Westminster Abbey – The Coronation Church

by Susan Flantzer
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

Westminster Abbey; Photo Credit – By Σπάρτακος – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=26334184

Check out all our British coronation articles at the link below:

History of Westminster Abbey

First known as St. Peter’s Abbey, Westminster Abbey in London, England was founded by Benedictine monks in 960 under the patronage of King Edgar the Peaceful (reigned 943 – 975) and St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury. In the 1040s, King Edward, better known as St. Edward the Confessor (reigned 1042 – 1066), built his royal palace nearby St. Peter’s Abbey on the banks of the River Thames on land known as Thorney Island. Later the medieval Palace of Westminster sat upon the site and today the Houses of Parliament (the formal name is still the  Palace of Westminster) is there.

A scene from the Bayeux Tapestry showing the funeral procession of Edward the Confessor with the church Edward built on the left. This is the only contemporary depiction of Edward’s church; Credit – Wikipedia

Edward the Confessor began rebuilding St. Peter’s Abbey to provide himself with a royal burial church. This church became known as the “west minster” to distinguish it from (old) St. Paul’s Cathedral (the east minster) in the City of London. See Wikipedia: Minster. The new church was consecrated on December 28, 1065. Too ill to attend the consecration, Edward the Confessor died on January 5, 1066, and was buried before the high altar of his new church the day after his death.

The Shrine of St. Edward the Confessor

In 1245, King Henry III started the construction of the second and present Westminster Abbey in the new Gothic style of architecture. The second church was designed to be not only a place of worship and a monastery but also a place for the coronation and burial of monarchs. This church was consecrated on October 13, 1269, and on that day, King Henry III oversaw a grand ceremony to rebury Edward the Confessor in a magnificent new shrine, directly behind the high altar, and he personally helped to carry the body to its new resting place. Edward the Confessor’s shrine survives and around his shrine were interred five kings and four queens, including King Henry III.

Westminster Abbey has been Britain’s coronation church since 1066. From King William I (the Conqueror) to King Charles III, all monarchs except for two have been crowned in Westminster Abbey. Twelve-year-old King Edward V was presumed murdered in the Tower of London before he could be crowned. King Edward VIII abdicated eleven months after succeeding his father, before his scheduled coronation date.

For more information see Unofficial Royalty: Westminster Abbey in London, England

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The Coronation Theatre; Credit – Westminster Abbey

The Coronation Theatre

Like many other Christian churches, Westminster Abbey is built in the shape of a cross. This space where coronations happen is at the point in which the two parts of the cross meet, at the very center of Westminster Abbey, in front of the High Altar

The Cosmati Pavement in front of the High Altar; Credit – By amanderson2 – https://www.flickr.com/photos/49399018@N00/52639897002/, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=128111089

The Cosmati Pavement in front of the High Altar was laid down in 1268 during King Henry III’s rebuilding of Westminster Abbey. The mosaic workers came from Rome, with a man called Odoricus as the foreman. The pavement is an inlaid mosaic stone decoration known as Cosmati work, named after one of the Italian families of craftsmen who specialized in it. It is abstract in design and differs from ancient Roman and earlier medieval mosaic work that consisted of square stones of equal size. It is here that the 700-year-old Coronation Chair, also called St. Edward’s Chair and King Edward’s Chair, is placed, facing the High Altar, on which the monarch sits for the majority of the service. Photos from recent coronations show the Cosmati Pavement covered.

The Coronation Theatre at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II; Credit – By BiblioArchives / LibraryArchives from Canada – Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II / uronnement de la Reine Elizabeth IIUploaded by oaktree_b, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=19783528

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The Coronation Chair

The Coronation Chair with Stone of Scone in Westminster Abbey, 1885

King Edward I’s relentless, but unsuccessful campaign to assert his overlordship over Scotland was resisted by William Wallace and Robert the Bruce, (later King Robert I of Scotland) but it gave him one of his nicknames, “Hammer of the Scots.” In 1296, Edward I captured the Stone of Scone, an oblong block of red sandstone that was used for centuries in the coronation of the monarchs of Scotland. It was kept at the now-ruined Scone Abbey in Scone, near Perth, Scotland. Edward took the Stone of Scone back to England and placed it in the care of the Abbot of Westminster Abbey.

An oaken chair, called the Coronation Chair, King Edward’s Chair, or St. Edward’s Chair, was made by order of King Edward I to enclose the Stone of Scone. Originally the chair had images of birds, foliage, and animals on a gilt ground. The figure of a king, either Edward the Confessor or King Edward I, his feet resting on a lion, was painted on the back. The four gilt lions on the legs were made in 1727 to replace the original lions which were not added to the chair until the early 16th century. The chair has been in use at coronations since 1308 although opinion is divided as to when it was actually used for the crowning. However, since the coronation of King Henry IV in 1399, the monarch has been crowned in the chair. Originally the Coronation Chair was kept in St. Edward’s Chapel at Westminster Abbey, the site of the shrine of St. Edward the Confessor directly behind the High Altar. The Coronation Chair is now kept in a specially-built enclosure in St. George’s Chapel at the west end of the nave, near the main doors of Westminster Abbey.

The Coronation Chair in its usual home, St. George’s Chapel in Westminster Abbey; Credit – By Darkmaterial – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=127657004

In 1996, 700 years after it was taken, the Stone of Scone was returned to Scotland. It is kept at Edinburgh Castle in the Crown Room alongside the crown jewels of Scotland (the Honours of Scotland). An agreement was made that the Stone of Scone will be returned to Westminster Abbey and placed in the Coronation Chair for future coronations, and then it will be returned to Edinburgh Castle.

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Seating Capacity

Some of the tiered seating during the 1821 coronation of King George IV

Westminster Abbey has a seating capacity of 2,200. At the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, there were approximately 8,000 guests. Besides the British royal family and other family members, all peers and their wives, all members of the British parliament, representatives from the many nations of the Commonwealth of Nations, heads of state or their representatives, foreign royalty, and members of Parliament from the Queen’s various legislatures, among others, were invited to attend Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation.

A view of some of the tiered seating at the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II

Westminster Abbey was closed for five months prior to Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation so that the construction needed for 8,000 guests could be completed. Tiered seating, similar to stadium seating, had to be constructed to accommodate all the guests. The coronation of King Charles II in 1661 was the first time that tiered seating was constructed in the transepts so that the congregation could see the ceremony.

The use of tiered seating is no longer possible. Safety regulations at Westminster Abbey now restrict the seating capacity to 2,000 so the guest list was severely limited. Peers were in uproar as only a minority were invited to King Charles III’s coronation.

Before the coronation of King Charles III, Westminster Abbey was closed to visitors from April 25, 2023 – May 7, 2023 for preparations and rehearsals.

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Works Cited

  • The Coronation Chair (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/the-coronation-chair (Accessed: March 29, 2023).
  • Coronation Theatre (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/spotlight-on-coronations/coronation-theatre (Accessed: March 29, 2023).
  • Cosmati Pavement (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/cosmati-pavement (Accessed: March 29, 2023).
  • En.wikipedia.org. 2021. List of British coronations – Wikipedia. [online] Available at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_coronations> (Accessed: March 29, 2023).
  • En.wikipedia.org. 2021. Westminster Abbey – Wikipedia. [online] Available at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westminster_Abbey> (Accessed: March 29, 2023).
  • Flantzer, Susan. (2021) Westminster Abbey in London, England, Unofficial Royalty. Available at: https://www.unofficialroyalty.com/westminster-abbey-in-london-england/ (Accessed: March 29, 2023).
  • Fox, Adam, 1984. Westminster Abbey. Andover: Pitkin Pictorials.
  • Jenkyns, Richard, 2005. Westminster Abbey. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Westminster Abbey. 2021. A royal church | Westminster Abbey. [online] Available at: <https://www.westminster-abbey.org/> (Accessed: March 29, 2023).

The Laird o’ Thistle (Special Edition) – A Scottish Dedication

© Unofficial Royalty 2023

St. Giles’ Cathedral; Credit – By Carlos Delgado – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=35465527

As we prepare this week for the Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla, I cannot help but take a quick look ahead to another upcoming event. It has been announced by Scottish First Minister Humza Yousaf that there will be a special “service of dedication and thanksgiving” held at Edinburgh’s High Kirk (St. Giles Cathedral) later this year, which will include the ceremonial presentation to the King of the Honours of Scotland – Scotland’s historic Crown, Scepter, and Sword of State dating to the 16th century. The Stone of Scone, sans the Westminster Coronation Chair, will also be featured after having been repatriated from its brief journey down to London for the ceremonies on 6 May. I am guessing that the service will take place during the annual Scotland Week at the beginning of July when the King and Queen take up residence at Holyrood Palace at the foot of Edinburgh’s Royal Mile.

Queen Elizabeth II returning the crown of the Honours of Scotland to the care of the Duke of Hamilton, in St. Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh, during the Scottish National Service of Thanksgiving and Dedication in 1953

This summer’s service will be modeled on the service of Thanksgiving  Service held for the late Queen Elizabeth II during her post-Coronation visit in 1953. As with the Service of Thanksgiving for the Queen’s life held in Edinburgh in last September, the dedication service will be under the direction of Church of Scotland (Presbyterian) leaders and traditional Scottish royal officers (the Lord Lyon, etc.). It will doubtless include other Christian and Interfaith leaders. The preliminary plan is for the Honours to be escorted on their short journey down the hill from Edinburgh Castle by a “People’s Procession” of about one hundred representatives chosen from around the country.

It is key to note, for all concerned, that this Scottish ceremony will not be a SECOND Coronation. The Honours themselves were last used in a Coronation in 1651, interestingly enough for the crowning of King Charles II at Scone. (Cromwell and his English Parliamentarian forces chased the young King off to Europe shortly thereafter.) King Charles III will neither wear nor bear the Honours. He will merely receive them. He will not be re-anointed, but he and Camilla will be blessed. If the model of 1953 is followed, Charles and Camilla will wear formal day dress, not formal robes and regalia.

I admit that I have rather mixed feelings about the Coronation on 6 May. The late Queen’s 1953 Coronation took place in a still-imperial context, though the Empire was already transitioning into the Commonwealth. The House of Lords was actually still the House of LORDS back then. The established Church of England involved a far greater proportion of the English people at the time. (And, the Moderator of the Kirk was at least accorded a brief walk-on role, to present a Bible to H.M.) Even so, the 1953 pageantry seemed rather archaic… and that was 70 years ago.
Since World War II, the United Kingdom has been the only European monarchy that has continued to anoint and crown its sovereigns. The last non-British coronation in Europe was for the young King Michael of Romania in 1940. Other European monarchies now use simpler ceremonies of enthronement and blessing, at most. The upcoming Scottish service will be more in that mode.

Back in September, I commented to various friends that the Thanksgiving Service for the Queen’s life in Edinburgh was “the “real funeral” as far as I was concerned. The formal State Funeral in London was historically interesting; but, for me, it was the Edinburgh service that best combined simple dignity with sincere heartfelt affection in honoring Her Majesty. I have a suspicion that may prove similarly true in a few weeks when King Charles and Queen Camilla come again to the High Kirk. The old Kings of Scots were ne’er sae pompous and grand as those down in England, and traditionally – whether they liked it, or not – they were closer to their people. After many years of observing him, I suspect that is rather more what King Charles ultimately wants for the future of the Crown, and I hope he succeeds in bringing it to pass. I wish the King and Queen well.

Yours Aye,
Ken Cuthbertson – the Laird o’ Thistle

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

British Coronation Regalia

by Scott Mehl
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The British Coronation Regalia includes the most treasured and sacred items in the royal collection, most of it only used as part of the Coronation ceremony. The majority of the items date back to the 1661 Coronation of King Charles II, with at least one item going back much further in history. This article will give some information about each of the items used in the ceremony – as well as links to some more detailed articles about some of them. We hope you enjoy learning about these magnificent pieces which so greatly define the history of the British monarchy.

The actual crowning of the Sovereign is the most sacred and important part of the Coronation service, and remains largely unchanged for hundreds of years. You can read more about the Coronation and order of service in our Royal Ceremonies section.

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The Coronation Chair and Stone of Scone

The Coronation Chair (without the Stone of Scone). photo: By Darkmaterial – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=127657004

The Coronation Chair (also known as St. Edward’s Chair or King Edward’s Chair) was commissioned by King Edward I in 1296 to hold the Stone of Scone, which he had seized from Scotland during the First Scottish War of Independence. It was first used for the Coronation of King Edward II in 1308, and has been used for every coronation since.

The Stone of Scone (also known as the Stone of Destiny or the Coronation Stone) is traditionally believed to have been part of the coronation ceremony for Scottish monarchs for centuries. Originally, the Coronation Chair simply surrounded the Stone, on which the Sovereign sat. In the 17th century, a wooden seat was added above the stone.

Read more about the Coronation Chair and Stone of Scone HERE!

The Ampulla and Coronation Spoon

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The formal crowning starts with the Sovereign being anointed by the Archbishop of Canterbury. The coronation oil, which was made and consecrated in Jerusalem. is kept in the Ampulla, and poured into the Coronation Spoon at the time of the Sovereign’s anointing. Both pieces are also used for the anointing of the Queen Consort.

The Ampulla takes the shape of a golden eagle, with its wings outspread. The head of the eagle screws off to allow the oil to be poured in. It then pours out through the eagle’s beak. Dating from the 1661 coronation of Charles II, the Ampulla is based on an earlier version, which was based upon a legend in which the Virgin Mary appeared to St. Thomas a Becket, presenting him with a golden eagle and a vial of oil to be used for the anointing of future Sovereigns.

