This story is from May 07, 2023
Right royal tamasha: New season of the Crown begins
Charles III crowned king in first UK coronation since 1953
King Charles III with the St Edward's Crown on his head attends the coronation ceremony inside Westminster Abbey in central London.
King Charles III arrives for his coronation at Westminster Abbey, in London.
The Diamond Jubilee State Coach, accompanied by the Sovereign's Escort of the Household Cavalry, travels along The Mall in the King's procession ahead of the coronation ceremony.
King Charles III and Camilla travel in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey for the coronation ceremony.
Britain's King Charles III and Queen Consort Camilla began their journey in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach, a journey of two kilometres from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey in central London.
The newer Diamond Jubilee State Coach was last seen in 2019, and has only been in use for the past ten years.
Dean of Westminster David Hoyle and the archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby awaited the arrival of Britain's King Charles III and Camilla for the coronation ceremony.
Speaker of the house of commons, Sir Lindsay Hoyle arrived at Westminster Abbey for the ceremony.
British prime minister Rishi Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty awaited the arrival of Britain's king Charles and, Camilla for the coronation ceremony, in London.
Even the supposedly holy oil used to anoint Charles and Camilla was a modern product made from olives harvested in the groves of a Jerusalem monastery and lacking the traditional secretions from the glands of civets or the intestines of whales.
The coronation decidedly begins a new season for the crown — albeit on live television and minus hired actors mouthing lines. It also sets off Britain’s new Carolean age, which is supposed to be ruled by a twice-married septuagenarian couple and their very modern blended family, even as it ignited fresh debate in British overseas territories about dumping Charles as head of state and excising the monarchy, which serves to remind many of colonial occupation, slavery and exploitation.
Though the pageantry was more conspicuously slimline — one-fourth the guests and one-fifth the distance traversed in triumphal procession compared to Queen Elizabeth II’s 1953 coronation — it was clear the Windsors are loathe to adopt the business-like public persona of other European bicycling monarchies.
The ceremony clocked more than a 100 foreign heads of state and scores of other dignitaries including India’s vice-president Jagdeep Dhankhar. Meanwhile, in a sign of its post-Brexit paranoia over insults real or imagined, Britain nursed a supposed snub from both the US and China.
Joe Biden kept away, as is traditional for American presidents, but Beijing sent vice-president Han Zheng, who is blamed for overriding the international UK-China treaty guaranteeing democratic freedom to Hong Kong for 70 years following the 1997 handover. The carefully choreographed script saw Charles and Camilla given elaborate gifts by a handpicked multifaith cast that included Hindus, Muslims and Jains, and eventually left to tote around heavy crowns on their heads.
Historian Simon Schama described it as “a theatre to be British” but documentary producer Dan Davies insisted it came at a clarifying moment for Brexit Britain: “We’re not a great power, we’re not a great trading nation and no one likes us”. Even so, within the massed crowds, some sported jokey inflatable crowns and union flag-patterned bowler hats and three-piece suits.
The deliberate send-up of British joy over their new old king — the oldest ever to be crowned and with the longest apprenticeship in British history — seemed to continue the narrative from the actual coronation ceremony. There, high baroque competed with high camp, with strains of Handel giving way to popular musical composer Andrew Lloyd Webber’s specially written piece, Make a Joyful Noise.
In a sense, the jokiness may be said to reflect the steep decline in the number of Britons who consider the monarchy to be “very important”, down from 65% in 1983 to 29% today, according to the National Centre for Social Research. That said, YouGov polling ahead of the coronation found 59% with a positive view of Charles and the same number affirming that he’s doing a good job (despite the lack of job description).
The ceremony kicked off a three-day national holiday weekend made soggy by the inevitable rain but still marked by the pomp and circumstance of a military march and royal procession through central London, a celebrity-studded concert at Windsor Castle, and nearly 5,000 public events and street parties.
Commerce became king, at least for a day, with a British multinational coffee chain offering “a royal reward” to customers who recruit a “Charles, Charlie, Charlotte, Charlene, Carl, Carlos or Caroline” to their app, a pizza company offering a special “crown crust”, an Indian restaurant in Stoke in central England hawking its ‘Kings Coronation Limited Edition Curry’ complete with paneer, and high-end shoe brand Manolo Blahnik trading off four celebratory men’s slipper designs with gold embroidery.
Meanwhile, estranged Prince Harry’s Madame Tussauds waxwork was briefly reunited with the rest of the royal family for the coronation (but not his actor wife Meghan’s) and the new king and queen recorded a public service message for use across thousands of UK rail stations for their big weekend. Sure enough, it was right royal entertainment.
(Rashmee Roshan Lall is based in London and writes on international affairs)
- Cassie's post-assault chat with Diddy reveals disturbing details: 'You hit me in the head two good times'
- Manhunt begins in UK for Indian-origin man Pankaj Lamba after his wife's body found in car boot
- Germany approves more professional visas amid labour shortage
- Trudeau explains cap on immigration: 'We made mistakes, system exploited by bad actors'
- Israel PM Benjamin Netanyahu's aide leaked classified document to foreign media to reduce his criticism
- Taylor Swift may have no desire to return to Higmark Stadium to support Travis Kelce after feeling the full wrath of Bills Mafia in January
- Why some families are returning adopted kids in Tamil Nadu
- Cassie’s post-assault chat with Diddy reveals disturbing details: 'You hit me in the head two good times'
- Ali Khamenei’s son Mojtaba set to take over as Iran's supreme leader: Report
- “It hurt my feelings”: Cam Newton said he was hurt seeing his former teammates being honored at the stadium expect him
- Billionaire Harsh Goenka 'seeks help' to understand this interview of Pakistan cricket team captain Mohammad Rizwan
- 'It's the government's ... ': Kapil Dev on Champions Trophy venues, India-Pakistan clash
- 10 easy South Indian snacks for Friday evenings
- 7 genetic traits that babies get from their dad
- 10 good habits of parents that make kids disciplined
- 7 low-maintenance animals to keep as pets
- 10 Korean dishes that are getting popular in India