Queen celebrates 93rd birthday on Easter Sunday

The Queen has turned 93 Credit: Toby Melville/PA

The Queen is celebrating her 93rd birthday.

This year, the monarch – who is Head of the Church of England – sees her birthday coincide with Easter Sunday, the most important day in the Christian calendar.

Elizabeth II, who has a strong faith, usually celebrates Easter at Windsor Castle by joining members of her family at a service in St George’s Chapel.

At Buckingham Palace, the Band of the Irish Guards will perform a rendition of Happy Birthday in her honour on the forecourt as part of the Changing of the Guard ceremony.

April 21 – the day the Queen was born – is the first of the monarch’s two birthdays.

The Queen and the royal family during the Trooping the Colour celebrations last year Credit: Yui Mok/PA

She also has an official one on the second Saturday in June each year, which is commemorated with the Trooping the Colour parade.

Gun salutes are also fired as a mark of respect to the Queen on her special day – but never on a Sunday, so this year they will be delayed by one day.

On Monday, the King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery will ride their horses and gun carriages past Buckingham Palace en route to Hyde Park to stage a 41 Gun Royal Salute at noon.

A 62-gun salute will also be performed by the Honourable Artillery Company at the Tower of London at 1pm the same day.

The King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery will perform their gun salutes the day after the Queen’s birthday Credit: Nick Ansell/PA

The Queen traditionally spends a month-long residence at Windsor Castle, known as Easter Court, each year.

Princess Elizabeth Alexandra Mary was born at 2.40am on April 21 1926, the first child of the then Duke and Duchess of York, at 17 Bruton Street, the Mayfair home of her mother’s parents, the Earl and Countess of Strathmore.

The Duke and Duchess of York with their daughter Princess Elizabeth at her christening in 1926 Credit: PA

She was never expected to be Queen when she was born, but the abdication of her uncle Edward VIII in 1936 put her father George VI on the throne, and changed her destiny.

Queen Elizabeth and King George VI with Princess Elizabeth, who had not long become the heiress presumptive, and Princess Margaret in 1937 Credit: PA

Elizabeth II, who has been monarch for more than 67 years, is Head of State, the Armed Forces and the Commonwealth, and has been married to the Duke of Edinburgh for more than 71 years.

The Queen and Philip on board the Spirit of Chartwell during the Diamond Jubilee River Pageant in 2012 Credit: John Stillwell/PA

She became Britain’s longest-reigning monarch, passing her great-great grandmother Queen Victoria’s record, in September 2015.

With the death of 88-year-old King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand in 2016, the Queen now holds the record for the world’s longest reigning living monarch.