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Private funeral held for Denmark’s Prince Henrik

In line with his wishes, Prince Henrik will be cremated

By AFP - Feb 20,2018 - Last updated at Feb 20,2018

The cortege transporting the coffin of former Dutch prime minister, Ruud Lubbers, arrives at the Laurentius and Elisabeth Cathedral in Rotterdam during his funeral on Tuesday (AFP photo)

COPENHAGEN — Danish royalty and politicians gathered in a Copenhagen chapel on Tuesday for the private funeral service of Prince Henrik, the French-born husband of Queen Margrethe who died this month aged 83.

The queen, accompanied by her sons Crown Prince Frederik, 49, and Prince Joachim, 48, and their families paid their last respects to Henrik at the Christiansborg Palace chapel.

The funeral was a private affair, with only the royal family, close friends and some government members invited to attend.

However, hundreds of Danes gathered outside the chapel to catch a glimpse of the event.

At the end of the ceremony, the priest tossed soil on the coffin, taken from both the royal couple's chateau in Caix, northern France, and from the Marselisborg palace grounds in Aarhus, Denmark. 

Afterwards, the coffin was carried outside to a hearse as the royal family watched, bowing as the hearse pulled away and wiping away tears. 

Diagnosed in September 2017 with dementia, Henrik had been hospitalised since January 28 for a pulmonary infection.

He died on February 13. 

In line with his wishes, he will be cremated. Half of his ashes will be spread in Danish waters and half buried on the grounds of Fredensborg Castle north of Copenhagen.

Born Henri Marie Jean Andre de Laborde de Monpezat on June 11, 1934, near Bordeaux, he married Margrethe, then crown princess, in 1967. 

Henrik, who retired from public service in January 2016, spoke out often about his frustration that his royal title of prince was never changed to king after his wife became queen in 1972.

Last year, he announced that he did not want to be buried next to his wife because he was not made her equal in life, thereby breaking with the tradition of burying royal spouses together in Roskilde Cathedral, west of Copenhagen.

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