Queen Camilla, the wife of Britain's head of state King Charles III, has been forced to postpone her engagements for this week because of a chest infection, Buckingham Palace said on Tuesday, reports AFP.
Queen Camilla, 77, had been due to attend the opening of the annual Field of Remembrance in memory of the country's war dead at London's Westminster Abbey on Thursday.
She was then expected to be at the palace hosting a reception for Britain's Olympic and Paralympic athletes that evening.
"Her Majesty The Queen is currently unwell with a chest infection, for which her doctors have advised a short period of rest," a palace spokesman said.
"With great regret, Her Majesty has therefore had to withdraw from her engagements for this week but she very much hopes to be recovered in time to attend this weekend's Remembrance events as normal."
The palace announced earlier that Birgitte, Duchess of Gloucester, 78, would instead represent Camilla at the Field of Remembrance.
British media said that Camilla was resting at home under doctors' supervision. No further details about her condition were given.
Camilla accompanied Charles on a recent tour of Australia and at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting on the Pacific island of Samoa.
The couple broke up the long journey back to Britain from Samoa last week with what the palace called "a short private stopover" in India, a place spokesman said last Wednesday.
The stopover, reportedly at an ayurvedic spa near the southern city of Bangalore, was said not to be health-related.
Charles 75, was diagnosed with an undisclosed cancer earlier this year and has been receiving treatment. His daughter-in-law Catherine, Princess of Wales, 42, announced recently that she has completed chemotherapy.
Catherine's husband Prince William, who is heir to the throne, is currently in South Africa as part of his Earthshot Prize for environmental innovation initiative.