Platinum jubilee: Queen Elizabeth celebrates 70 years on throne
Britain's Queen Elizabeth attends a reception with representatives from local community groups to celebrate the start of the Platinum Jubilee, at the Ballroom of Sandringham House, which is the Queen's Norfolk residence, in Sandringham, Britain, Feb. 5, 2022. (Joe Giddens/Pool via REUTERS)


Queen Elizabeth II, the world's longest-reigning living monarch, will celebrate her platinum jubilee to mark 70 years on the throne on Sunday.

She kicked off the anniversary by inviting local community groups on Saturday to her Sandringham residence in the east of England.

Elizabeth, 95, became the queen of Britain and more than a dozen other realms including Canada, Australia and New Zealand on the death of her father King George VI on Feb. 6, 1952, while she was in Kenya on an international tour.

The queen's guests at Sandringham included Angela Wood, who as a cookery student in 1953 helped to create Coronation Chicken, a curry and mayonnaise-based dish invented to celebrate Elizabeth's reign and that is still enjoyed today.

The queen, wearing a light blue dress, also cut a celebratory cake baked by a local resident and heard a rendition of "Congratulations" played by a concert band, Buckingham Palace said.

Elizabeth has continued to carry out official duties well into her 90s, but has been little seen in public since she spent the night at a hospital last October for an unspecified ailment and was then instructed by doctors to rest.

However, Buckingham Palace on Friday released footage ahead of Sunday's landmark, showing her viewing items from previous royal jubilees, such as a fan given to her great-great-grandmother Queen Victoria to mark her 50th year on the throne in 1887, signed by family, friends and politicians.

Ironically, Elizabeth was not destined to be monarch at her birth, and became queen only because her uncle Edward VIII abdicated to be with American divorcee Wallis Simpson.

But in 2015, she overtook Victoria as Britain's longest-reigning sovereign in a line that traces its origin back to Norman King William I and his 1066 conquest of England.

This weekend's low-key events are a prelude to more pomp and ceremony to mark the platinum jubilee in early June. The government has added an extra public holiday to the usual spring day off to make for a four-day weekend.