The Coronation Spoon is perhaps the oldest item in the Coronation Regalia. Dating from at least 1349, it was recorded among St. Edward’s Regalia in the Abbey. While it is unknown when its use in the Coronation ceremony actually began, it has been used for every English and British Coronation since King James I in 1603. Unlike much of the old regalia which was melted down in 1649, the Spoon was sold off. Following the restoration, it was returned to King Charles II in 1661.

The Spurs

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Sovereign is first presented with the spurs, which symbolize knighthood. The use of spurs dates back to the coronation of Richard I in 1189. The current spurs were made in 1661, and altered slightly in 1820. Originally the spurs would have been attached to the Sovereign’s feet, but since 1661, they are simply presented and touched by the Sovereign, and then placed on the altar. The golden spurs have velvet-covered straps attached by buckles, with gold embroidery adorning them.

The Swords

(l-r) The Sword of Offering, The Sword of State, The Sword of Mercy. photo: Wikipedia

There are several swords carried in the Coronation procession, each representing a different aspect of the Sovereign’s role.

  • The Sword of Temporal Justice – symbolizing the Sovereign’s role as head of the Armed Forces
  • The Sword of Spiritual Justice – symbolizing the Sovereign’s role as Defender of the Faith
  • The Sword of Mercy (also known as the Curtana) – symbolizing the Sovereign’s mercy
  • The Sword of State – symbolizing the Sovereign’s Royal Authority
  • The Sword of Offering (also known as the Coronation sword)

During the ceremony, the Sword of State is presented to the Lord Chamberlain, and then placed in St. Edward’s Chapel (behind the Altar). In exchange, the Sword of Offering is brought forward and presented the sword to the Sovereign.

The Sword of Offering, 1821.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Sword of Offering was made for the 1821 coronation of King George IV. It features a blade of gilt steel, adorned with 2,141 diamonds, 12 emeralds and 4 rubies arranged for form roses, thistles and shamrocks. Each end of the cross-piece features a lion’s head, set in diamonds, with rubies for the eyes. Additional jewels form oak leaves and acorns.

The scabbard is leather encased in gold, lined with red silk velvet. It features roses, thistles and shamrocks – set in diamonds, rubies and emeralds – along with additional designs of oak leaves and acorns.

The Sword of Offering typically became the personal property of the Sovereign, and a new one made for each new reign. However, in 1902, George IV’s sword was used for the coronation of King Edward VII and became part of the Crown Jewels. It has been used for each coronation since.

The Armills

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Armills are wide gold bracelets which were traditionally placed on the Sovereign’s wrists. They are thought to represent the “bracelets of sincerity and wisdom” referenced in the wording of the coronation ceremony (although their original role and purpose in the coronation ceremony has long been unknown). The pair on the left in the photo above date back to 1661 are decorated in enamel, featuring the national emblems – roses, thistles, fleurs-de-lis and harps – and are lined in red velvet. This pair was used at every coronation through George VI in 1937. A new pair (on the right) were made for the 1953 coronation of Elizabeth II, as a gift from the Commonwealth. This pair is made of 22-carat gold, decorated with foliated scrolls, and hinged by a gold Tudor rose.  For the 2023 Coronation of King Charles III, the 1661 Armills were used, and were simply presented and touched by the King.

The Sovereign’s Orb

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Sovereign’s Orb, made in 1661, represents the Sovereign’s power and symbolizes the Christian world. The hollow gold sphere has several bands of pearls surrounding clusters of emeralds, rubies and sapphires, surrounded by diamonds. These bands divide the Orb into three sections – representing the three continents known in the medieval days. Atop the sphere is an octagonal amethyst, topped by a cross adorned with diamonds. The cross features an emerald in the center on one side, and a sapphire on the other, with pearls at the angles and points. It is placed in the Sovereign’s right hand by the Archbishop of Canterbury, before being returned to the altar.

The Sovereign’s Ring

The Sovereign’s Ring (left) and Queen Consort’s Ring (right) 1831.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Sovereign’s Ring (above, left) was placed on the fourth finger of the right hand. For the 2023 Coronation of King Charles III, the ring was merely presented and touched by the King.  The current Sovereign’s Ring dates back to the Coronation of King William IV in 1831. Previously, a new ring was made for each Sovereign, and remained in their personal collection. However, upon the death of Queen Adelaide (King William IV’s consort) in 1849, she left William IV’s ring, as well as her own Consort’s Ring, to Queen Victoria. Queen Victoria then left both rings, along with her own Coronation Ring (a slightly smaller version of King William IV’s) to the Crown upon her death in 1901. The Sovereign’s Ring has been used at the coronations of every British sovereign since Edward VII in 1902.

The Sovereign’s Ring, set in gold, features an octagonal sapphire overlaid with a cross of rubies, banded in gold. This is surrounded by 14 cushion-shaped diamonds, with two additional diamonds at the top of the band.

Read more about the Queen Consort’s Ring HERE!

The Sovereign’s Sceptre with Cross and Sovereign’s Sceptre with Dove

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Sovereign’s Sceptre with Cross symbolizes the Sovereign’s temporal role. Made for the 1661 Coronation of King Charles II, it is placed in the Sovereign’s right hand. At just over 3 feet in length and weighing about 2.6 pounds, the Sceptre with Cross is adorned with 333 diamonds, 31 rubies, 15 emeralds, 7 sapphires and 1 amethyst. It has been altered several times since its creation, most recently for the 1911 Coronation of King George V and Queen Mary, to include the Cullinan I diamond (also known as the Great Star of Africa). Weighing over 530 carats, the Cullinan I is the largest clear-cut diamond in the world. The Cullinan I features near the top of the sceptre, topped by the large amethyst surmounted by a cross pattée encrusted with an emerald and small diamonds.

Read more about the Cullinan diamond HERE!

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Sovereign’s Sceptre with Dove – also known as the Rod of Equity and Mercy – symbolizes the Sovereign’s spiritual role. Also made for the 1661 Coronation, it is placed in the Sovereign’s left hand. It is over 3-½ feet in length and weighs about 2.6 pounds, and is decorated with 285 gemstones, including 94 diamonds, 53 rubies, 10 emeralds, 4 sapphires, 3 spinels and bands of precious stones circling the rod. The top features a gold monde set with diamonds, topped by a plain cross with a white enameled dove with outspread wings – representing the Holy Ghost.

St. Edward’s Crown

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The most sacred item in the Coronation Regalia is St. Edward’s Crown, used for the physical crowning of the British Sovereign. It takes its name from the original medieval crown, claimed to have belonged to King Edward the Confessor (St. Edward) in the 11th century.

The current crown was made for the 1661 coronation of King Charles II, following the Restoration. It has been worn for the coronations of seven English and British Sovereigns:

  • King Charles II (1661)
  • King James II (1685)
  • King William III (1689)
  • King George V (1911)
  • King George VI (1937)
  • Queen Elizabeth II (1953)
  • King Charles III (2023)

In the most defining moment of the Coronation ceremony, St. Edward’s Crown is placed upon the head of the Sovereign by the Archbishop of Canterbury.  This is the only time that the crown is worn by the Sovereign.

Read more about St. Edward’s Crown HERE.

The Imperial State Crown

The Imperial State Crown, 1937.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Imperial State Crown is worn by the Sovereign during the procession out of Westminster Abbey after the Coronation service. There have been several versions of the crown made through the years, including Queen Victoria’s Crown which was made for her coronation in 1838, and used for the coronations of her two successors – King Edward VII in 1902, and KIng George V in 1911. The current Imperial State Crown was made for the 1937 Coronation of King George VI, and used for the coronations of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953, and King Charles III in 2023.

Unlike St. Edward’s Crown, which is only worn by the Sovereign at the coronation, the Imperial State Crown is traditionally used for two ceremonial events. It is traditionally worn by the Sovereign at the State Opening of Parliament, and it is traditionally placed upon a late Sovereign’s coffin during their lying-in-state and funeral (along with the Sovereign’s Orb and Sceptre.

Read more about The Imperial State Crown HERE!

The Queen Consort’s Regalia

Queen Mary’s Crown, 1911.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Following the crowning of the Sovereign, the Queen Consort is also crowned in a similar, but simpler, ceremony. Following her anointing – also using the Ampulla and Coronation Spoon – the Queen Consort is presented with the Queen Consort’s Ring.  She is then crowned with the Queen Consort’s Crown and presented with the Queen Consort’s Sceptre with Cross, and the Queen Consort’s Rod with Dove.

Read all about the Queen Consort’s Regalia HERE!

 

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

The Queen Consort’s Regalia

by Scott Mehl
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

Following the Homage paid to the King, the Queen Consort is also crowned in a similar, yet simpler, ceremony.  The Queen Consort is first anointed, using the same Ampulla and Coronation Spoon used for the King.  Following the anointing, the Queen Consort’s Ring is presented.  Traditionally, it is place on the 4th finger of the Queen Consort’s right hand.  However, for the 2023 Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla, the ring was merely presented and touched by the Queen Consort.  The Consort’s Crown is then placed on her head, followed by the presentation of the Queen Consort’s Sceptre with Cross and the Queen Consort’s Ivory Rod with Dove.  She then takes her place in the Throne Chair beside that of the Sovereign.

Queen Consort’s Ring

Sovereign’s Ring and Queen Consort’s Ring, 1831.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Traditionally, the Queen Consort is given a ring during her crowning ceremony.  The last Consort’s ring (pictured above on the right) was made in 1831 for the Coronation of King William IV and Queen Adelaide.  The ring consists of a large ruby, surrounded by 14 brilliant-cut diamonds, and an additional 14-rubies around the band.  This design mirrored the traditional design for a Consort’s ring.  Historically, the Sovereign’s and Consort’s rings remained in their personal collection, thus new rings would be made for each Coronation.  Following his death in 1837, King William IV left his coronation ring to his widow, Queen Adelaide, who in turn bequeathed both rings to Queen Victoria in 1849.  Upon her own death in 1901, Queen Victoria left both rings, as well as her own Coronation Ring, to the Crown.  Queen Adelaide’s Ring has been used by every subsequent Queen Consort – Queen Alexandra (1902), Queen Mary (1911), Queen Elizabeth (1937) and Queen Camilla (2023).

Queen Consort’s Crown

From 1685 through 1761, Queen Consorts were crowned with the State Crown of Mary of Modena, which was made for the Coronation of King James II and Mary of Modena.  In addition, it was also used by two Queens Regnant – Queen Mary II in 1689, and Queen Anne in 1702.  It was last used for the Coronation of King George II and Queen Caroline in 1727.  (Queen Charlotte used her own nuptial crown in 1761.)  Since then, a new crown has been made for each new Queen Consort – Queen Adelaide in 1831, Queen Alexandra in 1902, Queen Mary in 1911, and Queen Elizabeth in 1937.  However, Queen Camilla has chosen to be crowned using Queen Mary’s Crown, with some slight modifications.

The Crowns of Mary of Modena, Queen Adelaide, Queen Alexandra, Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth are all displayed with the Crown Jewels at the Tower of London.

The State Crown of Mary of Modena

State Crown of Mary of Modena, 1685.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Mary of Modena was the first Consort crowned following the Restoration, along with her husband, King James II, in 1685.  For the occasion, the Court Jewelers made this State Crown, a Coronation Crown (used for Mary’s actual crowning ceremony), and a Diadem which Mary wore in her procession into Westminster Abbey.  Mary’s State Crown and Coronation Crown were both used by Queen Mary II (1689) and Queen Anne (1702).

Mary’s State Crown, pictured above, was originally set with diamonds which were rented for the occasion.  The band supports four fleurs-de-lis and four crosses pattée atop a smaller band of diamonds.  It is set with four half-arches – each adorned with a central row of pearls, blanked on both sides by a row of rose-cut diamonds.  Atop the arches is a pavé-set monde and a cross pattée, with pearls on each of the top three points.  It is fitted with a purple cap of velvet and ermine band.

Following the coronation, the jewels were replaced with quartzes.  They were temporarily replaced again with real diamonds for the later coronations of Queen Mary II (1689), Queen Anne (1702), and Queen Caroline (1727).

Mary’s Coronation Crown (seen in the photo below) is not part of the Crown Jewels, but is owned by the Museum of London.

Embed from Getty Images

 

Queen Adelaide’s Crown

Queen Adelaide’s Crown, 1831, lithograph. source: Wikipedia

After King WIlliam IV came to the throne in 1830, it was decided that Mary of Modena’s State Crown was too fragile and theatrical.  Thus, a new crown was made for Queen Adelaide. The Queen, who disliked the practice of renting jewels for the various crowns, instead had diamonds from her own collection used to adorn the new crown made for her.  The new crown kept with the British tradition of having four half-arches, surmounted by a monde and a cross pattée.  It was fitted with a purple cap of velvet and ermine band.  Following the coronation, the jewels were removed, and it was never used again.  The empty frame is displayed at the Tower of London.

Adelaide’s decision to have a new crown made became a precedent in the British Royal Family. For the next 106 years, a new crown was created for each Queen Consort – Alexandra (1902), Mary (1911) and Elizabeth (1937).

Queen Alexandra’s Crown

Queen Alexandra’s Crown, 1902. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

With the last Queen Consort crowned 71 years earlier, when King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra came to the throne in 1901, it was decided that a new crown would be created for the crowning of Queen Alexandra.  The new crown was more in the style of European royal crowns (perhaps a nod to Alexandra’s Danish background), less upright and with an unprecedented 8 half-arches, which were detachable.  But it retained much of the traditional elements – the band supporting four fleurs-de-lis and four crosses pattée, with the arches supporting a jeweled monde and another cross pattée.  Queen Alexandra’s Crown was the first to include the Koh-i-Noor Diamond, sent prominently on the front of the crown.  The Koh-i-Noor had been presented to Queen Victoria in 1856, and was later used in the Crowns of Queen Mary (1911) and Queen Elizabeth (1937).  Today, the diamond is controversial, with several countries laying claim to its ownership.  The Crown is fitted with a purple cap of velvet and ermine band.

