The Princes opened up in a new BBC documentary which will be broadcast on Sunday. The documentary sees the Princes speak with raw honesty about their emotions at the time. They gave a vivid account of how they had to conceal their devastation amid the extraordinary outpouring of public grief. They also spoke of their shock and bewilderment at the "peculiar" scale of public mourning.
Harry says his reaction to being told the news was one of "disbelief", and there was "no sudden outpouring of grief".
The brothers also revealed how hard it was having to walk behind his mother’s coffin at the funeral, with William recalling that it was "the hardest things I have ever had to do" and he "just wanted to go into a room and cry".
He added: "I just remember hiding behind my fringe basically, at a time when I had a lot of hair, and my head’s down a lot."
Prince Harry says: "One of the hardest things for a parent to have to do is to tell your children that your other parent has died. But he was there for us, he was the one out of two left and he tried to do his best and to make sure we were protected and looked after. But, you know, he was going through the same grieving process as well."
They also praised their grandmother, Queen Elizabeth, who faced an unprecedented public backlash for remaining at Balmoral with them in the dark days after their mother died.
"I think it was a very hard decision for my grandmother to make. She felt very torn between being a grandmother to William and Harry and her Queen role," William says.
Aides say it is the first and last time the princes will speak about their mother’s death in such intimate detail. A Kensington Palace spokesman said they were "glad" they had contributed to the documentary but wanted to concentrate on honouring her legacy rather than talk about the past.
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