The Earl and Countess of Wessex are celebrating their 20th wedding anniversary on Wednesday.
Edward is the youngest of the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh’s children, and the only one not to have got divorced.
The earl and Sophie enjoyed a day out at the races ahead of their anniversary, and posed for photographs at Royal Ascot on Tuesday to mark their milestone.
Buckingham Palace said the couple would be celebrating their two decades of marriage together privately.
Prince Edward married Sophie Rhys-Jones in St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, on June 19 1999, in a continental-style evening service where guests were told not to wear hats.
Edward said ahead of the nuptials: “We manage to have a good laugh about things most of the time, and we happen to love each other, which is the most important thing of all.”
Romance blossomed when Edward and public relations professional Sophie met at a real tennis event in the early 1990s.
They now have two children, Lady Louise Windsor, 15, and 11-year-old Viscount Severn.
Sophie’s journey to motherhood was a traumatic and dangerous one.
Her daughter, Lady Louise Windsor, was born several weeks prematurely when the countess was rushed to hospital for an emergency Caesarean section.
Two years earlier, she suffered a potentially life-threatening ectopic pregnancy and lost the baby.
Sophie, who hails from a middle-class background, once had a job at Capital Radio and continued working in PR when she married.
But problems arose when she tried to combine her life as a royal with her professional career.
She was caught in a Fake Sheikh sting and accused of trying to use her status to promote her business.
The “Sophiegate” newspaper controversy was hugely damaging, resulting in reports of indiscreet remarks about a string of public figures including Tony and Cherie Blair, and William Hague.
It led to a lengthy inquiry into how working royals should be regulated.
Edward, who dropped out of the Royal Marines in 1987, was the first child of a sovereign to actively pursue their own career.
He set up his own film and TV production company, Ardent Productions, in 1990, but faced criticism over claims that he used official royal trips abroad, funded by taxpayers, to drum up business for his firm.
Edward also enraged his brother, the Prince of Wales, when Ardent was found filming at St Andrews University, in breach of a media agreement, shortly after Prince William began studying there.
In the Queen’s Golden Jubilee year of 2002, the Wessexes finally announced that they would be quitting their businesses to become full-time royals.
The earl, 55, is heavily involved with the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award scheme, founded by his father, Philip.
His interests also include sports and the arts.
He is patron of Paralympics GB and vice patron of the Commonwealth Games Federation.
His many arts patronages include the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Northern Ballet and the National Youth Theatre of Great Britain.
Sophie, 54, is patron of more than 70 charities and organisations, with interests including agriculture, fashion, supporting people with disabilities, and the prevention of avoidable blindness in developing countries.
In 2015, the Queen hosted a reception for nearly 400 people at Buckingham Palace to celebrate the couple’s charitable work.
Three years ago, the countess cycled 445 miles from the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh to Buckingham Palace, as part of her Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Diamond Challenge.
She recently returned from the first ever official royal visit to Lebanon, where she met Syrian women and children in a refugee camp.
Sophie has a close relationship with her mother-in-law, the Queen, and also shares an interest in carriage driving with Philip.
The traditional gift for 20 years of marriage is china, but more recently it has become the platinum anniversary.
Edward’s siblings have all been divorced.
The Duke of York ended his marriage to Sarah, Duchess of York, in 1996, while Charles formally split from Diana, Princess of Wales, the same year.
The Princess Royal divorced Captain Mark Phillips in 1992.
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