Coronation (United Kingdom) |
In the United Kingdom, the ceremony of coronation
is the ritual whereby the monarch is formally crowned and invested with the regalia. The coronation usually takes place several
months after the death of the previous monarch, for the coronation is considered a joyous occasion that would be inappropriate
when mourning still continues. (Queen Elizabeth II, for
example, was crowned on June 2, 1953, having
ascended to the throne on February 6, 1952.) A coronation need not occur for an individual to be a monarch; Edward VIII was not crowned during his
brief reign, but was unquestionably king.
List
- Anne - April 23, 1702 (as Queen of England)
- George I - October 20, 1714 (as King of Great Britain)
- George II - October 11, 1727 (as King of Great Britain)
- George III - September 22, 1761 (as King of Great
Britain)
- George IV - July 19, 1821
- William IV - September 8, 1831
- Victoria - June 28, 1838
- Edward VII - August 9, 1902
- George V - June 22, 1911
- Edward VIII - n/a
- George VI - May 12, 1937
- Elizabeth II - June 2, 1953
General aspects
Prior to the Norman Conquest, kings were crowned in varying
places. William the Conqueror chose to be crowned in
Westminster Abbey and set a precedent for all future monarchs.
All British monarchs since William the Conqueror have been crowned, except for Empress Maud (who reigned but was known as "Lady of the English" instead of "Queen"), King Edward V (who was imprisoned and deposed before a coronation
could occur), and Edward VIII (who abdicated before a coronation could occur).
Members of both houses of Parliament, peers, members of the Royal Family, Prime
Ministers of Commonwealth countries, foreign
representatives, and leading British and other Commonwealth citizens and officials attend the ceremony. Also, certain obsolete
Great Offices of State - Lord High Steward and Lord High Constable - are "called out of abeyance," or temporarily restored, but only for the day of
the coronation.
Peers wear special coronation robes, cape, and hood made of crimson velvet. The rank
of the peer is demonstrated by bars of sealskin spots on the cape: Royal Dukes have six,
other Dukes four, Marquesses three and a half, Earls three, Viscounts two and a half, and Barons two. The rank of peeresses (female peers and wives of male peers) is denoted differently: by the length of the
train. Duchesses have four-yard trains, Marchionesses three and a half,
Countesses three, Viscountesses
two and a half, and Baronesses two.
The peers also wear coronets, and peeresses wear circlets, the design of which can also serve to
indicate the wearer's rank. The designs in the royal family are as follows: for the Sovereign's children and siblings, four
crosses pattee alternating with four fleurs-de-lis; for the Sovereign's
younger sons' sons, four crosses pattee alternating with four strawberry leaves; for the Sovereign's younger sons' daughters and
the heir apparent's children, two crosses pattee and two strawberry leaves alternating with four fleurs-de-lis; and finally, for
the Sovereign's daughters' children, four strawberry leaves alternating with four fleurs-de-lis. For nobles, the designs are as
follows: for Dukes, eight strawberry leaves; for Marquesses, four strawberry leaves alternating with four silver balls; for
Earls, eight strawberry leaves alternating with eight raised silver balls; for Viscounts, sixteen silver balls; and for Barons,
six silver balls. Peeresses use equivalent designs, but wear a circlet, which encircles the head, rather than a coronet, which
rests atop the head.
The ceremony, which includes several religious elements, has traditionally been conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury, for he is the most senior
clergyman of the Church of England. However, at various points in
history, more junior bishops have been called upon to perform the coronation. For instance, Elizabeth I was crowned by the Bishop of Carlisle because the
more senior prelates did not recognise her as the Sovereign.
The recognition
First, the Sovereign enters the Abbey and takes a seat on the Chair of Estate. Bishops carry the Bible and other symbols of Christianity and
place them on an Altar in front of the Chair. Then, peers bring most of the Regalia to the Archbishop of Canterbury, who gives them to the Dean of
Westminster, who then places them on the Altar.
Then, the Archbishop, accompanied by certain Great Officers of State – the Lord Chancellor, the Lord Great
Chamberlain, the Lord High Constable, and the Earl Marshal – proceeds to the East, South, West, and North sides of the
Coronation Theatre in
that order, and at each side presents the new sovereign and declares him or her "your undoubted King (or Queen)."
The oath
The Archbishop then proceeds to administer the Coronation Oath to the Sovereign. The Oath was first established by an Act of Parliament in 1689 for the
coronation of William III and Mary II as joint sovereigns. The Oath changed over time; Queen
Elizabeth II took the following oath in 1953:
Archbishop: "Will you solemnly promise and swear to govern the Peoples of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, Pakistan and Ceylon, and of your Possessions and other
Territories to any of them belonging or pertaining, according to their respective laws and customs?" Queen: "I solemnly promise
so to do." Archbishop: Will you to your power cause Law and Justice, in Mercy, to be executed in all your judgements? Queen: "I
will." Archbishop: "Will you to the utmost of your power maintain the Laws of God and the true profession of the Gospel? Will you
to the utmost of your power maintain in the United Kingdom the Protestant Reformed Religion established by law? Will you maintain
and preserve inviolably the settlement of the Church of England, and the doctrine, worship, discipline, and government thereof,
as by law established in England? And will you preserve unto the Bishops and Clergy of England, and to the Churches there
committed to their charge, all such rights and privileges, as by law do or shall appertain to them or any of them?" Queen: "All
this I promise to do. The things which I have here promised, I will perform, and keep. So help me God."
