For decades, Queen Elizabeth II’s corgis weren’t just pets — they were part of the monarchy’s soul. Tiny paws on polished palace floors, bright eyes at her heels, a living symbol of continuity and devotion.
Now, according to a bombshell revelation from the Duke of Kent, that symbol has been sold off, packaged, and shipped out under a secret contract allegedly signed by Queen Camilla herself. The claim is simple and explosive:
Camilla sold all of the late Queen’s beloved corgis to outside traders, using Elizabeth’s name to inflate the price — and then pocketed the profits.
What sounds like the plot of a dark royal drama has sparked fury, disbelief, and one terrifying question:
Is this just about dogs… or about erasing Queen Elizabeth II altogether?
From Companions to Commodities
No monarch in modern history has been as closely linked to an animal as Queen Elizabeth II was to her corgis. Over 70 years on the throne, she owned more than 30 of them. They padded through corridors at Windsor, trotted alongside her at Balmoral, appeared in official photos, and even in the famous 2012 Olympics sketch with James Bond.
They were an extension of her heart.
Everyone assumed that after her death in September 2022, those final corgis would live out their days quietly under royal care — perhaps with Prince William and Catherine, or other trusted family members.
But behind the scenes, a very different plan was allegedly set in motion.
According to documents the Duke of Kent is said to have seen, Queen Camilla didn’t just decline to keep the dogs within the family. She allegedly signed a secret contract handing the corgis over to outside traders, who then marketed them as “Royal Companions” and “living pieces of history” to ultra-wealthy buyers.
These weren’t emotional rehomings.
They were high-end sales.
The Secret Contract: Monetising the Queen’s Heart
The reported contract reads like something out of a dystopian royal thriller.
Each corgi, allegedly:
- Branded as a “Royal Companion to Queen Elizabeth II”
- Marketed as a “rare royal treasure”
- Sold at exorbitant prices to international elites hungry for status
Some buyers were reportedly willing to pay hundreds of thousands of pounds for a single dog that had once walked the halls of Buckingham Palace. From there, the animals were scattered — to private estates, luxury breeders, “exclusive” kennels, and even private zoos.
In some cases, they were reportedly:
- Flown on private jets to new homes
- Used as breeding stock to produce “descendant of the Queen’s corgi” litters
- Exhibited at luxury pet events and splashed across social media as status symbols
Legal clauses in the contract, according to leaks, allegedly prevent buyers from disclosing details of the sale — a secrecy provision that has only intensified suspicion that this was meant to be hidden from the rest of the royal family.

Animal rights activists, royal traditionalists, and ordinary citizens alike have reacted with horror.
To them, this isn’t just a financial scandal. It’s moral vandalism.
Who Paid — and Who Profited
Reports claim the corgis were sold to:
- Billionaire collectors in the Middle East
- Business magnates in China and the United States
- Aristocrats and high-end breeders throughout Europe
Some of the dogs have allegedly been moved multiple times between estates and facilities, suggesting there is no emotional bond — only commercial interest in their royal provenance.
And the money?
Insiders claim that instead of being placed into a public-facing royal fund, a significant portion of the profits found their way into a private discretionary fund controlled by Camilla. From there, the money was reportedly funneled into:
- Lavish refurbishments of her private quarters
- High-end interior design projects
- Personal estate improvements
All while the late Queen’s most personal, living companions were being shipped off like branded merchandise.
Critics say this is the clearest example yet of Camilla allegedly using Elizabeth’s legacy as a cash machine, while simultaneously trying to erase her presence from the living fabric of the monarchy.
Erasing Elizabeth: Step by Calculated Step
The corgis, according to royal loyalists, are just the most symbolic part of a much bigger pattern.
The Duke of Kent and other insiders describe a systematic dismantling of Queen Elizabeth II’s influence:
- Traditions quietly dropped or rewritten
- Long-standing customs at Sandringham Christmas gatherings reportedly scaled back or altered.
