I guess she will not be cremated but buried somewhere? Scotland?
If Henry Windsor is known as Harry why is William Windsor not known as Bill? King Bill sounds good to me.
I just do not get any of this royalty nonsense but can only see it as a projection of the Jungian collective unconscious. Obviously very powerful unfortunately.
I'm not convinced that it is, to be honest.
Support for the monarchy has declined in recent years, and now sits at around 60%, compared with support for a republic at just over 25%.
But that's not the end of the story. I think it's a safe bet that, among that 60%, a relatively small number are
fervent monarchists - people who would (for example), queue for 30 hours to see the Queen lying in state.
In that sense, being a monarchist is a bit like being a Christian in this country. Many people say they are Christian on census forms, or if directly asked, but relatively few go to church regularly, and even fewer are directly involved in the activties of their local church, beyond turning up on Sunday.
This impression is confirmed by normal life continuing where I live (Sheffield). There is almost no sign of collective grieving (literally none, in fact) and everybody's just doing their thing. I've overheard a few conversations about the Queen's death, mostly respectful, but one or two have been more sceptical.
So, don't be fooled by the wall to wall TV coverage, and the crowds in London. If the consent manufacturing machine has to work this hard, and protestors have to be arrested
before they have even written their signs, that is not the mark of an institution that is seen as beyond reproach by the British public.
Having said all that, I doubt the monarchy is going anywhere in the near future, and I'm sure it will outlive me. But in one hundred years time... who knows?