diana at Highgrove House from 1987. He claimed Diana trusted him as her “only man”.
Harry and William got along with Burrell until Harry, 19, became an unpaid farmhand in Australia.
Former butler Burell candidly discusses his royal life and closeness with the late princess. He lost contact with her children around 2003.
Harry was furious when Burrell divulged secret information in 2003’s A Royal Duty. Harry and William publicly termed Burrell “a cold and overt betrayal.”
Harry was furious with his mother’s ex-butler.
Paul suggested defending his book with Harry and William. He wanted to show them their mother’s life.
“I’d love to give them a piece of my mind,” he remarked.
Paul and Harry fought thereafter. In Spare, Harry accused his mother’s former butler of “milking” her death. Harry said Royal Duty “made his blood boil.”
Harry recalls receiving a Palace box explaining the “delicate matter.”
Former Mummy butler’s confession was empty. One man’s self-justifying self-centered story. My mother considered this butler a friend. We did too. As expressed by Harry.
“He profited from her disappearance. My blood boiled.”
Harry planned to fly to Britain to “confront” Paul Burrell. Father and brother discouraged him.
Harry’s book charges prompted Burrell’s fast response. In a Florida video, the former butler said Harry has “changed fundamentally” and his mother would be “appalled.”
Princess Diana’s bad letters
“What I see now is an angry, petulant, privileged prince who blames others and refuses responsibility.”
He added: “[Diana] would be angry at these personal, vindictive revelations which undermine Harry, his country, his family, the institution – which his mother was very proud of – and his late grandmother’s legacy.”
Some think Diana-written documents are rare. Naturally, there. The Mirror reported that Princess Diana’s two greeting cards to Constantine II of Greece were auctioned in May.
Diana appears funnier and less serious with sexual implications. Her handwritten messages and signature were on the cards.
First card’s front showed naked man resting against tree. The caption said, “Adam came first“.Man always does!
Diana sent a second card with a naked woman asking, “What’s the definition of the Perfect Man?”
The answer was a 10-inch-tongued dwarf who could breathe through his ears.
View greeting card photos.
Constantine II, the last Greek king, befriended Diana. Princess Diana signed his cards: “Dearest Tino, lots of love from Diana.”
Sold for $7000
The second read: “Dearest Tino, proudest love as always, from Diana.”
They sold for $7,000 at Dominic Winter Auctioneers in May.
“The reason for sending these cards, other than as a bit of fun, is unclear as the cards do not celebrate a birthday, Christmas or christening,” the auction firm stated on their website.
Diana must have seen these cards and thought about Tino before buying and sending them, probably motivated by a party conversation.”
Lady Diana, relax. Share this story on Facebook to honor her.