- Elizabeth’s preferred style of low-key, dutiful public engagements replaced by more curated, Camilla-centric appearances.
- Buckingham Palace physically transformed
- Private rooms once filled with Elizabeth’s furniture, photographs, horse portraits and memorabilia reportedly stripped away.
- New décor, new art, new aesthetic — a visual overwrite of the late Queen’s presence.
- The Royal image reframed
- Fewer references to Queen Elizabeth II in official speeches and social media posts.
- A slow but noticeable shift away from the late Queen’s legacy to a “modern Camilla era” branding.
If true, selling the corgis wasn’t an isolated act. It was the loudest symbol of a broader strategy:
Remove the Queen’s presence from the palace, from tradition, from daily life — and replace it with Camilla’s.
Seizing the Stables: The Queen’s Horses Next
The alleged purge hasn’t stopped at dogs.
Sources suggest Camilla has also asserted control over the royal stables, an area Elizabeth cherished. Under the late Queen, the racing and breeding programme wasn’t just a hobby; it was a lifelong passion, bound up with decades of carefully bred bloodlines and classic race winners.

Under Camilla, insiders claim:
- Some of Elizabeth’s most treasured racehorses have been sold off quietly.
- Focus has shifted from traditional thoroughbred racing to leisure-based equestrian activities more aligned with Camilla’s personal interests.
- Long-serving stable staff with deep loyalty to Elizabeth have been replaced or reassigned, with their roles filled by people inclined toward Camilla’s new vision.
To traditionalists, this feels like watching one of the last living pillars of Elizabeth’s identity — her horses — being dismantled in the same way her dogs were.
Pushing Out the Queen’s People
Another chilling allegation:
Camilla isn’t just reshaping spaces and animals — she’s reshaping people around the throne.
Longtime members of Queen Elizabeth II’s inner circle — dressers, private secretaries, senior ceremonial advisers, and communications staff — have reportedly:
- Been retired early
- Pushed into the background
- Replaced with figures loyal to Camilla and her circle
This, critics say, has two effects:
- It removes voices who might protest if Elizabeth’s legacy is disrespected.
- It ensures Camilla’s reign is less likely to be compared unfavourably to that of the late Queen — because fewer people inside the system remember how things used to be.
It’s a quiet purge, but an effective one.
Public Backlash: “Justice for the Corgis”
Once news of the alleged corgi contract broke, anger exploded.
- Social media erupted with hashtags like #JusticeForTheCorgis and #CamillaBetrayedTheQueen.
- Royal historians publicly condemned the reported sale as “an insult to everything Elizabeth stood for.”
- Animal rights groups demanded to know where the dogs are now, how they are treated, and why they were ever allowed to leave royal protection in the first place.
Some MPs and royal commentators are now calling for:
- A formal parliamentary inquiry into the sale
- Stricter legal protection for royal animals and symbolic assets
- Full transparency on who approved the deal and where the money went
Buckingham Palace has, so far, reportedly refused to address the specifics, allowing anger and suspicion to grow.
A Monarchy at War with Itself?
Behind palace walls, the fallout may be even fiercer.
Sources claim that Prince William and Princess Anne are deeply troubled by the direction Camilla is taking — from alleged asset sales to the quiet erasure of Elizabeth’s traditions. Some describe an emerging divide between:
- Traditionalists, who believe Elizabeth’s legacy is sacred and foundational
- Camilla’s faction, who argue the monarchy must be “modernised” even if that means discarding the old ways
With King Charles’s health an ongoing concern, the fear is clear:
How much of Elizabeth’s Britain will survive if those who loved her most don’t push back?
For now, one thing is certain:
The corgis are gone.
The contract, according to the Duke of Kent, is real.
And the question hanging over the monarchy is brutal:
If the Queen’s dogs could be sold off like luxury trinkets, what — or who — might be next in Camilla’s campaign to put her stamp on the Crown?
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