Queen Mary’s Crown

Queen Mary’s Crown, 1911. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Queen Mary’s Crown was created for the 1911 Coronation of King George V and Queen Mary.  Queen Mary had the crown designed by Garrard & Co., paying for it with her own money, and the hope/intent that it would become the crown used by all future Queen Consorts.  Its design varied from the traditional style, with 8 half-arches instead of four (just as Queen Alexandra’s Crown was designed).  At 25cm (9.8 inches) tall, and weighing 590g (1.30 lbs), the crown featured about 2,200 diamonds, including the Koh-i-Noor Diamond, the Cullinan III and Cullinan IV.  In 1914, the Cullinan jewels – the personal property of Queen Mary – were removed and replaced with glass, and the arches were made detachable, allowing the Crown to be worn as a circlet.  Queen Mary wore the circlet often, including for the 1937 Coronation of her son, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.  For this occasion, the Cullinan V was added to the crown, set on the back of the band.  The Crown is fitted with a purple cap of velvet and ermine band.  (Read more about the various Cullinan diamonds HERE.)

In the photo above, the large stone on the front is the Koh-i-Noor, with the Cullinan IV set just below it.  The Cullinan III is set at the top of the crown.

Queen Elizabeth’s Crown

Queen Elizabeth’s Crown, 1937. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Queen Elizabeth’s Crown was created by Garrard & Co. for the 1937 Coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (later The Queen Mother).  It was modeled on the Crown of Queen Mary, however it reverted to the more traditional 4 half-arches instead of 8.  Like the previous crowns of Queen Alexandra and Queen Mary, the arches are detachable, allowing for the crown to be worn as a circlet.  Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother wore the crown in its circlet form at the coronation of her daughter, Queen Elizabeth II, in 1953.  The Crown was adorned with about 2,800 diamonds, including the Koh-i-Noor Diamond, and a replica of the Lahore Diamond.  The Crown is fitted with a purple cap of velvet and ermine band.  Most recently, in 2002, the Crown – in its full form – was placed upon the Queen Mother’s coffin during her lying-in-state and funeral.

Queen Camilla’s Crown

Queen Camilla has chosen to use Queen Mary’s Crown, created for the 1911 Coronation of King George V and Queen Mary.  In February 2023, the Crown was removed from the Tower of London, to undergo some minor modifications for the upcoming Coronation.  The original eight half-arches have been reduced to four, and the Koh-i-Noor Diamond is not featured.

The crown features several jewels from the personal collection of the late Queen Elizabeth II, which had also been used by Queen Mary.  The Cullinan III, Cullinan IV and Cullinan V  will be prominently featured on the crown.  Originally part of Queen Mary’s private collection, she left them to Queen Elizabeth II upon her death in 1953.  They are now in the personal collection of King Charles III.

The Queen Consort’s Sceptre with Cross and Ivory Rod with Dove

During the crowning of the Queen Consort, she is also handed two sceptres – smaller versions of those presented to the Sovereign.  Both of these were made for the 1685 Coronation of King James II and Mary of Modena.

Queen Consort’s Sceptre with Cross, 1685. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Queen Consort’s Sceptre with Cross – traditionally placed in the right hand after she is crowned – is made of gold adorned with table- and rose-cut quartzes.  The top features a monde sitting in a base of quartz-set petals representing a fleur-de-lis, and is topped with a jeweled cross.

Queen Consort’s Ivory Rod with Dove, 1685. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Ivory Rod with Dove – traditionally placed in the left hand after she is crowned – is made of ivory, topped by a gold monde which features the national emblems (rose, thistle, harp and fleur-de-lis) in enamel.  Atop the monde is a cross with an enameled dove with its wings folded.

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Imperial State Crown

by Scott Mehl
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Imperial State Crown is worn by the Sovereign to depart Westminster Abbey after the Coronation service. It is also traditionally worn for the State Opening of Parliament, and placed atop a late Sovereign’s coffin at their lying-in-state and funeral (along with the Orb and Sceptre).

The empty frame of Queen Victoria’s Imperial State Crown, 1838. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Following the Restoration, a new Imperial State Crown had to be made for King Charles II. Since then, there have been numerous versions of the crown. Queen Victoria’s Crown, made for her coronation in 1838, was also used for the coronations of King Edward VII (1902) and King George V (1911). The photo above shows the frame of Queen Victoria’s Crown, with the jewels removed, as well as the monde and cross which would have sat atop the arches. The current Imperial State Crown was made for the 1937 coronation of King George VI, and was modified slightly for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II (1953), with the arches lowered to give a more feminine appearance. It was modified once again for the coronation of King Charles III (2023).

The back of the Imperial State Crown. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Designed by Garrard & Co., the Imperial State Crown contains over 3,100 jewels and precious stones, including 2,868 diamonds, 273 pearls, 17 sapphires, 11 emeralds and 5 rubies. Some of the notable jewels in the crown are:

Cullinan II and Black Prince’s Ruby

close-up view of the Cullinan II and Black Prince’s Ruby on the front of the Imperial State Crown.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Cullinan II – often called the Second Star of Africa – is mounted on the front of the crown’s band, beneath the Black Prince’s Ruby. At 317.4 carats, it is one of the largest clear-cut diamonds in the world. It is cut from the famed Cullinan Diamond, which originally weighed 3,105 carats and was given to King Edward VII in 1907. (Read more about the Cullinan Diamond and it’s various stones HERE)

The 170 carat Black Prince’s Ruby (actually a spinel) is mounted on a cross patté on the front of the crown, just above the Cullinan II. According to legend, the stone was given to Edward, Prince of Wales (known as the Black Prince) in 1367 by King Pedro of Castile. It was later worn by King Henry V in his helmet at the Battle of Agincourt. A hole was drilled into the stone at some point, probably to allow the stone to be worn as a pendant. It was later filled with a small ruby. The stone was set in Queen Victoria’s Imperial State Crown (1838) and then in the same place on the current Imperial State Crown.

The Stuart Sapphire

close-up view of the Stuart Sapphire on the back of the Imperial State Crown. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The 104 carat Stuart Sapphire is mounted on the back of the crown’s band. It most likely belonged to King Charles II, and left England with James II fled to France after the Glorious Revolution. James II passed the stone to his son, James Stuart, who in turn bequeathed it to his own son, Henry Benedict – later Cardinal York. The sapphire, along with other Stuart relics, were sold, and later purchased by King George III in 1807, and returned to Britain.

It was set in the front of Queen Victoria’s Imperial State Crown (1838), just beneath the Black Prince’s Ruby. However, it was later moved to the back of the crown, to make way for the newly acquired Cullinan II in 1909. It maintains the same position in the current Imperial State Crown.

St. Edward’s Sapphire

close-up view of St. Edward’s Sapphire, mounted in the cross at the top of the Imperial State Crown. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

St. Edward’s Sapphire, an octagonal rose-cut sapphire, is mounted in the center of the cross patté at the top of the crown. It is alleged to have originally been in the coronation ring of Edward the Confessor (later St. Edward), and taken from the ring when Edward’s remains were reinterred in Westminster Abbey in 1163. Since at least 1838, the Sapphire has been set in the Imperial State Crown – first in Queen Victoria’s 1838 crown, and then in the current crown.

Queen Elizabeth I’s Pearls

Queen Elizabeth’s Pearls, beneath the monde on the Imperial State Crown. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The four large pearls, suspended just beneath the monde, are often referred to as Queen Elizabeth’s earrings. Catherine de Medici received several pearls from Pope Clement VII upon her marriage to King Henri II of France in 1553. They were left to her daughter-in-law, Mary, Queen of Scots, and then sold to, or acquired, by Queen Elizabeth I. Despite the legend, it is most likely that the pearls are from a later period, as at least two of them did not enter the Royal Collection until the 19th century.

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St. Edward’s Crown

by Scott Mehl
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

St. Edward’s Crown is considered to be the most important piece of the British regalia, used only for the crowning of the Sovereign. The original medieval crown, claimed to have belonged to King Edward the Confessor (St. Edward) from the 11th century, had been destroyed or melted down in 1649 following the overthrow of the monarchy. After the Restoration, a new crown – designed very similarly to the original relic – was made in 1661 for the coronation of King Charles II.

The band, bordered in gold beads, is adorned with sixteen clusters, each set with a rectangular or octagonal stone, surrounded by topazes and aquamarines. Supported by the band are four crosses pattée and four fleurs-de-lis, all bejeweled. Four half-arches form the top of the crown, topped with a jeweled gold monde supporting a cross pattée.

Until 1911, the jewels used in the crown were rented or borrowed for the ceremony and then returned to the jewelers. However, for the coronation of King George V in 1911, the crown was permanently set with jewels which remain to this day.

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Prior to the 2023 Coronation of King Charles III, the last time St. Edward’s Crown was seen publicly was at a service at Westminster Abbey in June 2013, celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. This was the first time the Crown had left the Tower of London since The Queen’s Coronation in 1953.

Despite the intent that it be the coronation crown for all future sovereigns, it was only used three times – King Charles II (1661), King James II (1685) and King William III (1689) before it was deemed too heavy. Beginning with Queen Anne (1702), St. Edward’s Crown was instead included in the procession into Westminster Abbey and placed on the altar (with the exception of Queen Victoria’s Coronation in 1838, when St. Edward’s Crown was not used at all). It would be 209 years before it returned to use, at the coronation of King George V in 1911.

Crown of George I, 1714. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

In the interim, several other crowns were used. Both Queen Mary II and Queen Anne chose smaller diamond crowns of their own. Kings George I (1714), George II (1727), George III (1761), and William IV (1831) all used the State Crown of George I, made for his coronation in 1714. King George IV (1821) had a new crown made for his Coronation. Queen Victoria (1838) chose to be crowned with her new Imperial State Crown, which was also used by her son, King Edward VII in 1902. It was King George V (1911) who brought St. Edward’s Crown back to the Coronation ceremony, and it has been used ever since.

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The Cullinan Diamond

by Scott Mehl
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

The nine primary stones cut from the Cullinan Diamond.  (top – II, I, III; bottom – VIII, VI, IV, V, VII, IX)
photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Cullinan Diamond, found in 1905, was the largest gem-quality rough diamond ever discovered, weighing 3,106 carats. It was found on January 26, 1905 at the Premier No. 2 mine in Cullinan, South Africa (then the Transvaal Colony).

The large stone went on display in Johannesburg shortly after it was found, and then in April 1905, it was sent to the company’s London sales agent to be put up for sale. Despite much interest, the stone was never sold.

The Transvaal Prime Minister, Louis Botha, brought up the idea of buying the stone and gifting it to King Edward VII. At first, the King was advised to decline the offer, but later was persuaded by Winston Churchill – then the Colonial Under-Secretary – to accept it. The Transvaal government purchased the stone in October 1907 for £150,000.

The rough diamond was presented to King Edward VII at Sandringham House on November 9, 1907 – the king’s 66th birthday. It was promptly announced that the King was accepting the gift “for myself and my successors”, and that “this great and unique diamond be kept and preserved among the historic jewels which form the heirlooms of the Crown”.

Mr. Asscher using the hammer for the first operation on the Cullinan Diamond, February 1908. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Joseph Asscher & Co. in Amsterdam, was chosen to cut the large stone into the brilliant diamond we see today. After several weeks of planning, the first cut was made on February 10, 1908. However, it would be another eight months before the process was completed. The result was nine larger stones – totally 1,055.89 carats – as well as 96 brilliants and some unpolished fragments. Each of the nine larger stones were assigned a number – I through IX.

Cullinan I and II were given back to King Edward VII, and they became part of the Crown Jewels. Cullinan I was set in the Sceptre, and Cullinan II set in the Imperial State Crown. The remaining 7 stones (along with the brilliants and fragments) remained with Mr. Asscher as payment for his services. However, King Edward personally purchased the Cullinan VI as a gift for his wife, Queen Alexandra, that same year.

In 1910, after Edward VII died, the South African government purchased the remaining stones and presented them to Queen Mary, who quickly had them put in various settings which she used for the rest of her life. Unlike Cullinan I and II, the rest of the jewels were part of the Queen’s personal collection. Upon her death in 1953, she left them to her granddaughter, Queen Elizabeth II. They were then inherited by King Charles III in 2022.

CULLINAN I

Cullinan I, set in the sceptre.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Cullinan I – known as the Great Star of Africa – is part of the Crown Jewels, set in the top of the Sovereign’s Sceptre with Cross. At 530.2 carats, this pear-shaped diamond is the largest clear cut diamond in the world. It was set in the sceptre in 1910, and first used for the 1911 coronation of King George V and Queen Mary. The stone is removable, and Queen Mary often wore the Cullinan I suspended from the Cullinan II as a brooch.

CULLINAN II

Cullinan II, set in the Imperial State Crown.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Cullinan II – known as the Second Star of Africa – is part of the Crown Jewels, set in the front of the Imperial State Crown. It weighs 317.4 carats, and is a cushion cut. As with most of the jewels, it can be removed from the crown, and was worn often by Queen Mary as a brooch, with the Cullinan I suspended from it.

CULLINAN III and CULLINAN IV

Cullinan III suspended from Cullinan IV.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Cullinan III and Cullinan IV were first used in Queen Mary’s Crown for the 1911 coronation. Cullinan III is a 94.4 carat pear-shaped diamond, and was set in the cross pattée at the top of the crown. Cullinan IV is a 63.6 carat square-cut diamond, and was set in the front band of the crown, just beneath the Koh-i-Noor Diamond.

