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Queen meets in-person Gen. Nick Carter at Windsor Castle

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Not one to be kept long from her royal duties, Queen Elizabeth II, held a face-to-face meeting with British military’s chief of staff Gen. Nick Carter on Wednesday. The queen looked well and in very good spirits as she conducted the meeting in the Oak Room at Windsor Castle. As reported by the AP:

Concerns about the monarch’s health were raised last month when she spent a night in a London hospital for medical tests

LONDON (AP) — Queen Elizabeth II met with the British military’s chief of staff at Windsor Castle on Wednesday, the first time she was seen carrying out a face-to-face engagement since she missed the national Remembrance Sunday service due to a sprained back.

Queen Elizabeth II receives General Sir Nick Carter, Chief of the Defense Staff, left, during an audience in the Oak Room at Windsor Castle, Berkshire, Wednesday Nov. 17, 2021. General Sir Nick is relinquishing his role as the Chief of Defense Staff at the end of this month. (Steve Parsons/Pool Photo via AP)

The 95-year-old monarch looked well as she chatted with Gen. Nick Carter in Windsor Castle’s Oak Room. The queen, who wore a colorful floral dress, stood to welcome Carter, who is preparing to step down from his role as the armed forces chief at the end of November.

Concerns about the monarch’s health were raised last month when she spent a night in a London hospital after being admitted for medical tests. In late October, palace officials said the monarch had been told by doctors to rest for two weeks and only take on light duties.

Queen Elizabeth II receives General Sir Nick Carter, Chief of the Defense Staff, left, during an audience in the Oak Room at Windsor Castle, Berkshire, Wednesday Nov. 17, 2021. General Sir Nick is relinquishing his role as the Chief of Defense Staff at the end of this month. (Steve Parsons/Pool Photo via AP)

Those concerns intensified after she pulled out at the last minute from Sunday’s national Remembrance service to pay tribute to Britain’s war dead. Buckingham Palace officials, who had said it was the monarch’s “firm intention” to make the event, announced Sunday that she decided she had to miss the ceremony because she sprained her back.

Elizabeth is Britain’s longest-lived and longest-reigning monarch and is due to celebrate her Platinum Jubilee — 70 years on the throne — next year.

Source AP

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