(File Photo:
Xinhua)
born July 1, 1961, Sandringham, Norfolk, England
died August 31,
1997, Paris, France
original name Diana Frances Spencer
former consort (1981¨C96) of Charles, prince of Wales, and mother of the heir
second in line to the British throne, Prince William of Wales (born 1982).
Diana was born at Park House, the home that her parents rented on Queen
Elizabeth II's estate at Sandringham and where her childhood playmates were the
queen's younger sons, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward. She was the third child
and youngest daughter of Edward John Spencer, Viscount Althorp, heir to the 7th
Earl Spencer, and his first wife, Frances Ruth Burke Roche (daughter of the 4th
Baron Fermoy). She became Lady Diana Spencer when her father succeeded to the
earldom in 1975. Riddlesworth Hall (near Thetford, Norfolk) and West Heath
School (Sevenoaks, Kent) provided the young Diana's schooling. After attending
the finishing school of Chateau d'Oex at Montreux, Switzerland, Diana returned
to England and became a kindergarten teacher at the fashionable Young England
school in Pimlico.
She renewed her contacts with the royal family, and her friendship with
Charles grew in 1980. On February 24, 1981, their engagement was announced, and
on July 29, 1981, they were married in St. Paul's Cathedral in a globally
televised ceremony watched by an audience numbering in the hundreds of millions.
Their first child, Prince William Arthur Philip Louis of Wales, was born on June
21, 1982, and their second, Prince Henry Charles Albert David, on September 15,
1984. Marital difficulties led to a separation between Diana and Charles in
1992, though they continued to carry out their royal duties and jointly
participate in raising their two children. They divorced on August 28, 1996,
with Diana receiving a substantial settlement.
After the divorce, Diana maintained her high public profile and continued
many of the activities she had earlier undertaken on behalf of charities,
supporting causes as diverse as the arts, children's issues, and AIDS patients.
Her unprecedented popularity as a member of the royal family, both in Britain
and throughout the world, attracted considerable attention from the press, and
she became one of the most photographed women in the world. Although she used
that celebrity to great effect in promoting her charitable work, the media, and
in particular the aggressive freelance photographers known as paparazzi, were
often intrusive. It was while attempting to evade journalists that Diana was
killed, along with her companion, Dodi Fayed, and their driver, in an automobile
accident in a tunnel under the streets of Paris. Though the photographers were
initially blamed for causing the incident, a French judge in 1999 cleared them
of any wrongdoing, instead faulting the driver, who was found to have had a
blood-alcohol level over the legal limit at the time of the crash and to have
taken prescription drugs incompatible with alcohol.
Her death and funeral produced unprecedented expressions of public mourning,
testifying to her enormous hold on the British national pysche. Her life, and
death, polarized national feeling about the existing system of monarchy (and in
a sense about the British identity), which appeared antiquated and unfeeling in
a populist age of media celebrity in which Diana herself was a central figure.