In 1914, both were removed from Queen Mary’s Crown and replaced with glass replicas. From that time until her death in 1953, Queen Mary often wore them paired together as a brooch, as seen in the photo above.

Queen Elizabeth II first wore the brooch in 1958 for a visit to the Asscher Diamond Company while on a State Visit to the Netherlands. In a touching gesture – and understanding the magnificence of the jewels – The Queen even removed the brooch to allow Louis Asscher (the 84-year old nephew of Joseph Asscher) to see and touch the stones 51 years after they’d first been cut.

The late Queen continued to wear the brooch, especially at important events and occasions, such as her Diamond Jubilee in 2012.

CULLINAN V

Cullinan V. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Cullinan V is an 18.8 carat heart-shaped diamond, set in a platinum brooch. It formed part of the stomacher that Queen Mary had made to wear at the Delhi Durbar in 1911. Although typically worn alone, it can also be combined with Cullinan VII or Cullinan VIII. For the 1937 coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mary had the Cullinan V added to her crown, which she wore without the arches or velvet cap. As a nod toward both Queen Mary and the late Queen Elizabeth II, the Cullinan V is again being added to Queen Mary’s Crown which is being used by Queen Camilla for the 2023 coronation.

CULLINAN VI

Cullinan VI suspended from Cullinan VIII.  photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Cullinan VI is an 11.5 carat marquise-cut diamond which was purchased by King Edward VII in 1908, as a gift for his wife, Queen Alexandra. Queen Mary inherited the stone in 1925, and since then it is typically worn suspended from the Cullinan VIII brooch, as seen above.

CULLINAN VII

Cullinan VII, as part of the Delhi Durbar Neclace. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The Cullinan VII is an 8.8 carat marquise-cut stone which is part of the Delhi Durbar Necklace, created in 1911. The stone is set as a pendant on the necklace, on a detachable chain of ten graduated brilliants.

CULLINAN VIII

The Cullinan VIII is a 6.8 carat emerald-cut stone set in a platinum brooch, very similar to the Cullinan V. Like the Cullinan V, the Cullinan VIII brooch was part of Queen Mary’s stomacher for the 1911 Delhi Durbar. Today it is typically worn with Cullinan VI suspended as a pendant (as seen in the photo above with Cullinan VI).

CULLINAN IX

The Cullinan IX Ring. photo: Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

The smallest of the nine stones from the Cullinan Diamond, the Cullinan IX is 4.39 carats. In a stepped pear-shape cut, the stone is set in a platinum ring – known as the Cullinan IX Ring. Along with the Cullinan VII, this stone appears to have remained in its original setting and use since 1910.

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The Coronation Chair and Stone of Scone

by Scott Mehl
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

The Coronation Chair (without the Stone of Scone), 2023. photo: By Darkmaterial – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=127657004

The Coronation Chair

The Coronation Chair (also known as St. Edward’s Chair) was commissioned by King Edward I in 1296 to hold the Stone of Scone, which he had seized from Scotland during the First Scottish War of Independence. It was first used for the Coronation of King Edward II and 1308, and has been used for the coronation of every English and British Sovereign since, with one exception. At the joint Coronation of King William III and Queen Mary II in 1689, King William was crowned in the Coronation Chair, while Queen Mary was crowned in a copy of the chair, made specifically for the occasion. (Queen Mary II’s Chair is also displayed at the Abbey, in the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Galleries.)

Traditionally, the Sovereign only uses the chair once – during their Coronation. However, there has been at least one exception. At a service celebrating her Golden Jubilee in 1887, Queen Victoria was once again seated in the Coronation Chair. For the occasion, the chair was given a dark coat of varnish, which was later painstakingly removed.

Originally, the Chair was gilded, painted and inlaid with glass mosaics, but today only small traces of those details remain. For many years, the Chair was kept in St. Edward’s Shrine in Westminster Abbey, where people were able to see and touch it. Through the years, tourists have tried to take small pieces of the chair, and choirboys from the Abbey often carved their initials and other graffiti into it. Much of that graffiti remains. Today, the Coronation Chair sits on a plinth – behind glass – in St. George’s Chapel, located in the nave of Westminster Abbey, where it is highly protected from being touched or damaged by the thousands of tourists who see it each year.

Through the years, it has undergone much preservation and restoration. A June 1914 bombing broke off part of the chair, which was quickly restored. From 2010-2012, the Chair underwent an extensive restoration, while in full-view of the public. And in 2023, it once again underwent an extensive restoration and conservation program in preparation for the Coronation of King Charles III.

The Coronation Chair has only left Westminster Abbey twice in its long history. The first time – in December 1653 – it was taken to Westminster Hall for the ceremony inducting Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector. The second time – in August 1939 – it was taken to Gloucester Cathedral for the duration of World War II. (Queen Mary II’s Coronation Chair was taken to Winchester Cathedral.)

The Stone of Scone in the Coronation Chair, c1875-1885. photo: Wikipedia

The Stone of Scone

The Stone of Scone – also known as the Scone of Destiny – is a large block of red sandstone, weighing about 335 pounds, which was used for centuries in the coronation ceremonies of the Sovereigns of Scotland. Its history is steeped in legend. One claims the stone is Stone of Jacob – on which Jacob rested his head (Genesis 28:10-22). Another has its origins in Ireland, from where it was brought to Scotland by Fergus I – the first King of the Scots. However, geological studies have proven the stone was quarried in the area of Scone, challenging many of the legends. What is known is that the Stone was brought to Scone Abbey in 841 and was used for Scottish coronations for hundreds of years.

During the First War of Independence in 1296, the Stone was seized by King Edward I of England, who brought the stone to Westminster Abbey. He then had the Coronation Chair made to house the stone. It has been used for every English and British coronation since at 1308.

During World War II, the Stone was hidden away in a buried vault beneath the Abbey, while the Coronation Chair was moved to Gloucester Cathedral. On Christmas Day 1950, a group of Scottish Nationalists stole the Stone from its display in the Abbey. It was recovered 4 months later, and returned to the Abbey, being locked away in the WWII vault. It returned to the Coronation Chair in February 1952, after extensive security measures had been put in place to ensure its safety.

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In 1996, British Prime Minister John Major announced that the Stone of Scone would be returned to Scotland to be displayed at Edinburgh Castle, with the provision that it would return to the Abbey for future coronations. On November 13, 1996, the Stone was removed from the Coronation Chair and placed in the Lantern of the Abbey. The following morning – under heavy police escort – the Stone of Scone made its journey back to Scotland. An official handover ceremony was held at Edinburgh Castle on November 30, 1996. The Duke of York represented Queen Elizabeth II at the ceremony, personally handing over the Royal Warrant which transferred the stone to the Commissioners for the Regalia. In 2020, it was announced that the Stone of Scone will be moved to the new Perth Museum, set in the former Perth City Hall, which is slated to open in 2024.

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History of the Coronation of English and British Queen Consorts

by Susan Flantzer
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

Queen Consort Camilla will be crowned with Queen Mary’s Crown, 1911 Credit – Royal Collection Trust / © His Majesty King Charles III 2023

Check out all our British coronation articles at the link below:

A queen consort is the wife of a reigning king. She shares her husband’s rank and status and holds the feminine equivalent of the king’s titles but does not share the king’s political powers. In the United Kingdom, a Queen Consort is styled Her Majesty Queen <first name>. A Queen Regnant is a female sovereign, equivalent in rank to a king, who reigns in her own right, such as Queen Victoria or Queen Elizabeth II.

Twenty-eight queen consorts have been crowned in Westminster Abbey since the Norman Conquest in 1066. A number of queen consorts were not crowned with their husbands but were crowned in a separate coronation ceremony. The reasons vary from not being married when their husbands became king, not being in England at the time, pregnancy, and illness. Eight queen consorts were never crowned. Margaret of France, the second wife of King Edward I, was never crowned, making her the first queen consort since the Norman Conquest in 1066 not to be crowned. King Henry VIII apparently did not feel the need to have his last four wives crowned. Three of them were queens for a short time: Jane Seymour (15 months, died), Anne of Cleves (7 months, divorced),  Catherine Howard (16 months, beheaded). Henry VIII’s last wife Catherine Parr (survived) was queen for a bit longer, 2 ½ years. Henrietta Maria of France, wife of King Charles I, and Catherine of Braganza, wife of King Charles II, were not crowned because they were Roman Catholic and did not want to participate in a Church of England ceremony. King George IV’s estranged wife Caroline of Brunswick was prevented from being crowned with him. When she showed up at Westminster Abbey on the day of the coronation, she was turned away.

Unless otherwise noted, all pictures, portraits, and photos are from Wikipedia.

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Matilda of Flanders, Queen of England

Statue of Matilda of Flanders in the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris, France

Matilda’s husband was the illegitimate child of Robert I the Magnificent, Duke of Normandy and his mistress Herleva of Falaise, and got his crown by conquest. Matilda brought a much-needed royal pedigree into her marriage that gave her husband more credibility. She was a direct descendant of the Anglo-Saxon king, Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, and was the maternal granddaughter of King Robert II of France. Matilda’s father was the powerful Baldwin V, Count of Flanders. The liturgy for Matilda’s coronation stressed her power as a queen and that she had been chosen by God for the position. It further stressed that Matilda shared her husband’s royal authority and that this authority and her virtues were a blessing sent to those she now ruled.

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Matilda of Scotland, Queen of England

Edith of Scotland and King Henry I were married on November 11, 1100, at Westminster Abbey. Following the wedding ceremony, Edith was crowned Queen of England and took the regnal name Matilda in honor of Henry’s deceased mother Matilda of Flanders.

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Adeliza of Louvain, Queen of England

King Henry’s wife Matilda of Scotland had died in 1118 and he was in need of a male heir, so a second marriage became a necessity. King Henry I of England, aged 53, married the 18-year-old Adeliza of Louvain on January 24, 1121, at Windsor Castle in Windsor, England. Adeliza was crowned a week after the wedding but she did not provide her husband with an heir.

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Matilda of Boulogne, Countess of Boulogne, Queen of England

Matilda was Countess of Boulange in her own right.  On December 1, 1135, King Henry I of England died. Henry I’s nephew Stephen of Blois, quickly crossed from Boulogne to England, accompanied by his military household. With the help of his brother, Henry of Blois who was Bishop of Winchester, Stephen seized power in England and was crowned king on December 22, 1135. Matilda was unable to accompany her husband because she was pregnant, so she was crowned on Easter Day, March 22, 1136.

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Eleanor, Duchess of Aquitaine, Queen of England

Eleanor was Duchess of Aquitaine in her own right. With the accession of her husband as King Henry II, England had its first undisputed king for over a century. Traveling from his French possessions (Henry was also Duke of Normandy, Count of Anjou, Count of Maine, and Count of Nantes), Henry II arrived in England on December 8, 1154. He immediately took the oaths of loyalty from the barons, Eleven days later, Henry and his very pregnant wife Eleanor were crowned at Westminster Abbey.

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Berengaria of Navarre, Queen of England

Berengaria and King Richard I were to have married in Sicily, but Richard postponed the wedding and set off for the Holy Land along with Berengaria and his widowed sister Joan, Queen of Sicily who were on a separate ship. Two days after setting sail, Richard’s fleet was hit by a strong storm. Several ships were lost and others were way off course. Richard landed safely in Crete, but the ship Berengaria and Joan were on was marooned near Cyprus. Berengaria and Joan were about to be captured by the ruler of Cyprus when Richard’s ships rescued them. On May 12, 1191, King Richard I of England married Berengaria at the Chapel of St George in Limassol, Cyprus, and after the wedding ceremony, Berengaria was crowned Queen of England. Then Richard, his new wife Berengaria, and his widowed sister Joan, Queen of Sicily accompanied Richard throughout the Crusade.

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Isabella, Duchess of Angoulême, Queen of England

Isabella was Duchess of Angoulême in her own right. She was crowned two months after she married King John.

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Eleanor of Provence, Queen of England

Eleanor and her four sisters all made excellent marriages and were all queens via these marriages. On January 14, 1236, King Henry III and Eleanor were married at Canterbury Cathedral in Canterbury, England. They then immediately traveled to London where Eleanor was crowned six days later. Following Eleanor’s coronation, a magnificent banquet was held with the entire English nobility attending.

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Eleanor of Castile, Queen of England

In 1270, Edward, then the heir to the throne, had gone off on the Crusades accompanied by his wife Eleanor of Castile, and at the time of his father’s death in 1272, he was in Sicily making his slow way back to England. The new King Edward I thought England was safe under his mother’s regency and a royal council, so he did not hurry back to England. On his way back to England, King Edward I visited Pope Gregory X in Rome and King Philip III of France in Paris and suppressed a rebellion in Gascony. He finally arrived back in his kingdom on August 2, 1274. On August 19, 1274, King Edward I and his wife Eleanor were crowned at Westminster Abbey.

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Margaret of France, Queen of England

Statue of Margaret of France, Queen of England at Lincoln Cathedral

Margaret was the first uncrowned Queen Consort since the Norman Conquest. She was not crowned because of financial constraints. However, not being crowned did not affect her status as Queen Consort. She even appeared publicly wearing a crown even though she had not received one during a formal coronation

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Isabella of France, Queen of England

King Edward II decided to delay his coronation until after his marriage. After he married Isabella of France on January 25, 1308, at Boulogne Cathedral in France, the newlyweds returned to England in February, where Edward II ordered Westminster Palace to be lavishly decorated for their coronation celebrations. Henry Woodlock, Bishop of Winchester was the officiant at the coronation, organized by Piers Gaveston, Edward II’s favorite. Woodlock had received a special commission from the exiled Robert Winchelsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, who was an opponent of King Edward II. English and French nobles attended the magnificent ceremony and the celebrations which followed. However, the celebrations were disrupted by the large crowds of eager spectators who surged into the palace, knocking down a wall, and forcing Edward II to flee for his safety.

