What to know about Trooping the Color
Trooping the Color, also known as the Queen’s Birthday Parade, is considered one of the most spectacular ceremonies in the world.
Each year on the reigning monarch’s official birthday, the streets around Buckingham Palace are lined with flag-waving crowds who gather to watch as 1,400 soldiers and 10 military bands parade alongside members of the royal family, who travel on horseback and in carriages.

The parade’s name comes from a military practice in which soldiers gather, or troop, around the Color, a flag that marks a regiment’s position in a battlefield.
At the end of the parade, Queen Elizabeth II traditionally carries out an inspection of the troops and receives a royal salute.
This year, for the first time in the queen’s 70-year reign, her eldest child, Prince Charles, will carry out that duty for her.
Elizabeth will arrive on the balcony of Buckingham Palace, where the royal family gathers to watch a military fly-over.
The queen has attended Trooping the Color every year of her reign except for one, in 1955, when it was canceled due to a national rail strike.







