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Prince Charles unveils Waterloo memorial in Belgium

Britain’s Prince Charles and his wife Camilla on Wednesday unveiled a memorial to the allied soldiers who defeated French emperor Napoleon’s forces at the Battle of Waterloo two hundred years ago.

The royal couple visited the renovated Hougoumont farmhouse where allied forces fought off a bloody French advance on June 18, 1805, in one of the most decisive moments in the battle.

Charles, the heir to Queen Elizabeth II’s throne, unveiled a statue of two life-size soldiers closing the farm’s north gates to commemorate the British, Prussian, Dutch and Belgian soldiers who died.

The event is the opening salvo in a series of commemorations of the Battle of Waterloo, including a ceremony on Thursday and then two days of battle re-enactments on Friday and Saturday.

Historians said up to 2,500 men died in the fighting at Hougoumont, where 7,000 troops led by the emperor’s brother General Jerome Bonaparte launched many waves of attack.

But the British and Prussian forces led by the Duke of Wellington and Marshal Bluecher held their ground and played a pivotal role in winning the day-long battle at Waterloo, south of the Belgian capital Brussels, that crushed Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte’s dreams of European conquest.

Wellington said later “the success of the battle turned upon the closing of the gates at Hougoumont.”

In the afternoon of the fateful day, a dozen men from the Coldstream Guards managed to close the north gates of the farm, whose buildings formed a rectangle, and that the French troops had managed to force.

The exploit is still celebrated in Britain, particularly by the members of this regiment from northern England.

Ten men from the Coldstream Guards wearing the red uniforms of the time symbolically opened the farm gates on Wednesday for Charles and Camilla while a bugler played the Last Post and a band played the British national anthem “God Save the Queen.”

In addition to Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall, Princess Astrid, the sister of King Philippe of Belgium, as well as Prince Pieter-Christian of the Netherlands and the Grand Duke of Luxembourg joined the ceremonies under a warm summer sun.

The current Duke of Wellington, Prince Charles Bonaparte and Prince Bluecher von Statthalter, descendants of the key players in the battle, shook hands before Charles unveiled the memorial.