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Philippa of Hainault, Queen of England

Isabella of Hainault’s coronation

Philippa married King Edward III on January 24, 1328, but her coronation was delayed for two years because her mother-in-law did not want to give up her status as first lady of the land. Philippa was crowned on February 18, 1330, at Westminster Abbey, when she was almost five months pregnant with her first child.

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Anne of Bohemia, Queen of England

Richard II with his wife Anne of Bohemia

Anne of Bohemia was crowned on January 22, 1382, two days after her wedding to King Richard II. Tournaments were held for several days after the wedding and Anne’s coronation in celebration. Anne and Richard II then made a tour of England staying at many major abbeys as they traveled.

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Isabella of Valois, Queen of England

Richard II of England receiving his seven-year-old bride Isabella of Valois from her father Charles VI of France

On November 1, 1396, at the Church of St. Nicholas in Calais, then possession of England, now in France, the nearly seven-year-old Isabella married 29-year-old Richard. Richard and Isabella left for England a few days later and on November 23, 1396, she made her state entry into London. The crowds in London were so great, that people were crushed to death on London Bridge. Isabella was crowned at Westminster Abbey on January 8, 1397. Due to Isabella’s young age and Richard II’s death (murder?) in 1400, the marriage was never consummated. Isabella married her cousin Charles of Orléans in Compiègne, France on June 29, 1406. At the age of 19, Isabella died on September 13, 1409, a few hours after giving birth to her only child, a daughter named Joan.

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Joan of Navarre, Queen of England

Tomb of Joan of Navarre and her husband King Henry IV in Canterbury Cathedral; Credit: © Susan Flantzer

In 1398, on a visit to France, to the court of Brittany, Henry met his future second wife Joan of Navarre, the widow of Jean V, Duke of Brittany. Joan of Navarre had not forgotten Henry. Apparently, Henry had made a good impression on her and she became determined to marry him if the opportunity should arise. In 1402, after Joan’s son came of age and could rule Brittany on his own, she sent an emissary to England to arrange a marriage with King Henry IV. Henry was agreeable to the marriage and a proxy marriage was held on April 3, 1402, with Joan’s emissary standing in for the bride. Joan left France for England in January of 1403 with her two youngest daughters and then traveled to Winchester where Henry met her and they were married at Winchester Cathedral on February 7, 1403. They then traveled to London where Joan’s coronation was held at Westminster Abbey on February 26, 1403.

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Catherine of Valois, Queen of England

On June 2, 1420, Catherine married King Henry V at Troyes Cathedral in France. The marriage was the result of a peace treaty between England and France during the Hundred Years’ War.  Despite the peace treaty, fighting still continued and Catherine spent the first few months of her marriage accompanying Henry from battle to battle. Eventually, the couple returned to England, and Catherine was crowned Queen of England at Westminster Abbey on February 23, 1421. Their marriage was short. King Henry V died from dysentery, a disease that killed more soldiers than battle, on August 31, 1422, at the age of 35, leaving a nine-month-old son he had never seen to inherit his throne as King Henry VI.

Catherine has another footnote in royal history, one that made her the ancestor of all British monarchs since King Henry VIII and many other European royal families, past and present. With Catherine being a young widow and with apparently no chance of remarriage, it should not seem unusual that an amorous relationship would be likely. Owen ap Maredudd ap Tudor, a Welsh soldier and courtier, served in Catherine’s household and they began a relationship. There is much debate as to whether Catherine and Owen married. They had at least four children including Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond who married Lady Margaret Beaufort, a descendant of King Edward III of England. Edmund Tudor and Lady Margaret Beaufort had one son Henry Tudor, the future King Henry VII, the first monarch of the House of Tudor.

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Margaret of Anjou, Queen of England

King Henry VI lacked any kind of administrative skills which left him open to the machinations of his advisers. When it was time for him to marry, his advisers persuaded Henry that the way to achieve peace with France was to marry Margaret of Anjou, the niece of King Charles VII of France. The couple was married at Titchfield Abbey in England on April 23, 1445. Margaret was crowned Queen Consort of England on May 30, 1445, at Westminster Abbey. She was to prove as strong as Henry was weak. Margaret was a leading figure on the Lancastrian side in the Wars of the Roses and was known for her courage and ambition. After defeat by the Yorkist Edward IV in 1471 and the deaths of her husband and son, she returned to France, dying in poverty

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Elizabeth Woodville, Queen of England

The widow of Sir John Grey of Groby (Elizabeth and her first husband are the great-great-grandparents of the ill-fated Lady Jane Grey), Elizabeth first came to the attention of King Edward IV when she petitioned him for the restoration of her husband’s forfeited land. Traditionally, the wedding is said to have taken place at Elizabeth’s family home in Northamptonshire on May 1, 1464. Elizabeth was crowned queen in Westminster Abbey on May 26, 1465.

After the death of her husband in 1483, Elizabeth remained influential even after her son, briefly King Edward V of England, was deposed by her brother-in-law King Richard III.  Elizabeth’s sons, the deposed King Edward V and Richard Duke of York – the Princes in the Tower – disappeared and their fate is unknown. Elizabeth played an important role in securing the accession of Henry VII, the first Tudor king, who married Elizabeth’s eldest daughter Elizabeth of York. Through her daughter, Elizabeth Woodville was the grandmother of King Henry VIII.

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Anne Neville, Queen of England

Anne’s father, known as “the Kingmaker,” was one of the major players in the Wars of the Roses, originally on the Yorkist side but later switching to the Lancastrian side.  Both Anne’s parents were descendants of King Edward III of England. Anne’s husband Richard, Duke of Gloucester, the brother of King Edward IV, deposed his nephew King Edward V. Richard and Anne’s coronation occurred on July 6, 1483, just ten days after Richard III’s accession. The day before the coronation, Richard and Anne rode in procession from the Tower of London to the Palace of Westminster. On their coronation day, King Richard III and Queen Anne walked barefoot on a red carpet to Westminster Abbey. Queen Anne’s train was carried by Lady Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond and Derby whose son would become King Henry VII after King Richard III lost his crown and his life at the Battle of Bosworth Field, just five months after Anne’s death.

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Elizabeth of York, Queen of England

Elizabeth of York holds a unique position in British royal history. She was the daughter of King Edward IV, the sister of King Edward V, the niece of King Richard III, the wife of King Henry VII, the mother of King Henry VIII, and the grandmother of King Edward VIQueen Mary I and Queen Elizabeth I. Her great-granddaughter was Mary, Queen of Scots whose son, King James VI of Scotland, succeeded Queen Elizabeth I as King James I of England. Through this line, the British royal family and other European royal families can trace their descent from Elizabeth of York.

On August 22, 1485, Henry Tudor defeated King Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field and became King Henry VII, the first Tudor king of England. Elizabeth of York and Henry Tudor married on January 18, 1486, at the Palace of Westminster. Elizabeth was crowned Queen Consort of England on November 25, 1487 at Westminster Abbey.

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Catherine of Aragon, Queen of England

King Henry VIII and his first wife Catherine of Aragon were married on June 11, 1509, and crowned together thirteen days later. Read more about their coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon.

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Anne Boleyn, Queen of England

Anne was crowned at Westminster Abbey on June 1, 1533. Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn are the only wives of Henry VIII to have coronations. Anne is the only Queen Consort ever to be crowned with St. Edward’s Crown. There was a rush for Anne to be crowned as she was pregnant and there was some question about whether the child (the future Queen Elizabeth I) had been conceived before or after the marriage ceremony. Anne was quite unpopular and Henry VIII wanted to cement her status. The day before her coronation, Anne, wearing white and a gold coronet on her head, participated in a procession through the streets of London. She was seated in a litter of white cloth of gold while the barons of the Cinque Ports held a canopy of cloth of gold over her head. 

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Jane Seymour, Queen of England

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Anne of Cleves, Queen of England

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Catherine Howard, Queen of England

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Catherine Parr, Queen of England

After the death of King Henry VIII, Catherine Parr married  Thomas Seymour, brother of Henry VIII’s late third wife Jane Seymour. Catherine and Thomas had fallen in love before her marriage to Henry VIII, and the two had hoped to marry. However, when Henry VIII began to show an interest in Catherine, she felt it was her duty to choose Henry’s proposal of marriage over Thomas Seymour’s. In August 1548, Catherine and Seymour had a daughter, but tragically Catherine died on September 5, 1548, of puerperal fever (childbed fever). Her daughter Mary Seymour appears to have died young.  Six months after Catherine’s death, Thomas Seymour was beheaded for treason.

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The following Stuart monarchs of England were also Kings/Queens of Scots until 1707 when Scotland and England were united into a single kingdom called Great Britain: James I, Charles I, Charles II, James II, Mary II, William III, and Anne. The wives of James I, Charles I, Charles II, and James II held the title Queen of Scots in addition to Queen of England.

Anne of Denmark, Queen of England

The coronation of King James I of England and his wife Anne of Denmark was on  July 25, 1603 at Westminster Abbey. Read about their coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of James I and Anne.

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Henrietta Maria of France, Queen of England

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Catherine of Braganza, Queen of England

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Maria Beatrice of Modena, Queen of England

On April 23, 1685 at Westminster Abbey, King James II and his second wife Maria Beatrice of Modena were crowned in a service that omitted Communion as James and Maria Beatrice were Roman Catholic. The previous day, King James II and his wife had been privately crowned and anointed in a Catholic rite in their private chapel at the Palace of Whitehall.

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Caroline of Ansbach, Queen of Great Britain

Queen Caroline’s dress was so encrusted with jewels that a pulley had to be devised to lift the skirt so she could kneel down at various points in the ceremony

The composer George Frederick Handel was commissioned to write four new anthems for the coronation, including the rousing Zadok the Priest which has been played at every British coronation ever since. See a performance at this link: YouTube: Zadok the Priest.

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Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Queen of the United Kingdom

Charlotte is the second longest-serving consort in British history. Only her descendant, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, husband of another of her descendants, Queen Elizabeth II, served as a consort longer.

Exactly two weeks after their wedding, King George III and Queen Charlotte were crowned at Westminster Abbey. They were carried from St. James’s Palace to Westminster Hall in sedan chairs. At 11:00 AM, they walked the short distance from Westminster Hall to  Westminster Abbey. The coronation ceremony was so long that they were not crowned until 3:30 PM.  The traditional coronation banquet followed at Westminster Hall. Read about their coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of George III and Charlotte.

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Caroline of Brunswick, Queen of the United Kingdom

George IV and his wife Caroline both found each other equally unattractive and never lived together nor appeared in public together. Caroline was increasingly unhappy with her situation and treatment and negotiated a deal with the Foreign Secretary to allow her to leave the country in exchange for a very generous annual allowance. When King George III died in January of 1820, Caroline was determined to return to England and assert her rights as queen. On her way back to England, she received a proposal from her husband offering her an even more generous annual allowance if she would continue to live outside of England. Caroline rejected the proposal and received a royal salute of 21 guns from Dover Castle when she set foot again in England.

George IV was determined to be rid of Caroline and his government introduced a bill in Parliament, the Pains and Penalties Bill 1820, to strip Caroline of the title of queen consort and dissolve her marriage. The reading of the bill in Parliament was effectively a trial of Caroline. On November 10, 1820, a final reading of the bill took place, and the bill passed by 108–99. Prime Minister Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool then declared that since the vote was so close, and public tensions so high, the government was withdrawing the bill.

King George IV’s coronation was set for July 19, 1821, but no plans had been made for Caroline to participate. On the day of the coronation, Caroline went to Westminster Abbey, was barred at every entrance, and finally left. Three weeks later on August 7, 1821, Caroline died at the age of 53, most likely from a bowel obstruction or cancer.

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Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, Queen of the United Kingdom

In contrast to his extravagant brother King George IV, King William IV was unassuming and discouraged pomp and ceremony. On the day of his coronation, the doors of Westminster Abbey opened at 4:00 AM. The coronation procession left St. James Palace at 10:15 AM with King William IV dressed in an admiral’s uniform and Queen Adelaide in a white and gold dress. They arrived at Westminster Abbey at 11:00 AM and the coronation ended at 3:00 PM. There was no usual coronation banquet because King William IV decided it was too expensive. Read about the coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of William IV and Adelaide.

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Alexandra of Denmark, Queen of the United Kingdom

June 26, 1902 was the date set for the coronation of King Edward VII and his wife Queen Alexandra. However, Edward VII developed appendicitis several days before and then developed peritonitis. Unless he postponed the coronation and immediately had surgery, he would die. Edward VII finally agreed and a new coronation date was set, August 9, 1902. Read more at Unofficial Royalty: Guts and Glory: Edward VII’s Appendix and the Coronation that Never Was.

By August 9, 1902, King Edward VII had recovered and the coronation proceeded as planned. Because of the postponement, many foreign delegations had left London and did not return in August, leaving their countries to be represented by their ambassadors. The 81-year-old Frederick Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury, who died four months later, was almost blind and refused to delegate any part of his duties. He had the prayers printed in large letters on cards so he could see them. He still misread some of the prayers and at the moment of the crowning, after he appeared to almost drop the crown, he placed it on Edward VII’s head backward. Read more about the coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of Edward VII and Alexandra.

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Victoria Mary of Teck, Queen Mary of the United Kingdom

This was the first coronation where photography was permitted in Westminster Abbey.  Sir John Benjamin Stone was the official photographer. King George V and Queen Mary presented new hangings for the High Altar at Westminster Abbey which are still in use. The hanging is made of cream-white damask silk with an embroidered Crucifixion scene in the center flanked by angels holding shields with the Royal arms and coat of arms of St. Edward the Confessor. Read more at the links below.

