King Charles Will Appoint an Official Biographer of Queen Elizabeth ‘In Fairly Short Order,’ Royal Biographer Says

The biographer chosen will likely have access to the late Queen’s diaries as they write about her life

Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Prince Charles, Prince of Wales (wearing the uniform of Colonel of the Welsh Guards) and Queen Elizabeth watch a flypast from the balcony of Buckingham Palace during Trooping the Colour on June 2, 2022 in London, England

Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty

Prince Charles, Prince of Wales (wearing the uniform of Colonel of the Welsh Guards) and Queen Elizabeth watch a flypast from the balcony of Buckingham Palace during Trooping the Colour on June 2, 2022 in London, England

King Charles is expected to appoint an official biographer soon to write the official biography of his mother, Queen Elizabeth, royal biographer Robert Hardman said.

Speaking on an episode of Hello’s A Right Royal Podcast, Hardman said that the biographer appointed will use Queen Elizabeth’s diaries as primary source material. The Queen kept a daily diary throughout her life as monarch, and in Hardman’s recently updated book Charles III: New King. New Court. The Inside Story, he revealed that the late Queen’s last entry was written just two days before she died in September 2022 — and contained just five words.

Related: Queen Elizabeth’s Final Diary Entry — Written Just Two Days Before Her Death — Contained Only Five Words

Hannah McKay/getty Prince Charles and Queen Elizabeth stand on a balcony during the Platinum Jubilee Pageant on June 5, 2022 in London, England
Hannah McKay/getty Prince Charles and Queen Elizabeth stand on a balcony during the Platinum Jubilee Pageant on June 5, 2022 in London, England

While the public is unlikely to see the contents of Her late Majesty’s diary, the official biographer chosen will take that material and use it to “write the official life of the previous monarch,” Hardman said on the podcast.

“I’m not sure we will see them,” he said of the diaries themselves. “You know, we won’t be able to rummage through them ourselves. I very much doubt they’ll be published. But what will happen is, you know, in fairly short order — I would expect in the next year or two — the King to appoint an official biographer, because each monarch appoints an official biographer to write the official life of the previous monarch.”

Queen Elizabeth did the same when her father, King George VI, died on Feb. 6, 1952.

“Now, obviously, that hasn’t happened for a very long time,” Hardman continued. “The last time was after the death of George VI, when the Queen appointed John Wheeler-Bennett back in the early ‘50s to write the life of her father.”

Queen Elizabeth’s diaries — kept over the course of her history-making 70-year reign — were not places of deep introspection and reflection but instead a daily log of events, written down to likely not only help her remember what happened on any given day, but to also help the person she knew would one day write her official biography in the future as well as other historians covering her life and reign.

KIRSTY O'CONNOR/POOL/AFP via Getty Queen Elizabeth signs a guestbook during a visit to officially open the new building of Thames Hospice in Maidenhead, Berkshire, on July 15, 2022
KIRSTY O'CONNOR/POOL/AFP via Getty Queen Elizabeth signs a guestbook during a visit to officially open the new building of Thames Hospice in Maidenhead, Berkshire, on July 15, 2022

“I have no time to record conversations, only events,” Queen Elizabeth once told society diarist Kenneth Rose.

A former member of the royal household told The Sun back in 2019 that the Queen wrote in her diary with a fountain pen using black ink, and that each of her diaries was marked with her cypher and numbered with a Roman numeral.

The diaries were leatherbound, and writing in her diary was the last act of the day for Her Majesty every night “no matter how late the hour or how weary she may be,” the former member of the royal household said. “It is an unmissable duty, and she writes at a desk, never in bed.”

For his part, King Charles also keeps a journal, but “He doesn’t write great narrative diaries like he used to,” a senior courtier told Hardman for his updated book, which was released Nov. 7. Instead, he “scribbles down his recollections and reflections” at the end of every day.

VICTORIA JONES/POOL/AFP via Getty King Charles signs an oath to uphold the security of the Church in Scotland, during a meeting of the Accession Council inside St James's Palace in London on Sept. 10, 2022, to proclaim him as the new King
VICTORIA JONES/POOL/AFP via Getty King Charles signs an oath to uphold the security of the Church in Scotland, during a meeting of the Accession Council inside St James's Palace in London on Sept. 10, 2022, to proclaim him as the new King

Related: What Is Operation London Bridge? A Breakdown of What Happens Following Queen Elizabeth II's Death

Elsewhere in the episode of A Right Royal Podcast, Hardman discussed royal funerals, including their respective codenames. Queen Elizabeth’s Sept. 19, 2022 funeral was codenamed Operation London Bridge, and plans had been in place for the event for at least 20 years before her death at age 96 on Sept. 8 of that year.

“The fact is, anything that's going to involve thousands of troops, a large part of the police and all the other services, as well as all the broadcasters and media, requires a few plans,” Hardman said on the podcast.

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Zac Goodwin - WPA Pool/Getty The State Gun Carriage carries the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the Royal Standard with the Imperial State Crown and the Sovereign's orb and sceptre, in the Ceremonial Procession down The Mall following her State Funeral at Westminster Abbey on Sept. 19, 2022 in London, England
Zac Goodwin - WPA Pool/Getty The State Gun Carriage carries the coffin of Queen Elizabeth II, draped in the Royal Standard with the Imperial State Crown and the Sovereign's orb and sceptre, in the Ceremonial Procession down The Mall following her State Funeral at Westminster Abbey on Sept. 19, 2022 in London, England

Members of the royal family’s funeral codenames all correspond with names of bridges, he said.

“So the Queen Mother, for example, was Operation Tay Bridge, and the Prince of Wales [now King Charles] was Operation Menai Bridge, Menai Bridge being the bridge between Anglesey and Wales. And so that process has resumed, as one might expect,” Hardman said of future plans for the King’s funeral.

“But it was quite interesting to discover that, actually, the designation for the monarch remains Operation London Bridge, and for the Prince of Wales is Operation Menai Bridge still,” Hardman added. “Whereas previously, for Prince William, it was Operation Clare Bridge, because Clare Bridge is a famous bridge in Cambridge, and he was the Duke of Cambridge.”