Earl Spencer has confirmed he is a new relationship with “brilliant archaeologist” Cat Jarman.
Diana, Princess of Wales’s brother Charles revealed they met when Norwegian-born Dr Jarman came to dig up a Roman villa on his land.
The pair, along with Reverend Richard Coles, became co-hosts of the popular history podcast The Rabbit Hole Detectives, with the trio writing a trivia book to accompany the series.
Props to @CatJarman in this week's episode of The Rabbit Hole Detectives for eliciting high praise indeed from the 'disembodied voice'!@RevRichardColes @cspencer1508 #RabbitHoleDetectives pic.twitter.com/q0ykv9hf0f
— Folding Pocket (@FoldingPocket) July 5, 2023
Earl Spencer, who has been married three times, told ITV’s Good Morning Britain hosts Susanna Reid and Richard Madeley: “Cat Jarman, who is my partner now actually. She’s a brilliant archaeologist.
“It sounds like an Alan Partridge title, but she is Nordic Person of 2024, which is usually handed out to someone like Sven-Goran Eriksson or a composer to be Nordic Person of the Year.”
He added: “Well, first of all I met her because we both had the same publisher but secondly, I know this sounds rather bizarre but she came to dig up a Roman villa on some land I’ve got.
“Richard, Cat and I would end up together and Richard had been recently bereaved so was semi living with me and the three of us would just talk and talk and talk.
“Cat said ‘Let’s do a podcast’ and out of the podcast came the book.”
The earl also spoke about his sister, the late princess, and how he visits her burial site on an island at his ancestral home, Althorp House, almost every day.
'You get used to it without it ever going away.'@cspencer1508 reflects on losing his sister 27 years ago and how Princess Diana's legacy lives on. pic.twitter.com/yzdqlcTZM5
— Good Morning Britain (@GMB) October 15, 2024
“Every day people tell me what an inspiration she was and how much they miss her, what they did the day she died,” he said.
Diana – the mother of the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Sussex – was just 36 when she was killed in a car crash in Paris on August 31 1997.
“Like everyone else you sort of get used to it (grief) without it ever going away. I go pretty much every day there,” the earl added.
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