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Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, Queen Elizabeth of the United Kingdom

George VI’s mother Queen Mary attended the coronation, the first British dowager queen to attend a coronation. Also in attendance were the king and queen’s daughters, 11-year-old Princess Elizabeth and 7-year-old Princess Margaret, who watched the coronation from the Royal Gallery, between their grandmother Queen Mary and their paternal aunt Mary, Princess Royal, Countess of Harewood.

There were some mishaps did occur during the service. Cosmo Gordon Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury thought he had been handed St. Edward’s Crown backward, a bishop stepped on King George V’s train, and another bishop put his thumb over the words of the oath when the King was about to read it.

Read more at the links below.

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Queen Camilla of the United Kingdom

To prepare for the coronation, Westminster Abbey was closed to visitors and worshippers from April 25, 2023 and will re-open on Monday, May 8, 2023.

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This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Note: Many biography articles at Unofficial Royalty and Wikipedia royal biography articles were used to research this article besides the works cited below.

Works Cited

  • A Guide to Coronations (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/a-guide-to-coronations (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • A History of Coronations (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/a-history-of-coronations (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • Coronation Chair (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/spotlight-on-coronations/coronation-chair (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • Coronation Theatre (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/spotlight-on-coronations/coronation-theatre (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • Coronations of Queens Consort at Westminster Abbey (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/queens-consort-of-westminster-abbey?fbclid=IwAR3TVZFaXVje_yK50P2ChvoZdBp8XCpCLNF-t-jA7vr4j1PQEwB8b5ZxGy4 (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • England and Scotland Monarch Coronations and Other Related British Royal Information (2022) Coronation of British Kings & Queens. Available at: http://kingscoronation.com/ (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • Flantzer, Susan. (2019) Coronations after the Norman Conquest (1066 – present)Unofficial Royalty. Available at: https://www.unofficialroyalty.com/coronations-after-the-norman-conquest-1066-present/ (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • Keay, Anna. (2012) The Crown Jewels. London: Thames and Hudson, Historic Royal Palace.
  • Order of Service (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/spotlight-on-coronations/order-of-service (Accessed: March 28, 2023).
  • Strong, Roy. (2005, 2022) Coronation – A History of the British Monarchy. London: William Collins.

History of the Coronation of English and British Monarchs

by Susan Flantzer
© Unofficial Royalty 2023

The Coronation Chair; Credit – By Darkmaterial – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=127657004

On May 6, 2023, King Charles III will become the 41st English/British reigning monarch to be crowned since the coronation of King William I on December 25, 1066. There have been forty coronation ceremonies for sovereigns since December 25, 1066. Co-rulers, husband and wife, and first cousins, King William III and Queen Mary II, were crowned at the same coronation ceremony.

Resources about coronations from the Westminster Abbey website and the Official Website of the British Monarchy:

Check out all our British coronation articles at the link below:

The Coronation Stone in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, England; Credit – By Hellodavey1902 – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=94084918

The coronation of the English/British monarch has its roots in the Kings of Wessex and the early Anglo-Saxon Kings of the English being installed on the Kings’ Stone or Coronation Stone which can still be seen in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, England. For the coronation of Edgar the Peaceful, King of the English in 973, Saint Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury felt there was a need for a major ceremony similar to the coronations of the King of the Franks and the German Emperor. Although Edgar probably had a ceremony at Kingston-on-Thames, a coronation using Dunstan’s order of service was held for Edgar at Bath Abbey in Bath, England on May 11, 973. Since then, the main elements of the British coronation service and the form of the oath taken by the sovereign can be traced to the order of service devised by Saint Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury.

The first documented coronation at Westminster Abbey in London, England was that of Harold II Godwinson, King of England on January 6, 1066. The last crowned king from the House of Wessex, Harold would lose his crown and his life on October 14, 1066, at the Battle of Hastings when he was defeated by William II, Duke of Normandy. Edgar the Ætheling, the last male of the Anglo-Saxon House of Wessex, was the nominal King of England for about six weeks. As the position of William II, Duke of Normandy grew stronger, it became evident to those in power that Edgar the Ætheling should be abandoned in favor of William who became King William I of England, also known as William the Conqueror. On Christmas Day 1066, William was crowned King of England at Westminster Abbey.

Upon the death of the sovereign, there is an immediate transference of power. The heir to the throne becomes the new sovereign immediately upon his/her predecessor’s death. “The king is dead, long live the king!” If the sovereign is a male and is married, his wife instantly becomes the queen consort (the wife of a reigning king). A coronation is not necessary at all for a person to become the sovereign or the queen consort.

King Edward V, one of the “Princes in the Tower,” two disputed monarchs Empress Matilda, Lady of the English, the only surviving child of King Henry I, and Lady Jane Grey, and additionally King Edward VIII who abdicated in 1936, are the only monarchs since the Norman Conquest in 1066 who were never crowned.

A number of queen consorts were not crowned with their husbands but were crowned in a separate ceremony. The reasons vary from not being married when their husbands became king, not being in England at the time, pregnancy, and illness. Eight queen consorts were never crowned. Margaret of France, the second wife of King Edward I, was never crowned, making her the first queen consort since the Norman Conquest in 1066 not to be crowned. King Henry VIII apparently did not feel the need to have his last four wives crowned. Three of them were queens for a short time: Jane Seymour (15 months, died), Anne of Cleves (7 months, divorced),  Catherine Howard (16 months, beheaded). Henry VIII’s last wife Catherine Parr (survived) was queen for a bit longer, 2 ½ years. Henrietta Maria of France, wife of King Charles I, and Catherine of Braganza, wife of King Charles II, were not crowned because they were Roman Catholic and did not want to participate in a Church of England ceremony. King George IV’s estranged wife Caroline of Brunswick was prevented from being crowned with him. When she showed up at Westminster Abbey on the day of the coronation, she was turned away.

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Below is some basic information about each coronation along with some succession and coronation details and some interesting stories.

Unless otherwise noted, all pictures, portraits, and photos are from Wikipedia.

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Coronations after the Norman Conquest (1066 – present)

King William I of England

William I wanted to await the arrival of his wife in England before he was crowned but because he gained the throne by conquest, he felt an urgency to have his coronation sooner rather than later. At the coronation, Ealdred, Archbishop of York presented the king to the people, speaking in English and then Geoffrey, Bishop of Coutances, a trusted advisor of William I, spoke the same words in French. When the congregation shouted their approval, the soldiers standing guard outside thought the noise inside was an assassination attempt and began setting fire to houses around Westminster Abbey. Smoke filled the Abbey, the congregation fled, and riots broke out. However, King William I, Ealdred, Archbishop of York, and Geoffrey, Bishop of Coutances completed the service despite the chaos.

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King William II Rufus of England

King William I divided his lands, the Duchy of Normandy and the Kingdom of England, between his two eldest surviving sons. Robert Curthose, the eldest, received the Duchy of Normandy and the second son William Rufus received the Kingdom of England. Very little is known about William II Rufus’s coronation other than Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury was the officiant and the Anglo-Saxon order of service was used.

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King Henry I of England

On August 2, 1100, King William II Rufus rode out from Winchester Castle on a hunting expedition to the New Forest, accompanied by his brother Henry and several nobles. During the hunt, an arrow hit William Rufus in his chest, puncturing his lungs, and killing him. It has long been argued that his death was an assassination plot by his brother Henry. Henry’s two older brothers, King William II Rufus of England and Robert Curthose III, Duke of Normandy, who had been given the Duchy of Normandy by their father, had made a pact stating that if one of them died without heirs, both Normandy and England would be reunited under the surviving brother. However, at the time of William Rufus’ death, Robert Curthose was in the Holy Land on a Crusade so Henry was able to seize the crown of England for himself. Henry hurried to Winchester to secure the royal treasury. The day after William’s funeral at Winchester, the nobles acclaimed Henry as king. King Henry I then left for London where he was crowned three days after William’s death by Maurice, Bishop of London because there was no Archbishop of Canterbury at that time.

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King Stephen of England

On November 25, 1120, during the reign of King Henry I, a terrible tragedy caused a succession crisis in England. The White Ship carrying King Henry I’s only legitimate son William Ætheling, sank as it left France to sail to England, and William Ætheling drowned. Empress Matilda was Henry I’s only surviving legitimate child and on Christmas Day of 1126, Henry I made his barons swear to recognize Empress Matilda and any future legitimate heirs she might have as his successors.

On December 1, 1135, King Henry I of England died. His nephew Stephen of Blois, the son of Henry I’s sister Adela of Normandy and England, quickly crossed the English Channel from Boulogne (now in France) to England, accompanied by his military household. With the help of his brother Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester, Stephen seized power in England. William de Corbeil, Archbishop of Canterbury was persuaded to crown Stephen. It was argued that the oath King Henry I made his barons swear in support of his daughter Matilda was invalid as it had been exacted by force. A fictitious story that King Henry I had changed his mind about the succession on his deathbed was also circulated.

Empress Matilda did not give up her claim to England and Normandy, leading to the long civil war known as The Anarchy between 1135 and 1153. Shortly after the death of Stephen’s only son in 1153, Stephen and Henry FitzEmpress, Empress Matilda’s son, reached a formal agreement that allowed Stephen to keep the throne until his death but forced him to recognize Empress Matilda’s son Henry FitzEmpress, as his heir.

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King Henry II of England

With the accession of King Henry II, England had its first undisputed king for over a century. Traveling from his French possessions (Henry was also Duke of Normandy, Count of Anjou, Count of Maine, and Count of Nantes and his wife Eleanor was Duchess of Aquitaine in her own right.), Henry II arrived in England on December 8, 1154. He immediately took the oaths of loyalty from the barons, Eleven days later, Henry and his very pregnant wife Eleanor were crowned at Westminster Abbey.

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King Richard I of England

Richard I’s coronation is the first coronation that has a detailed account by a chronicler, Roger of Hoveden. His account, in which Richard is referred to as Duke of Normandy, can be read at the link below. On the day of his coronation, Richard proceeded to Westminster Abbey from the nearby Palace of Westminster followed by a crowd of nobles, clergy, and people. After the oath and anointing Richard took the crown from the altar and handed it to the Archbishop of Canterbury who then crowned him. After the coronation service, Richard changed to a lighter crown for the banquet which followed in Westminster Hall. On May 12, 1191, on his way to a Crusade in the Holy Land, Richard married Berengaria of Navarre at the Chapel of St. George in Limassol, Cyprus. Berengaria was crowned as part of the marriage ceremony. Then Richard, his new wife Berengaria, and his recently widowed sister Joan, Queen of Sicily accompanied Richard throughout the Crusade.

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King John of England

John succeeded his childless elder brother Richard I who died of gangrene from an arrow wound. Arthur of Brittany, the son of John’s deceased elder brother Geoffrey, Duke of Brittany,  had a better claim to the throne based upon the laws of primogeniture. However, Richard reportedly chose John as his successor on his deathbed. John acted promptly, seizing the royal treasury at Château de Chinon, a stronghold of the House of Angevin, in the Duchy of Anjou, now in France. On April 25, 1199, John was invested as Duke of Normandy in Rouen, the capital. He then left for England and his coronation was held at Westminster Abbey on May 27, 1199. During his coronation, John displayed “unseemly levity” and left before receiving Holy Communion.

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King Henry III of England

The second coronation of King Henry III

King John died on October 18, 1216, leaving Henry, his nine-year-old son, to inherit his throne in the midst of the First Barons’ War (1215 – 1217), in which a group of rebellious barons supported by a French army, made war on King John because of his refusal to accept and abide by the Magna Carta. Because a large part of eastern England was under the control of the rebellious barons and the French, it was thought that the young King Henry III should be crowned as soon as possible to reinforce his claim to the throne. Therefore, Henry III was crowned on October 28, 2016, at Gloucester Cathedral with a golden circlet belonging to his mother as the coronation regalia were at Westminster in London. On May 20, 1220, King Henry III was crowned a second time in Westminster Abbey with a full coronation ceremony.

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King Edward I of England

In 1270, Edward had gone off on the Crusades accompanied by his wife Eleanor of Castile, and at the time of his father’s death in 1272, he was in Sicily making his slow way back to England. The new King Edward I thought England was safe under his mother’s regency and a royal council led by Robert Burnell, so he did not hurry back to England. On his way back to England, King Edward I visited Pope Gregory X in Rome and King Philip III of France in Paris and suppressed a rebellion in Gascony. He finally arrived back in his kingdom on August 2, 1274. On August 19, 1274, King Edward I and his wife Eleanor were crowned at Westminster Abbey. After Robert Kilwardby, Archbishop of Canterbury placed the crown on his head, King Edward I then removed the crown declaring he would not wear it again until he had recovered lands his father had lost during his reign. During his reign, King John had Normandy, Maine, Touraine, Anjou, and Poitou, all French ancestral territories of his Norman or Angevin ancestors. King Edward I was not successful in recovering the territories.

The Coronation Chair with Stone of Scone in Westminster Abbey, 1885

King Edward I’s relentless, but unsuccessful campaign to assert his overlordship over Scotland was resisted by William Wallace and Robert the Bruce, (later King Robert I of Scotland) but it gave him one of his nicknames, “Hammer of the Scots.” In 1296, Edward I captured the Stone of Scone, an oblong block of red sandstone that was used for centuries in the coronation of the monarchs of Scotland. It was kept at the now-ruined Scone Abbey in Scone, near Perth, Scotland. Edward took the Stone of Scone back to England and placed it in the care of the Abbot of Westminster Abbey.

