Although , their relationship was never to be and despite a proposal, their engagement was forbidden by . However, Margaret was still able to find love, . The duo wed in 1960 and would go on to and . However, the couple's relationship ultimately did not go the distance . Although Margaret did not find another long-term partner, Antony would go on to remarry. Chart the couple's relationship from the highs to the lows below… Romance was not in the air when Margaret and Antony first crossed paths, with the duo meeting at a private party that had been thrown by Lady Elizabeth Cavendish, who was one of Margaret's ladies-in-waiting. The couple wouldn't formally meet until later on that year when the photographer was commissioned to capture a portrait of the royal; the year before Antony had been commissioned to capture portraits of the late
Queen and and their children, and . The couple managed to keep their relationship under wraps with author Anne de Courcy telling : "Yes, he would join her at parties, but no one could pinpoint which man she was interested in. " Much as their relationship was kept under wraps, the couple's proposal was also a private affair. Antony reportedly proposed to Margaret on the same day that she learnt her ex-love, Peter Townsend, was engaged. The couple went public with their engagement on 27 February 1960. Speaking years after the engagement, Margaret's granddaughter Lady Margarita Armstrong-Jones revealed that . The star told : "[It was] very simple and very small and I think that's probably what he wanted, nothing crazy and overstated." On 6 May 1960, the couple walked down the aisle at Westminster Abbey. The pair's nuptials , one being it was the first time a King's daughter had married a commoner, and it was . Due to her father having passed away years before, Margaret was given away by her brother-in-law Prince Philip and following the wedding the royal couple were granted the titles of the Count and Countess of Snowdon. The royal bride's wedding dress has gone on to become one of the most iconic royal gowns thanks to its beautiful simplicity. The silk organza gown was created by Norman Hartnell, the same designer who made the Queen's wedding dress, and featured long sleeves and a full skirt using over 30 metres of fabric. Happiness came for the couple on 3 November 1961 when the pair welcomed their first child, a son, David Armstrong-Jones. David has since founded his own furniture company and welcomed his own children: Charles Armstrong-Jones and Lady Margarita Armstrong-Jones, who was named in honour of Margaret. Just days before the couple celebrated their fourth wedding anniversary, Margaret and Antony welcomed their second child, Lady Sarah Chatto. Lady has grown up to become a talented artist and has welcomed . Margaret and Antony reportedly had a tumultuous marriage with numerous affairs and the couple decided to separate in 1976, 16 years after they tied the knot. On 19 March 1976, Buckingham Palace released a statement reading: "HRH The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, and the Earl of Snowdon have mutually agreed to live apart. The Princess will carry out her public duties and functions unaccompanied by Lord Snowdon. There are no plans for divorce proceedings." On 24 May 1978, the couple's decree nisi was granted and the divorce was finalised on 11 July 1978. According to Andrew Morton, who wrote the late biography, . Speaking on
Fox News, he claimed: "She was a deeply Christian woman who had her own desires that often conflicted with her faith and she struggled. She desperately wanted the marriage to work, but there were too many challenges." up until the Countess died on 9 February 2002. Antony died on 13 January 2017.