Before a flawless exchange of vows, a veiled Middleton wearing a laced  dress with a long train, the first "commoner" to marry a prince in close  proximity to the throne in more than 350 years, walked slowly through  the 1,900-strong congregation.
As they met at the altar William, second in line to the throne,  whispered to her, prompting a smile. The Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan  Williams declared the couple married with the words: "I pronounce that  they be man and wife together."
Tens of thousands of people thronging the streets outside cheered when  they heard the words, and again as the newlyweds left the abbey in a  1902 open-topped state landau carriage bound for Buckingham Palace, the  queen's London residence.
Huge cheering crowds strained to catch a glimpse of the beaming couple  as well as the military bands in black bearskin hats and cavalrymen in  shining breastplates who escorted them to the palace where they were  expected to kiss on the balcony.
Middleton's dress, the subject of fevered speculation for months in the  fashion press, was a traditional ivory silk and satin outfit with a lace  applique and train.
It was designed by Sarah Burton of the Alexander McQueen label, named after the British designer who committed suicide.
The bride wore a tiara loaned by the queen and the diamond and sapphire  engagement ring that belonged to William's mother Princess Diana, who  was divorced from Prince Charles in 1996, a year before her death in a  car crash in Paris aged just 36.
Middleton, the 29-year-old whose mother's family had coal mining roots,  is a breath of fresh air for the monarchy, which has in the past been  accused of being disconnected from ordinary Britons. She is seen as  having the common touch.
The royals' cool reaction to Diana's 1997 death contrasted with an  outpouring of public grief and marked a low point for the family. Some  questioned whether the institution, a vestige of imperial glory, had  outlived its unifying role in a modern state divided by partisan  politics and regional separatism.
Thousands of people from around the globe were outside the abbey, many  of them camping overnight for the best view of the future king and queen  and fuelling the feel-good factor that has briefly lifted Britain from  its economic gloom.










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