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Queen Elizabeth's 96th birthday marked with gun salutes

Queen Elizabeth celebrated her 96th birthday at her Sandringham estate on Thursday as gun salutes rang out across London and Windsor and military bands played Happy Birthday.

Britain's longest-serving monarch celebrates 70 years on the throne this year

Members of The King's Troop Royal Artillery fire a round during the 41 Gun Royal Salute marking the 96th birthday of Queen Elizabeth, in London's Hyde Park on Thursday. (Peter Nicholls/Reuters)

Queen Elizabeth celebrated her 96th birthday at her Sandringham estate on Thursday as gun salutes rang out across London and Windsor and military bands played Happy Birthday.

Britain's longest-serving monarch, who celebrates a historic Platinum Jubilee this year, was pictured with two white ponies in a photo released for the occasion.

Government ministers joined members of the Royal Family in sending their best wishes to the Queen, who has stepped back from most public duties this year over concerns about her health.

She has travelled from Windsor Castle, west of London, to spend her birthday at her estate in Sandringham, Norfolk.

Queen Elizabeth poses with her Fell ponies, Bybeck Nightingale, right, and Bybeck Katie, in this photo released Wednesday by The Royal Windsor Horse Show to mark the occasion of her 96th birthday. (henrydallalphotography.com/PA Wire/Reuters )

"An inspiration to so many across the U.K., the Commonwealth and the world, it's particularly special to be celebrating in this Platinum Jubilee year," her grandson Prince William and his wife, Kate, said on Twitter.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who is visiting India, wished the Queen a happy birthday and paid a "heartfelt tribute" to her "70 years of dedicated and faultless service to our country and the Commonwealth" in a video message.

Assumed the throne in 1952

Toymaker Mattel launched a commemorative Barbie doll of the Queen dressed in an ivory gown with a blue sash and wearing her wedding tiara to mark the Jubilee.

Mattel has released a Queen Elizabeth Barbie doll to mark the British monarch's Platinum Jubilee. (Mattel/Reuters )

Elizabeth became the queen of Britain and more than a dozen other realms, including Canada, Australia and New Zealand, upon the death of her father, King George VI, on Feb. 6, 1952, while she was in Kenya on an international tour.

The news was broken to her by her husband, Prince Philip, who died last year aged 99, after more than seven decades by her side.

When she ascended the throne, Josef Stalin, Mao Zedong and Harry Truman were running the Soviet Union, China and the United States, respectively, while Winston Churchill was Britain's prime minister.

Elizabeth has largely avoided the public spotlight after spending a night in hospital in October for an unspecified ailment and being ordered to rest. She tested positive for COVID-19 in February and has said she was left very tired.

She has missed events, including the Remembrance Sunday gathering and Easter service, but she joined other members of her family and dignitaries at a memorial service for her husband at London's Westminster Abbey last month.

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