When the new Duchess of Sussex, Meghan Markle, stepped off the royal train at Runcorn on Thursday for her first ever official engagement with the Queen, it marked the start of a day of heartwarming photo opps, showing the Royal Family's newest recruit apparently enjoying a warm and easy rapport with Her Majesty. Aside from the pictures showing Meghan (wearing custom Givenchy) and the Queen sharing jokes and smiles - and the former feeling comfortable enough to publicly ask for the latter's direction in matters of royal protocol - the mere fact of their having travelled up together on the royal train (a rare honour, and one yet to be bestowed upon Meghan's husband Harry and her in-laws, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge) indicated a close bond between the pair. But given the fact that Meghan and the Queen are thought to have only met a handful of times in the lead up to the royal wedding, how have they managed to forge a friendship so quickly?
According to a new Daily Beast report, Meghan's shared love of - wait for it - dogs was a major factor in winning the Queen over. 'Everyone in the Royal Family, without exception, detests the Queen's corgis, and the corgis return the favour,' explained royal writer and biographer Christopher Andersen. 'Charles, Philip, Anne, Andrew, Edward, William, Harry, all have gone on record saying they cannot abide Her Majesty's dogs. They bark, they nip, they pee everywhere, and they are famous for sweeping into a room and tripping people up. But they love Meghan. And the Queen has practically adopted Meghan's adorable rescue beagle, Guy.' Indeed, Meghan herself pointed out her love of the corgis in the BBC interview which followed her engagement announcement - and remember those pictures of Her Majesty apparently travelling into Windsor with Guy in tow just before the wedding? We can only cross our fingers for pictures of Her Majesty and the Duchess setting out on a dog-walking double date soon...
Look back at some of the biggest mishaps to befall British royal weddings (including Queen Elizabeth's own nuptials...) in the gallery below...
royal wedding mistakes - Grazia
Kate's wedding ring didn't fit
Before marrying Prince William, Kate Middleton asked the royal jeweller to re-size her ring. Having lost some weight in the lead up to her wedding, she requested them to make the band smaller, as she was worried that it might slip off. The Duchess ended up having precisely the opposite problem: when the time came for her husband to place the ring on her finger, William couldn't get the band past her knuckle, resulting in an awkward pause as he tried to make it fit. Luckily, the couple have since seen the funny side, and the incident is said to be a subject of amusement between them.
William and Kate's bridesmaids went rogue
A royal bridal party traditionally consists of under-tens, and while this guarantees some very sweet wedding photos, it also means that things can get a little chaotic. William and Kate's three-year-old bridesmaid Grace van Cutsem ended up inadvertently stealing the show during the couple's balcony kiss, pulling faces and covering her ears. To placate another royal bridesmaid, Eliza Lopes, during the carriage ride, Prince Harry presented the youngster with a wriggly worm toy – which even made it into the official photographs.
William had a sleepless night beforehand
The groom had a major case of pre-wedding jitters to contend with ahead of the Westminster Abbey ceremony, and later revealed that he only managed to catch 'about 30 minutes' of sleep before getting married. According to the Prince, things weren't helped by the crowd of well-wishers that had gathered outside the Palace, 'singing and cheering all night long.' When he finally arrived at the Abbey, a sleep-deprived Wills ducked into a room just off Poets' Corner with his best man, Harry, to compose himself before Kate's arrival.
Princess Diana said the wrong name at the altar
Before you visualise an 'I Ross, take thee Rachel' moment, Diana's name mix-up wasn't quite as dramatic as an episode of Friends. Understandably nervous on her wedding day, the future Princess of Wales mixed up the order of her husband-to-be's many names, calling him Philip Charles Arthur George, rather than Charles Philip Arthur George (hardly a surprise, given that the 20-year-old Diana had only met Charles 13 times before their wedding day).
Diana's dress wouldn't fit in her carriage
Diana's now-iconic wedding dress, designed by David and Elizabeth Emmanuel, is known for its striking 25 foot train, which was perfect for, say, aerial shots of the aisle of St Paul's Cathdral, but less suited to travelling to the ceremony with her father in a cramped carriage. The fairytale gown ended up being bundled into the Queen's Class Coach, resulting in a number of visible creases and wrinkles.
Diana spilt perfume on her wedding dress before heading down the aisle
With notes of rose, jasmine and tuberose, Quelques Fleurs by Parisian perfume house Houbigant was a favourite with Diana, who eventually chose the scent to wear on her wedding day. When she reached for some perfume to apply to her wrists, however, she ended up spilling it on her wedding dress. Her make-up artist, Barbara Daly, advised the bride to hold the offending spot to seem as if she was lifting the dress to avoid stepping on it.
The Queen broke her wedding tiara in two
Disaster struck on the morning of Princess Elizabeth's wedding when her 'something borrowed' – the diamond Fringe tiara belonging to her grandmother Queen Mary – snapped in two. Though her mother advised that the bride should simply choose another (her cool response was reportedly: 'we have two hours, and there are other tiaras'), the bride would not be moved, and summoned the royal jeweller to the palace. The tiara was eventually welded back together, but look closely at the Queen's wedding photos and you will spot a small gap between the centrepiece and the diamond spike on the right hand side.
The Queen's bouquet went missing
A broken tiara wasn't the only mishap to befall the future Queen on her wedding day. Before the Princess departed for Westminster Abbey, her bouquet (which featured white orchid, with a spring of myrtle as is traditional for royal brides) went AWOL, leading to yet more frayed nerves in the bridal party. However, it transpired that a considerate footman had placed the bouquet in a coolbox to keep them fresh.
A fainting vicar brought things to a halt for the Queen Mother
The Queen Mother, then Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, wasn't free of drama on her wedding day, either. When she tied the knot with Prince Albert, the Duke of York (who later became King George VI), proceedings reportedly came to a halt when one of the clergymen gathered at Westminster Abbey fainted and fell to the floor.