- Stephen Lamport
Sir Stephen Mark Jeffrey Lamport, KCVO, DL was Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales 1996-2002.
He was born in 1951 and educated at Dorking Grammar School, and Corpus Christi College,
University of Cambridge , where he was aScholar and graduated with a BA (First Class Honours), and subsequently admitted as Master of Arts. He also obtained an MA from theUniversity of Sussex .He joined the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office in 1974, and was assigned to theUnited Kingdom Mission to theUnited Nations inNew York . In 1975 he was posted to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office as a3rd Secretary From 1975 to 1979 he was inTehran , initially as a 3rd Secretary and then as2nd Secretary . From 1980 to 1984 he was a1st Secretary in London with theForeign and Commonwealth Office , serving 1981-1984 asPrivate Secretary to two successive Ministers of State,Malcolm Rifkind andDouglas Hurd .From 1984 to 1988 he was
1st Secretary inRome . From 1988 to 1993 he was with theForeign and Commonwealth Office , initially as a 1st Secretary and then as aCounsellor .He was Assistant Head of Department of the
Middle East Department in about 1990. By 1991 he was Deputy Head of Department of Personnel Operations, as a Counsellor. By 1992 he was Deputy Head of Department of the Personnel Management Department.He was Deputy Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales from March 1993, and then Private Secretary and Treasurer from October 1996 to 2002.
He is now Group Director for Public Policy and Government Affairs for the
Royal Bank of Scotland , and also a member of the Advisory Board of the Centre for Ethics in Public Policy and Corporate Governance ofGlasgow Caledonian University .Sir Stephen was appointed a CVO in 1999, and was promoted to KCVO in 2002. He was appointed a
Deputy Lieutenant ofSurrey in March 2006. He is married and has three children. He wrote a novel, "The Palace of Enchantment", in 1985 withDouglas Hurd .He was portrayed by
Tim McMullan in the movie "The Queen" (2006), circulating around the events before and after the death ofDiana, Princess of Wales in France, 1997.References
[http://www.gcal.ac.uk/ceppcg/advisory.html Profile at Glasgow Caledonian University October 2005] [http://www.westminster-abbey.org/press/news/33978]
Offices held
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