An oaken chair, called the Coronation Chair, King Edward’s Chair, or St. Edward’s Chair, was made by order of King Edward I to enclose the Stone of Scone. Originally the chair was painted with images of birds, foliage, and animals on a gilt ground. The figure of a king, either Edward the Confessor or King Edward I, his feet resting on a lion, was painted on the back. The four gilt lions on the legs were made in 1727 to replace the original lions which were not added to the chair until the early 16th century. The chair has been in use at coronations since 1308 although opinion is divided as to when it was actually used for the crowning. However, since the coronation of King Henry IV in 1399, the monarch has been crowned in the chair. Originally the Coronation Chair was kept in St. Edward’s Chapel at Westminster Abbey, the site of the shrine of St. Edward the Confessor.  The Coronation Chair is now kept in a specially-built enclosure in St. George’s Chapel at the west end of the nave, near the main doors of Westminster Abbey.

In 1996, 700 years after it was taken, the Stone of Scone was returned to Scotland. It is kept at Edinburgh Castle in the Crown Room alongside the crown jewels of Scotland (the Honours of Scotland). An agreement was made that the Stone of Scone will be returned to Westminster Abbey and placed in the Coronation Chair for future coronations, and then it will be returned to Edinburgh Castle. This writer has been fortunate to see the Stone of Scone both at Westminster Abbey and Edinburgh Castle.

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King Edward II of England

King Edward II decided to delay his coronation until after his marriage. After he married Isabella of France on January 25, 1308, at Boulogne Cathedral in France, the newlyweds returned to England in February, where Edward II ordered Westminster Palace to be lavishly decorated for their coronation celebrations. Henry Woodlock, Bishop of Winchester was the officiant at the coronation, organized by Piers Gaveston, Edward II’s favorite. Woodlock had received a special commission from the exiled Robert Winchelsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, who was an opponent of King Edward II. English and French nobles attended the magnificent ceremony and the celebrations which followed. However, the celebrations were disrupted by the large crowds of eager spectators who surged into the palace, knocking down a wall, and forcing Edward II to flee for his safety.

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King Edward III of England

Edward III’s father King Edward II was a weak king and his relationship with his favorites Piers Gaveston and Hugh Despenser the Younger, whether they were friends, lovers, or sworn brothers, was problematic and caused discontent both among the nobles and the royal family. Opposition to the regime grew, and when Edward II’s wife Isabella was sent to France to negotiate a peace treaty in 1325, she turned against Edward and refused to return. Isabella allied herself with the exiled Roger Mortimer, 3rd Baron Mortimer, 1st Earl of March, and invaded England with a small army in 1326. Edward II died in Berkeley Castle on September 21, 1327, probably murdered on the orders of Isabella and Mortimer.

Edward II’s 14-year-old son Edward was proclaimed Keeper of the Realm in October 1326 and then King Edward III of England in January 1327 when his father was forced to abdicate. Edward III’s mother Isabella and Roger Mortimer, 3rd Baron Mortimer, 1st Earl of March acted as regents for the young king. Due to a concern to confirm the legitimacy of King Edward III’s rule, the coronation was quickly organized, and King Edward III was crowned in Westminster Abbey on February 1, 1327.

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King Richard II of England

Coronation of King Richard II

Richard’s father Edward III’s eldest son and heir, Edward, Prince of Wales, who has come to be known as the Black Prince, died at the age of 45, probably of dysentery, in 1376, a year before his father died, and his 10-year-old son succeeded his grandfather as King Richard II.

Richard’s coronation took place on July 16, 1377, at Westminster Abbey, just eleven days after his grandfather’s funeral. The quickness with which all this happened was certainly affected by the controversial succession of a child king whose father had not been the king. The day before his coronation, the young King Richard II rode on horseback from the Tower of London to the Palace of Westminster. The streets were filled with entertainers and decorated with bright banners and tapestries. This was the first-ever coronation procession.

In 1398, Henry Bolingbroke, first cousin of King Richard II and the eldest child of King Edward III’s third son John of Gaunt, quarreled with Thomas de Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk, who accused him of treason. The two men planned to duel, but instead, King Richard II banished them from England, and Henry went to France.  John of Gaunt died on February 3, 1399, and Richard II confiscated the estates of his uncle and stipulated that Henry would have to ask him to restore the estates. Henry returned to England while his cousin Richard was on a military campaign in Ireland and began a military campaign of his own, confiscating the land of those who had opposed him. King Richard II eventually was abandoned by his supporters and was forced by Parliament on September 29, 1399, to abdicate the crown to his cousin who reigned as King Henry IV, the first king of the House of Lancaster. Richard II was imprisoned at Pontefract Castle in Yorkshire where he died on or around February 14, 1400. The exact cause of his death, thought to have been starvation, is unknown.

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King Henry IV of England

Coronation of King Henry IV

Henry IV’s coronation was held just two weeks after his accession, on a symbolic date, October 13, the feast day of St. Edward the Confessor, King of England. Because he had usurped the throne, Henry IV’s coronation was a means to establish his authority and demonstrate that he was a king for all the English people. First, there was a grand procession from the Tower of London with Henry IV dressed in royal blue and cloth of gold on a white horse, surrounded by 2,000 lords, ladies, knights, and members of his household. Henry IV entered Westminster Abbey under a golden canopy while his heir, thirteen-year-old Prince Henry, the future King Henry V, walked next to his father, carrying the Coronation sword. Prince Henry was created Prince of Wales at his father’s coronation.

Below is a link to an account of King Henry IV’s coronation from Froissart’s Chronicles, a history of the Hundred Years’ War written in the 14th century by Jean Froissart.

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King Henry V of England

On the day of King Henry V’s coronation, there was a terrible snowstorm, but people were undecided as to whether it was a good or bad omen. The procession from the Tower of London was slow due to the snow and had to be stopped periodically to shake the snow from the canopy held over Henry V’s head. Henry V dropped something on the floor during the coronation. The service was stopped so that Henry and those near him could search for the object. Because the coronation was held during Lent, all the dishes served at the coronation banquet were fish rather than meat.

On June 2, 1420, King Henry V married Catherine of Valois. Catherine went to England with Henry and was crowned in Westminster Abbey on February 23, 1421. In June 1421, Henry returned to France to continue his military campaigns. Catherine was already several months pregnant and gave birth to a son, the future King Henry VI, on December 6, 1421. King Henry V never saw his son. The warrior king, the victor against the French at the Battle of Agincourt, determined to conquer France once and for all, succumbed to dysentery, a disease that killed more soldiers than battle, on August 31, 1422, at the age of 35, leaving a nine-month-old son to inherit his throne.

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King Henry VI of England

The accession of the baby King Henry VI

The baby King Henry VI seated in his mother’s lap, presided over Parliament on September 28, 1423, when the nobles swore loyalty to him. One of Henry V’s surviving brothers, John, Duke of Bedford, was appointed Regent, and Henry V’s other surviving brother, Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, was appointed Protector and Defender of the Realm. Henry VI’s coronation was postponed until he was a month short of being eight years old.

Henry VI and Margaret of Anjou married in 1445 and had one child, Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales. Shortly before his son was born, Henry VI had some kind of mental breakdown. He was unable to recognize or respond to people for over a year. During Henry’s incapacity, Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, the next in line to the throne after Henry’s son, governed as Lord Protector. Even before the birth of Henry’s son, factions were forming and the seeds of the Wars of the Roses, the battle for the English throne between the House of Lancaster and the House of York, were being planted.

There was a give and take of power between the two royal houses as can be seen from the dates of the reigns of King Henry VI from the House of Lancaster and King Edward IV of the House of York, the son of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York who was killed at the 1460 Battle of Wakefield. Eventually, King Edward IV permanently got the upper hand. The final decisive Yorkist victory was at the Battle of Tewkesbury on May 4, 1471, when Henry VI’s only child Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales was killed. Henry VI was sent to the Tower of London and died on May 21, 1471, probably murdered on orders from King Edward IV.

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King Edward IV of England

King Edward IV was not crowned until his second reign due to the unstable nature of the throne because of the ongoing Wars of the Roses. On June 26, 1461, Edward IV went to the Tower of London as it was customary to stay there a night before the coronation. There he created twenty-eight new Knights of the Bath, including his brothers 12-year-old George and 8-year-old Richard, the future King Richard III. The next day, Edward was escorted by the new Knights of the Bath, all in blue gowns with white hoods, in a procession to the Palace of Westminster where Edward would spend the night before his coronation.

Edward was crowned King of England on Sunday morning, June 28, 1461, by Thomas Bourchier, Archbishop of Canterbury who was assisted by William Booth, the Archbishop of York. After the coronation, a banquet was held in Westminster Hall with King Edward IV sitting under a canopy of cloth of gold.

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King Edward V of England

On April 9, 1483, King Edward IV died and he was succeeded by his 12-year-old son as King Edward V. King Edward IV had named his brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester as his son’s Lord Protector. The Duke of Gloucester had his nephew brought to the Tower of London on May 19, 1483, to await his coronation, which never happened. Edward V’s mother was persuaded to let her second son Richard, Duke of York join his brother, who was lonely, at the Tower of London. Richard joined his brother on June 16, 1483.

On June 22, 1483, a sermon was preached at St. Paul’s Cross in London declaring King Edward IV’s marriage to Elizabeth Woodville invalid and his children illegitimate and ineligible for the throne. This information apparently came from Robert Stillington, the Bishop of Bath and Wells, who claimed Edward IV had a legal pre-contract of marriage to Eleanor Butler, invalidating his later marriage to Elizabeth Woodville. King Edward IV’s brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester assumed the throne as King Richard III. The Titulus Regius, enacted by Parliament in 1484 officially declared Edward IV’s children illegitimate.

Edward and his brother Richard were seen less and less until the end of the summer of 1483 when they disappeared from public view altogether. Their fate is unknown and remains one of history’s greatest mysteries. There are a number of theories, and the most plausible lay blame on their uncle King Richard III, Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, or King Henry VII.

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King Richard III of England

King Richard III’s coronation occurred on July 6, 1483, just ten days after his accession. The day before the coronation, Richard and his wife Anne Neville rode in procession from the Tower of London to the Palace of Westminster. On their coronation day, King Richard III and Queen Anne walked barefoot on a red carpet to Westminster Abbey. Queen Anne’s train was carried by Lady Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond and Derby whose son would become King Henry VII after defeating Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field. Almost the entire peerage of England witnessed the coronation which was followed by the traditional coronation banquet in Westminster Hall.

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King Henry VII of England

Henry Tudor’s mother Lady Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond and Derby, a descendant of King Edward III, actively promoted her son as an alternative to King Richard III. King Edward IV’s widow Elizabeth Woodville and Henry’s mother made a secret agreement that their children should marry. On Christmas Day in 1483, Henry pledged to marry King Edward IV’s eldest daughter, Elizabeth of York, who was also Edward IV’s heir since the presumed deaths of her brothers, King Edward V and his brother Richard, Duke of York. In 1485, having gained the support of the Woodvilles, the in-laws of the late King Edward IV, Henry Tudor sailed to Wales with a small French and Scottish force. On August 7, 1485, they landed in Mill Bay, Pembrokeshire, Wales, close to Henry’s birthplace. Henry Tudor then marched towards England accompanied by his paternal uncle Jasper Tudor and John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford.

On August 22, 1485, at the Battle of Bosworth Field, the last significant battle of the Wars of the Roses, the last king of the House of York and the Plantagenet dynasty, 32-year-old King Richard III of England, lost his life and his crown. The battle was a decisive victory for the House of Lancaster, whose leader 28-year-old Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, became the first monarch of the House of Tudor. Henry Tudor’s first action was to declare himself king by right of conquest. This was because Henry’s claim to the throne through his mother’s descent was weak.

On October 28, 1485, King Henry VII processed to the Tower of London to spend the traditional night there. The next day, there was a grand procession to the Palace of Westminster with heralds, sergeants of arms, trumpeters, nobles, the Lord Mayor, and aldermen of London all preceding Henry VII. Henry rode on a horse under a silk canopy carried by four knights on foot. Behind Henry rode his paternal uncle Jasper Tudor, the newly created Duke of Bedford, who had helped to raise Henry after the death of his father. He was crowned in Westminster Abbey on October 30, 1485.

On January 18, 1486, Henry VII honored his pledge to marry Elizabeth of York, King Edward IV’s eldest child, thereby uniting the House of York and the House of Lancaster. Henry had Parliament repeal Titulus Regius, the act that declared King Edward IV’s marriage invalid and his children illegitimate, thereby legitimizing his wife.

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King Henry VIII of England

16th-century woodcut of the coronation of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon showing their heraldic badges, the Tudor Rose and the Pomegranate of Granada

King Henry VIII and his first wife Catherine of Aragon were married on June 11, 1509, and crowned together thirteen days later. Read more about their coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon.

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King Edward VI of England

King Henry VIII died on January 28, 1547, and his nine-year-old son succeeded him as King Edward VI. Henry VIII’s will named sixteen executors, who were to act as Edward’s Council until he reached the age of 18. However, a few days after Henry’s death, the executors decide to make King Edward VI’s maternal uncle Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford, Lord Protector of the Realm, Governor of the King’s Person, and Duke of Somerset.

Edward’s coronation took place on February 20, 1547, at Westminster Abbey. The coronation was shortened because of the new king’s young age. King Edward VI traveled from Whitehall Palace to Westminster Abbey in a procession under a canopy carried by the barons of the Cinque Ports. The Coronation Chair had two cushions to help raise the nine-year-old king. King Edward VI’s coronation was the first Protestant coronation. Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury changed the coronation oath so that the “reformation of the Church could now be enabled by royal prerogative, the king as lawmaker”. The coronation was followed by a banquet in Westminster Hall.