The Communion and the Anointment
After the Sovereign takes the Oath, a clergyman presents the Bible to the Sovereign, saying, "Here is Wisdom. This is the
royal Law. These are the lively Oracles of God." During Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, the Moderator of the General Assembly of
the Church of Scotland performed the presentation. After the Sovereign receives the Bible, it is placed on the Altar.
Then, the Archbishop performs the Christian service known as the Holy
Communion. Various parts of the Bible are read, and after the reading of the Apostles Creed, the ceremony is interrupted for the time being.
Then, after the singing of hymns and the saying of some prayers, the Lord Great Chamberlain removes the Sovereign's crimson
outer robe. The Sovereign then takes a seat on King Edward's Chair, also known as the Coronation Chair, under which
lies the famous Stone of Scone. (The Stone now usually rests in
Edinburgh Castle, but arrangements have been made to bring it back
to Westminster Abbey when necessary for coronations.) Then, the Dean of Westminster takes the Ampulla, an eagle-shaped golden vessel, and from it pours holy oil into the Coronation Spoon. The Archbishop
then dips his fingers into the oil and then anoints the Sovereign on the palms,
breast, and head.
The investiture and coronation
After the anointment concludes, the Lord Great Chamberlain presents the Sovereign with the Spurs, medieval symbols of chivalry and knighthood. Then, the Jewelled Sword of
Offering and the Armills, or golden
bracelets, are presented to the Sovereign. The Dean of Westminster and the Lord Great Chamberlain then put the Robe Royal on the standing Sovereign. Next,
the Archbishop of Canterbury delivers the Orb, a symbol of the
Sovereign's role as Supreme Governor of the Church of England, to
his or her right hand, and the Orb is then returned to the Altar. A ring is then placed on the Sovereign's right hand in order to
represent the "marriage" between the country and the Sovereign.
Thereafter, the Archbishop of Canterbury delivers the Sceptre with the Cross to the Sovereign's right hand and the Sceptre with the Dove to the left hand. The climax of the ceremony then occurs as the
Archbishop puts on the Sovereign's head St Edward's Crown.
(Queen Victoria and King Edward VII complained about the weight of St
Edward's Crown; they instead used the lighter Imperial State
Crown.) All then cry "God Save the Queen/King!", as appropriate to the sex of the monarch, three times and cannons are fired from the Tower of
London.
The Archbishop prays for the Sovereign, who then proceeds to take a seat on the Throne. Homage is then paid by the Archbishop of Canterbury, who kneels in front of the Sovereign, and the
Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishops of the Church of England, who kneel in their
places:
I, N, Archbishop [or Bishop] of X, will be faithful and true, and faith and truth will bear unto
you, our Sovereign Lord [or Lady], King [or Queen] of this Realm and Defender of the Faith, and unto
your heirs and successors according to law. So help me God!
Then, the various peers kneel and do homage, with the following words:
I, N. Duke [or Marquess, Earl, Viscount, or Baron] of X, do become your liege man of life and limb, and
of earthly worship; and faith and truth will I bear unto you, to live and die, against all manner of
folks. So help me God.
The Royal Dukes pay homage individually. For other ranks of peers, the most
senior peer of a rank kneels in front of the Sovereign, and all other peers of that rank kneel in their places, and all say the
appropriate words together. The Dukes are lead by the Premier Duke, the Duke of Norfolk; the
Marquesses by the Premier
Marquess, the Marquess of Winchester; the Earls by the Premier Earl, the Earl of Shrewsbury; the
Viscounts by the Premier Viscount, the Viscount Hereford; and the Barons by the Premier Baron, the Baron de Ros. Formerly, each peer paid homage individually, but for the coronation
of Elizabeth II, given the
tremendous increase in the number of peerages conferred, the ceremony was shortened.
If there is a Queen Consort, then she is now crowned in a ceremony
similar to but simpler than the King's. However, husbands of Queens Regnant are not crowned.
The Communion resumed
The Sovereign then proceeds back to the Altar and returns the Sceptres to the Lord Great Chamberlain, and then receives
Communion. Various prayers are said, and the Sovereign returns to the throne with
the two Sceptres. Then, further prayers are said, and parts of the Bible are read, the Sovereign proceeds in a procession to
St Edward's
Chapel.
At the Chapel, the Sovereign, assisted by the Lord Great Chamberlain, removes the regalia and the Royal Robes and dons purple
velvet robes. The Sovereign then wears the Imperial State
Crown, holds the Sceptre with the Cross in the
right hand, and the Sovereign's Orb in the left hand, and proceeds
out of the Abbey while the National Anthem is sung. The
ceremony then concludes.
See also
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