Earl Spencer Marks 28th Anniversary of Princess Diana’s Death With Symbolic Floral Tribute at Althorp

In a quiet, private observance on the 28th anniversary of Princess Diana’s death, her brother Charles, 9th Earl Spencer, is reported to have laid 28 flowers at the late Princess’s secluded island resting place on Oval Lake. The remote site, encircled by water on the grounds of the Spencer family home in Northamptonshire, remains inaccessible to the public, offering the Princess a perpetual sanctuary away from the gaze that once defined her life.
Speaking about the tribute, Earl Spencer is quoted as saying, “Each bloom tells her story.” The gesture — one flower for each year since the fatal 1997 Paris crash — was described by those aware of the ceremony as “deliberate, curated, and entirely personal.”
A “Silent Chronicle” of Diana’s Life
Sources close to the family said that the flowers were not chosen at random, but selected to echo key chapters of Diana’s turbulent public and private journey. According to these accounts, individual blooms represented themes such as:
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Courage in the face of monarchy-level pressure 
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Public compassion against institutional froideur 
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Her isolation inside palace walls 
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Her confrontations with betrayal and surveillance 
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Her global humanitarian impact after exile from royal power 
While Spencer himself did not enumerate the meanings flower by flower, those familiar with the family’s private remembrances described the arrangement as “a coded biography in petals.”
A Serenity That Belies Conflict

Althorp’s Pleasure Gardens appeared calm, its quiet waters reflecting only foliage and sky. But observers close to the estate stressed that the tranquility masks a more combustible legacy — one in which Diana’s history remains sharply contested between the institution she married into and the brother who has steadfastly defended her narrative for nearly three decades.
For Earl Spencer, today’s tribute was not simply memorial; it was, they say, another act of custodianship — preserving the version of Diana he believes must not be overwritten by official memory.
A Memory That Will Not Subside

Twenty-eight years on, Princess Diana’s life and death remain live wire subjects — legally concluded, historically distant, but emotionally unresolved in the British psyche.
And if the Earl’s floral code is interpreted as intended, then the message carried across the lake today was clear: Diana’s story is still being told — and not all of it has been spoken aloud.
 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			