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Imy Brighty-Potts & Ria Tesia

List of places beloved by Queen Elizabeth II, where you can pay your respects to the late monarch

As the nation mourns the death of Queen Elizabeth II, one way people can pay their respects is by visiting places that the late monarch loved.

From 5pm on Wednesday September 14, until 6.30am on the day of the funeral, next Monday September 19, members of the public will be able to view her coffin in Westminster Hall. With millions of people expected, officials say queues could last for 12 hours.

If you are looking to pay tribute to the late Queen elsewhere, you are able to sign books of condolences in towns across the UK as well as online. Here is the official website where you can send a message of condolence to the Royal Family.

Click on the burgundy tab and write your heartfelt message. The website also says that 'a selection of messages will be passed onto members of the Royal Family, and may be held in the Royal Archives for posterity.'

While the royal residences are closed during the period of mourning, there are still designated places special to the royal family where you can leave floral tributes and remember the Queen.

Places where you can pay your respects to Queen Elizabeth II

Windsor Castle
Windsor Castle in Berkshire has been a royal residence and fortress for over 900 years. The Queen would often spend weekends here.

Every Easter, the Queen took up residence here for a month, and from March 2020 it became her permanent home. The castle has hosted various royal events, such as the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's wedding in 2018.

The Queen will be buried at the King George VI memorial chapel at Windsor. This is also the resting place of her mother and father, along with the ashes of her sister, Princess Margaret.

Flowers have been piling up outside the castle since her death, and members of the public have come together to share memories and celebrate her life. The new Prince and Princess of Wales and Harry and Meghan visited over the weekend.

Visitors are advised to leave tributes at the Cambridge Gate at the top of the Long Walk.

Balmoral Castle
The Queen died at Balmoral Castle, the royal family's Scottish residence. Based in rural Aberdeenshire, it was Her Majesty's summer home where the final public photographs of her were taken, when she met the new Prime Minister Liz Truss on September 6.

Floral tributes can be left by the Main Gate at Balmoral.

Royal Hillsborough Castle
Members of the royal family would stay at Hillsborough Castle when visiting Northern Ireland. Elizabeth first stayed there when she was still a princess, making her first solo visit to the country in 1946.

More recently, it has been home to the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland and was where negotiations for the Good Friday Agreement took place in 1998. Mourners can leave flowers at the Castle Forecourt, in front of the main gates.

Palace of Holyroodhouse
The official residence of the monarchy in Scotland, the Palace of Holyroodhouse was originally a monastery at the foot of Edinburgh's Royal Mile. The Queen visited annually for Holyrood Week, where she attended celebrations of Scottish culture and achievements.

It was where her body rested ahead of the procession to St Giles' Cathedral on Monday afternoon. People are encouraged to lay flowers for the Queen in the Physic Garden, next to the Abbey Strand gate.

St Giles' Cathedral
The Queen will lie in rest at St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh before being flown to London. The public will be able to pay their respects to the Queen by filing past the coffin from 5.30pm on Monday September 12, until 3pm on Tuesday September 13.

Long waits and security checks are expected, so take care when travelling. The King and other members of the royal family will attend a service of thanksgiving for her life at the cathedral on Monday, and are expected to hold a vigil in her honour.

Sandringham Estate
Norfolk-based country house Sandringham has been a royal residence since 1862. It is traditionally where the late Queen spent Christmas and new year.

She first opened the property to the public for her Silver Jubilee in 1977. The Estate asks for flowers to be placed at the Norwich gates, where a one-way system is in place.

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