As The Crown moves closer to the present day, we’re seeing more and more familiar storylines, like Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles’s ongoing relationship. First introduced in the third season, it’s in full swing in season four, complete with the love triangle involving Princess Diana before and during Charles and Diana’s marriage. Although we’ve all gotten used to the sight of Camilla by Charles’s side in recent years, it’s impossible to forget the intense controversy their relationship started out with and all the twists and turns along the way. Love may conquer all, but it’s been a long road to get there!
Ahead, we’ve put together a comprehensive timeline of some of the most important moments in Charles and Camilla’s relationship. From their first meeting, to their marriages to other people, to finally, getting to be together, here’s what you should know about the future ruling couple.
1970: Charles and Camilla First Meet
The future couple first met, as The Crown implies but doesn’t directly depict, at a polo match in 1970. Camilla had recently broken up with her previous boyfriend, Andrew Parker Bowles, and she and Charles hit it off quickly over shared interests.
Other sources suggest that Camilla met Charles a little later and flirted with him outright at the beginning. People reported that, upon their meeting, Camilla joked, “My great-grandmother was the mistress of your great-great-grandfather. I feel we have something in common.” She was right on that count, at least: her great-grandmother Alice Keppel was one of the known mistresses of King Edward VII, Charles’s ancestor.
Either way, the pair enjoyed a relatively low-key romance for a little while until, as The Crown also shows, Charles had to leave for his naval career. His absence quickly put the brakes on their fledgling romance, and he didn’t propose before he left.
1973: Camilla Marries Andrew Parker Bowles
With Charles away, and without any confidence about the future of that relationship, Camilla naturally moved on. She wound up back with her on-again, off-again ex, Andrew, and they married in 1973. They went on to have two children: Tom (who, as it happens, is Prince Charles’s godson) and Laura.
1981: Charles Marries Diana Spencer
After first meeting in 1977 (while Charles was casually dating her sister, Sarah), Charles and Lady Diana Spencer tied the knot in July 1981. Televised around the world, it appeared to be a fairytale wedding that captured imaginations everywhere – but there were already some cracks behind the scenes.
Even before the wedding, there were a few hints that the couple weren’t as perfectly suited as they tried to appear. The biggest indicator of this: the infamous TV interview where, when asked if they were in love, Diana replied “Of course!” and Charles said, “Whatever ‘in love’ means.”
1986: Charles and Camilla Resume Their Affair
Dates differ as to when, exactly, Charles started seeing Camilla again. Caroline Graham’s book Camilla and Charles: The Love Story suggested that they rekindled their affair in 1980, when she was a shoulder to lean on following the death of his great uncle, Lord Mountbatten. Charles himself, in a documentary in 1994, claimed that he and Camilla were only “very great friend[s]” until 1986, when his marriage to Diana “became irretrievably broken down, us both having tried.” By the mid-1980s, however, pretty much everyone agrees that the Charles-Diana marriage was in tatters and that he was having an affair with Camilla.
1989: Diana Confronts Camilla
Diana often said that she had always suspected Charles and Camilla were still in love, and in Andrew Morton’s headline-grabbing 1992 biography Diana: Her True Story, she revealed that she confronted Camilla about the affair by showing up at a party in 1989 and pulling her aside.
“[Camilla] said to me, ‘You’ve got everything you ever wanted. You’ve got all the men in the world fall in love with you and you’ve got two beautiful children, what more do you want?’… So I said, ‘I want my husband,'” Diana revealed. “I said to Camilla, ‘I’m sorry I’m in the way… and it must be hell for both of you. But I do know what’s going on. Don’t treat me like an idiot.'”
1992-1996: Charles and Diana Separate
Following the release of the Morton biography, any illusions that the Wales marriage could be saved were shattered, and by the end of the year, Charles and Diana announced their separation. What then followed were a few very awkward, tense years where they didn’t move quickly towards divorce but clearly were no longer together.
It was in 1995, however, that Camilla really got brought into things again. Diana gave a now-famous interview with Martin Bashir, where she famously said, “”There were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded.” That same year, Camilla and her husband announced they were divorcing. Charles and Diana’s divorce was finalized a year later, in 1996.
1999: Charles and Camilla Appear in Public
Soon after his divorce was finalized, Charles began slowly introducing Camilla into his life at large. Those plans were put on hold, however, after Diana’s death in a car accident in 1997. By 1998, things were discreetly back on track, and a spokesperson for the prince confirmed a Guardian report that Camilla had been introduced to Prince William.
In January 1999, Charles and Camilla orchestrated their first public appearance together, leaving a 50th birthday party for Camilla’s sister together. Later that year, the BBC reported, Camilla joined Charles and his sons on a vacation in Greece.
2003: Camilla Moves In with Charles
In 2003, the BBC reported that Camilla was moving into Clarence House with Charles, where they have lived ever since. Because the relationship was still on thin ice with the public, Buckingham Palace issued a statement clarifying that, although Clarence House is a royal residence, no public funds were used for Camilla’s move or for her suite, only private money.
2005: Charles and Camilla Marry
Over 30 years after they first met and fell in love, Charles and Camilla finally married in April 2005. According to the BBC, they held a private civil ceremony first (rather than a religious wedding, due to their well-known affairs), then had a service of blessing, presided over by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Prince William was his father’s best man, and although the Queen and Prince Philip did not attend the civil wedding, they were there for the blessing service and the reception after.
Upon their marriage, Camilla publicly took on the title of Duchess of Cornwall, rather than the “Princess of Wales” title that she was technically entitled to, in order to avoid controversy over that title’s association with Diana. Questions have been raised ever since about what Camilla will be called when Charles is king. Technically and legally, she’ll be queen consort, but official word has on and off claimed that she will be called “Princess Consort” instead.