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Lady Gabriella Windsor starts anew after husband's death as she moves out of London home

03 May 2026 , 11:45
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Lady Gabriella Windsor starts anew after husband
Lady Gabriella Windsor starts anew after husband's death as she moves out of London home

It has been more than two years since Lady Gabriella Windsor lost her husband Thomas Kingston when he took his own life. 

Now the Royal is moving on – or at least starting fresh somewhere new after vacating her London flat.

Prince and Princess Michael of Kent’s daughter, known for her down-to-earth approach, carried boxes and furniture to a waiting van, after apparently eschewing a team of movers.

The 45-year-old was in good spirits as she was helped by her friend Lady Eloise Waymouth, the daughter of the late society photographer, Lord Patrick Lichfield.

The pair chatted and smiled as they carted away soft furnishings, an antique chair, and several packing boxes and bags.

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They shared a hilarious moment after being distracted by a passing Chesil Speedster 2 car, whose front-seat passenger was a dog in driving goggles – a sight which left them in fits of laughter. 

The Royal, known to family and friends as Ella, was not wearing her wedding ring for the move.

Financier Mr. Kingston, 45, died in February 2024. He was found with self-inflicted gunshot wounds at his parents’ £3 million home in the Cotswolds.

Lady Gabriella Windsor (pictured), known for being down-to-earth, eschewed a moving company and instead enlisted the help of a friend to relocate from her London flat

Aristocratic friend Lady Eloise Waymouth, the daughter of late society photographer Lord Patrick Lichfield, was pictured carrying boxes during the move

At one point, the pair were momentarily distracted by a passing Chesil Speedster 2 car, whose front-seat passenger was a dog in driving goggles - a sight which left them in fits of laughter

The couple married at St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, in May 2019 in a ceremony attended by the Queen and Philip. 

Their wedding was widely regarded as a highlight of the 2019 royal calendar.

Mr. Kingston, a former hostage negotiator turned financier, was often described by friends as a man of ‘immense charm and intellect’.

Lady Gabriella often remarked in interviews how ‘lucky’ she felt to have met ‘someone special’. 

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The couple’s romance began in 2014 after they were introduced by mutual friends.

Before his marriage into the Royal Family, Mr. Kingston had been a well-known figure in social circles, having previously dated Pippa Middleton, the Princess of Wales’s sister.  

He eventually proposed to Gabriella during a 2018 holiday to the Isle of Sark, just one year before their high-profile wedding at St George’s Chapel. 

She reportedly moved in with her parents at their Kensington Palace flat after his death. 

An inquest heard Mr. Kingston, in charge of an investment firm struggling to meet an £8 million debt, had suffered adverse effects from a cocktail of anti-depressants and sleeping pills he had been taking in the weeks before he died. 

In fact, the true scale of the financial pressure facing Mr. Kingston’s investment firm, Devonport Capital Limited, has only recently come to light. 

The firm reportedly held a staggering negative balance of £27.9 million, leaving a final shortfall of £8.1 million for creditors. 

In a desperate bid to save the company he founded, the high-flying financier had invested £1.6 million of his own personal wealth into the business. 

Thomas and Lady Gabriella smile for photographers at the 2023 Wimbledon Tennis Championships

Even his father, Martin Kingston, a respected barrister, is owed £162,000, while the biggest creditor, Dubai-based Christopher Chandler, faces a loss of approximately £3.7 million. 

Lady Gabriella, who wept at the hearing, said: ‘Anyone taking pills such as these needs to be made aware of the side effects to prevent future deaths. 

‘If this could happen to Tom, it could happen to anyone.’ 

Speaking on her late husband’s state of mind, Lady Gabriella reflected on the intersection of his professional and personal struggles. 

While acknowledging that work had been a ‘challenge’ over the years, she told the coroner: ‘I highly doubt it would have led him to take his own life, and it seemed much improved.’

She added that the fact he chose his parents’ home for his final moments suggested a sudden, impulsive decision rather than a premeditated act.

The inquest revealed that Mr. Kingston had been seeking help for work-related stress and insomnia in the months before his death. 

He was treated by a GP at the Royal Mews Surgery, the private practice at Buckingham Palace typically used by royal household staff. 

A determined Lady Gabriella hauls some of her belongings during her low-key moving day

Lady Gabriella and Lady Eloise are pictured carrying large green bags away from the apartment

There, he was prescribed sertraline, an antidepressant used for anxiety, alongside the sleeping tablet zopiclone.

The hearing was told that Mr. Kingston had stopped taking the medication in the days immediately preceding the tragedy, a factor the coroner linked to his ‘sudden impulse’ to take his own life. 

Records show he did not leave a will, and his entire estate, worth £660,000, passed to his wife. 

The High Court signed off on the letters of administration earlier this year, reports the Sun, which brought a formal end to the legal probate process more than two years after his passing.

While the gross value of his estate was listed at £934,429, the final figure inherited by Lady Gabriella was reduced to £664,429 once debts, funeral costs, and taxes were settled.  

Emily Hughes

Emily Hughes

Money & Markets Editor

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