King Charles III will be crowned on May 6, 2023 in London

King Charles III will be crowned on May 6, 2023 in London

“The coronation will reflect the role of the monarch today and look to the future while maintaining its roots in long-standing traditions,” explained the Palace, adding that the King’s wife, Queen Consort Camilla, 75, will also be crowned.

The announcement of the date comes just over a month after the death of Elizabeth II, on September 8, at the age of 96, when she spent the end of the summer at her Balmoral castle in Scotland.

The UK’s longest-serving monarch, who held the throne for 70 years, was privately buried alongside her parents, sister and husband in an annex to St George’s Chapel, a 15th-century Gothic church on the grounds of the Castle. from Windsor, about 40 kilometers east of London.

This ended 10 days of national mourning, in which hundreds of thousands of Britons took to the streets to bid farewell to their queen, in the funeral chapels deployed in Edinburgh and London, or along solemn funeral processions.

In them, the children and grandchildren of Elizabeth II were seen walking together behind the coffin despite the scandals and tensions that recently shook the British royal family, from the exile of Enrique and Meghan to the United States to the accusations against Prince Andrew of sexual abuse of an American minor.

The crowds will return to the streets in May for this new ceremony full of luxury and tradition, although the coronation of Carlos III is expected to be “faster and smaller” than that of his mother, anticipated Bob Morris, an expert on the monarchy. British.

The consecration of Elizabeth II, the first to be broadcast on television around the world, took place on June 2, 1953, a year and a half after her ascension to the throne on February 6, 1952, after the death of her father Jorge SAW.

The ceremony had more than 8,000 guests and lasted more than three hours.

For 900 years the coronations of British monarchs have been held in the majestic Westminster Abbey and since 1066 they have almost always been presided over by the Archbishop of Canterbury.

But, in a United Kingdom mired in a serious cost-of-living crisis, the ceremony is expected to be more low-key than Elizabeth II’s and, at King Charles III’s wish, more representative of the diversity of British society today.

The act will be prepared for months in an operation named “Golden Orb”, after one of the symbols of power and spirituality that, together with the scepter and the crown, represent the monarch.

Charles III, long one of the least popular members of the British royal family, saw his acceptance skyrocket to 70% after coming to the throne in September, although he remains far behind his eldest son William, 40, and the his wife, Catalina, favorites of the British with 84% and 80% respectively.

Source: Ambito

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