Princess Margaret Married Visionary Photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones in May 1960

Who did Princess Margaret marry? Princess Margaret married photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones at the Westminster Abbey on May 6, 1960. Read on for more.

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On June 2, 1953, Princess Margaret inadvertently announced her romance with Peter Townsend to the world by way of brushing off just a little of fluff from his army uniform in the midst of Coronation Day. 

The 22-year-old royal is believed to have fallen in love with the RAF pilot and former equerry to King George IV progressively — but the relationship garnered heated controversy anyway. So, did they ever marry? Did Princess Margaret have a husband? 

Peter Townsend used to be considered one of Princess Margaret's great loves — but they never married.

Princess Margaret's courting with Peter attracted a great deal of scrutiny from either side, as according to The Independent. The third in line to the throne on the time, Princess Margaret would have had to chance abdication to marry the reputable air force officer. 

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Marrying a divorcee was once thought to be to be highly debatable. To go through with the plans, the couple would have had to make monumental sacrifices. Princess Margaret would have needed to relinquish her proper to be crowned because the queen. The celebrated veteran would were forbidden from getting into the Royal Enclosure at Ascot, which carried stigma, among others. 

In 1955, Princess Margaret referred to as off the engagement mentioning the teachings of the Church of England and her responsibility to the Commonwealth as the main reason why.

In 1958, Princess Margaret met her first and most effective husband, visionary photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones, at a dinner party. However, it wasn't till he was once commissioned to create a portrait of her — an tournament captured on Season 2 of The Crown — that they began courting. 

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Princess Margaret and Antony married on the Westminster Abbey on May 6, 1960, in what became the first-ever televised royal wedding ceremony. Although the connection was first hostile by the courtiers — Antony didn't hail from an aristocratic circle of relatives — it did lend a hand the Princess regain her public status following her affair with Peter.

After a six-week-long honeymoon aboard the Britannia, the royal yacht, Princess Margaret and her husband started their new life as a married couple at Kensington Palace. 

"They [were] very close in the first few years," Anne de Courcy described the early days of the wedding in Snowdon: The Biography. 

Their first son, David, used to be born on Nov. 3, 1961, and he was quickly adopted via Lady Sarah Chatto (née Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones) on May 1, 1964. 

According to biographer Anne de Courcy, Princess Margaret and Antony were similarly strong-willed — and so they had other concepts about marriage. A passionate photographer, Antony labored long hours at his studio, whilst Princess Margaret had hoped to spend more time with her husband. 

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As a vicious rumor had it, Antony would go away insulting notes in Princess Margaret's books, hoping she would to find them while reading. As different assets have it, they both began pursuing illicit affairs. Princess Margaret is assumed to have spent more time with Anthony Barton, one of Antony's friends from college. 

Reportedly, she also sought out the corporate of Roddy Llewellyn, a landscape gardener 17 years her junior. Meanwhile, Antony took up an interest in Lady Jacqueline Isaacs, among others. 

The distinction in mentality, blended with alcohol and medicine, lead to the slow-paced loss of life of the wedding, and in 1978, they announced their divorce. However, they remained shut buddies, and they continued to speak to each other long after it was over. 

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