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Lady Jane Grey, Queen of England

As 15-year-old King Edward VI lay dying, probably of tuberculosis, in the late spring and early summer of 1553, many feared that the succession of his Catholic half-sister Mary would spell trouble for the English Reformation. John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland and Lord Protector of the Realm had arranged the marriage of his son Guildford Dudley and Lady Jane Grey, number four in the line of succession. Northumberland had King Edward VI compose a document “My devise for the succession” in which he passed over his half-sisters Mary and Elizabeth and the daughter of Mary Tudor, Frances Brandon, Duchess of Suffolk. The crown was meant to go to the Duchess of Suffolk’s daughters and their male heirs. The unfortunate Lady Jane Grey was the eldest of the Duchess of Suffolk’s daughters.

On July 9, 1533 Lady Jane Grey was told that she was Queen, and reluctantly accepted the fact. However, the Privy Council switched their allegiance from Jane to Edward’s sister Mary and proclaimed her Queen on July 19, 1553. Mary arrived triumphantly in London on August 3, 1553, accompanied by her half-sister Elizabeth and a procession of over 800 nobles and gentlemen. Ultimately, Lady Jane, her husband Guildford Dudley, her father Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk, and her father-in-law John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland would all lose their heads.

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Queen Mary I of England

The coronation of Queen Mary I was the first coronation of a queen regnant in England, a female ruler in her own right. Read about her coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of Mary I of England.

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Queen Elizabeth I of England

On November 17, 1558, Queen Elizabeth succeeded her elder half-sister Queen Mary I. on November 17, 1558. Upon hearing the news, Elizabeth reportedly said, “This is the Lord’s doing and it is marvelous in our eyes.” Elizabeth’s coronation took place on January 15, 1559, at Westminster Abbey in London, England. Read about her coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of Elizabeth I.

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King James I of England

Since none of the children of King Henry VIII had children, James VI, King of Scots was the senior heir of King Henry VII. James was the only child of Mary, Queen of Scots and her second husband (and first cousin) Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, both grandchildren of Margaret Tudor, daughter of King Henry VII of England and sister of King Henry VIII of England. On her deathbed, Queen Elizabeth I gave her assent that James should succeed her.

James was now James VI, King of Scots and King James I of England. The following Stuart monarchs of England were also Kings/Queens of Scots until 1707 when Scotland and England were united into a single kingdom called Great Britain: Charles I, Charles II, James II, Mary II, William III, and Anne.

The coronation of King James I of England was on  July 25, 1603 at Westminster Abbey. His wife Anne of Denmark was crowned with him. Read about their coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of James I and Anne.

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King Charles I of England

King Charles I was crowned in Westminster Abbey on February 2, 1626. This would be the last time that the original coronation regalia was used as the regalia was melted down or sold by Cromwell’s Parliamentarians after King Charles I was executed. The only piece of the old regalia that still exists is the Coronation Spoon, which had been sold off before it could be melted. In 1649, the spoon was sold for 16 shillings to Clement Kynnersley, Yeoman of the Removing Wardrobe, who returned it to King Charles II upon the restoration of the monarchy.

King Charles I lost his throne and his head during the English Civil War (1642 – 1651), fought between the Royalists (Cavaliers) and Parliamentarians (Roundheads). Oliver Cromwell was declared Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland. A Commonwealth and then a Protectorate remained the government until 1660 when Parliament formally invited the eldest son of the beheaded King Charles I to be the English monarch as King Charles II in what has become known as the Stuart Restoration.

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King Charles II of England

The coronation of King Charles II was delayed because of the extensive preparations necessary after more than ten years of the Commonwealth and because a new set of regalia had to be made as the previous regalia had been melted down during the Commonwealth period. This coronation was the last time the traditional procession from the Tower of London took place. It was the first time that tiered seating was constructed in the transepts so that the congregation could see the ceremony.

Samuel Pepys, the famous diarist, was at the coronation and detailed the service in his diary. See this link: The Diary of Samuel Pepys: Tuesday 23 April 1661

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King James II of England

Coronation of King James II and Maria Beatrice of Modena

On April 23, 1685 at Westminster Abbey, King James II was crowned in a service that omitted Communion as James was Roman Catholic. The previous day, King James II and his wife had been privately crowned and anointed in a Catholic rite in their private chapel at the Palace of Whitehall. There seemed to be “bad omens” on the day of the coronation. The crown appeared to be about to fall off his head and at the moment of crowning the Royal Standard at the Tower of London was torn by the wind.

In 1688, King James II was effectively deposed during the Glorious Revolution. James II had converted to Catholicism and after his second wife gave birth to a Catholic son, there were fears that the throne would turn permanently into a Catholic throne. Willem III, Prince of Orange, the nephew and son-in-law of King James II, the husband of James II’s daughter Mary from his first marriage, vowed to safeguard the Protestant interest. James’s elder daughter Mary was declared Queen Mary II and she was to rule jointly with her husband and first cousin William (who was third in the line of succession after Mary’s sister Anne) who would be King William III.

After James II lost his throne, the Jacobite (from Jacobus, the Latin for James) movement formed. The goal of the Jacobites was to restore the Roman Catholic Stuart King James II of England/VII of Scotland and his Roman Catholic heirs to the thrones of England and Scotland. Since 1688, there have been Jacobite pretenders to the British throne.

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Queen Mary II of England

King William III of England

King William III and Queen Mary II were crowned as joint monarchs at Westminister Abbey on April 11,  1689. King William III was crowned in the Coronation Chair so a new chair was made for Queen Mary II’s use and is now in the Abbey collection. Henry Compton, Bishop of London officiated at William and Mary’s coronation because William Sancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury considered himself still bound by his oath of allegiance to King James II.

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Queen Anne of England, after 1707, Queen of Great Britain

Queen Anne suffered from gout and was carried to Westminster Abbey in an open sedan chair, with a low back to permit her train to flow out behind her. Once Queen Anne reached the door of Westminster Abbey, she got out of the sedan chair and walked down the aisle. Queen Anne wore crimson velvet over a golden robe embroidered with jewels, and a petticoat with bands of gold and silver lace between rows of diamonds.

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King George I of Great Britain

Queen Anne, the last of the Stuarts, had seventeen pregnancies which resulted in only three live births. In 1700, the last of those three children, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester, died six days after his eleventh birthday. Parliament was faced with a succession crisis as it did not want the throne to go to a Roman Catholic. The 1701 Act of Settlement was passed giving the throne to Sophia of the Palatinate, Electress of Hanover and her Protestant descendants. Sophia was a granddaughter of King James I and a first cousin of King Charles II and King James II.

Sophia died on June 8, 1714, at the age of 83. Her son Georg Ludwig of Brunswick-Lüneburg was now the heir to the British throne. Queen Anne died on August 1, 1714, only 54 days after Sophia died.  The first Hanoverian, King George I, was only 56th in line to the throne according to primogeniture, but the nearest Protestant according to the 1701 Act of Settlement.

King George I did not speak much English and the Archbishop of Canterbury and the other clergy involved in the coronation spoke little German. Most of George I’s coronation was conducted in Latin, as both George I and the members of the clergy could understand it. While loyalists celebrated King George I’s coronation, there were riots in southern and western England in protest of the coronation of the first Hanoverian king.

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King George II of Great Britain

Queen Caroline’s dress was so encrusted with jewels that a pulley had to be devised to lift the skirt so she could kneel down at various points in the ceremony

The composer George Frederick Handel was commissioned to write four new anthems for the coronation, including the rousing Zadok the Priest which has been played at every British coronation ever since. It gives this writer, who has been fortunate to have sung it, goosebumps. See a performance at this link: YouTube: Zadok the Priest.

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King George III of Great Britain, after 1800 King of the United Kingdom

Exactly two weeks after their wedding, King George III and Queen Charlotte were crowned at Westminster Abbey. They were carried from St. James’s Palace to Westminster Hall in sedan chairs. At 11:00 AM, they walked the short distance from Westminster Hall to  Westminster Abbey. The coronation ceremony was so long that they were not crowned until 3:30 PM.  The traditional coronation banquet followed at Westminster Hall. Read about their coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of George III and Charlotte.

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King George IV of the United Kingdom

George IV and his wife Caroline both found each other equally unattractive and never lived together nor appeared in public together. Caroline was increasingly unhappy with her situation and treatment and negotiated a deal with the Foreign Secretary to allow her to leave the country in exchange for a very generous annual allowance. When King George III died in January of 1820, Caroline was determined to return to England and assert her rights as queen. On her way back to England, she received a proposal from her husband offering her an even more generous annual allowance if she would continue to live outside of England. Caroline rejected the proposal and received a royal salute of 21 guns from Dover Castle when she set foot again in England.

George IV was determined to be rid of Caroline and his government introduced a bill in Parliament, the Pains and Penalties Bill 1820, to strip Caroline of the title of queen consort and dissolve her marriage. The reading of the bill in Parliament was effectively a trial of Caroline. On November 10, 1820, a final reading of the bill took place, and the bill passed by 108–99. Prime Minister Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool then declared that since the vote was so close, and public tensions so high, the government was withdrawing the bill.

Coronation of King George IV

King George IV’s coronation was set for July 19, 1821, but no plans had been made for Caroline to participate. On the day of the coronation, Caroline went to Westminster Abbey, was barred at every entrance, and finally left. Three weeks later on August 7, 1821, Caroline died at the age of 53, most likely from a bowel obstruction or cancer.

George IV’s coronation was an extravagant affair that cost a staggering £230,000, equivalent in purchasing power today to about £32,306,101. A new crown was made containing over 12,000 diamonds. The 59-year-old obese king sweltered in his suit, thick velvet coronation robes, long curled wig, and plumed hat, and used nineteen handkerchiefs to mop his heavily perspiring brow.

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King William IV of the United Kingdom

Because King George IV and his wife Caroline had only one child, Princess Charlotte of Wales, born nine months after her parents’ wedding, had died in childbirth along with her stillborn son, King George IV was succeeded by his brother King William IV. In contrast to his extravagant brother King George IV, King William IV was unassuming and discouraged pomp and ceremony. On the day of his coronation, the doors of Westminster Abbey opened at 4:00 AM. The coronation procession left St. James Palace at 10:15 AM with King William IV dressed in an admiral’s uniform and Queen Adelaide in a white and gold dress. They arrived at Westminster Abbey at 11:00 AM and the coronation ended at 3:00 PM. There was no usual coronation banquet because King William IV decided it was too expensive. Read about the coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of William IV and Adelaide.

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Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom

A child of King William IV and Queen Adelaide would have succeeded to the throne as William’s two elder brothers King George IV and Prince Frederick, Duke of York had no surviving children. Sadly, William IV and Adelaide had no surviving child of their own. Their first child was born prematurely on March 27, 1819, as a result of Adelaide being ill with pleurisy. The baby girl was christened Charlotte Augusta Louisa and died the same day. Adelaide suffered a miscarriage on September 5, 1819. On December 19, 1820, Adelaide gave birth to a girl, Elizabeth Georgiana Adelaide, six weeks prematurely. Princess Elizabeth, who had been healthy despite being premature, died 12 weeks later on March 4, 1821, of the then-inoperable condition of a strangulated hernia. Twin boys were stillborn on April 23, 1822.

And so, it was the only child of King William IV’s next brother, the deceased Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, who would succeed him. Adelaide wrote to her widowed sister-in-law the Duchess of Kent, “My children are dead, but your child lives, and she is mine too.” That child was the future Queen Victoria.

Coronation of Queen Victoria

Nineteen-year-old Queen Victoria was crowned on June 28, 1838. The ceremony took five hours and because there had been very little rehearsal, there were many mishaps. No one except Queen Victoria and The Reverend Lord John Thynne, Deputy Dean of Westminster knew what should be happening. The coronation ring was painfully forced onto Queen Victoria’s wrong finger and 88-year-old John Rolle, 1st Baron Rolle “rolled” down the steps while making his homage to the Queen. A confused bishop incorrectly told Queen Victoria that ceremony was over and she had to come back to her seat to finish the service. Read about the coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of Queen Victoria.

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King Edward VII of the United Kingdom

The coronation of King Edward VII

June 26, 1902 was the date set for the coronation of King Edward VII and his wife Queen Alexandra. However, Edward VII developed appendicitis several days before and then developed peritonitis. Unless he postponed the coronation and immediately had surgery, he would die. Edward VII finally agreed and a new coronation date was set, August 9, 1902. Read more at Unofficial Royalty: Guts and Glory: Edward VII’s Appendix and the Coronation that Never Was.

By August 9, 1902, King Edward VII had recovered and the coronation proceeded as planned. Because of the postponement, many foreign delegations had left London and did not return in August, leaving their countries to be represented by their ambassadors. The 81-year-old Frederick Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury, who died four months later, was almost blind and refused to delegate any part of his duties. He had the prayers printed in large letters on cards so he could see them. He still misread some of the prayers and at the moment of the crowning, after he appeared to almost drop the crown, he placed it on Edward VII’s head backward. Read more about the coronation at Wikipedia: Coronation of Edward VII and Alexandra.

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King George V of the United Kingdom

First photographs of a coronation ever taken by Sir John Benjamin Stone. King George V and Queen Mary are in their chairs of estate during that part of the coronation service which precedes the anointing. On the left, are the bearers of the four swords. On either side of the King and Queen, are the supporting bishops.

This was the first coronation where photography was permitted in Westminster Abbey.  Sir John Benjamin Stone was the official photographer. King George V and Queen Mary presented new hangings for the High Altar at Westminster Abbey which are still in use. The hanging is made of cream-white damask silk with an embroidered Crucifixion scene in the center flanked by angels holding shields with the Royal arms and coat of arms of St Edward the Confessor. Read more at the links below.

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King Edward VIII of the United Kingdom, The Duke of Windsor

King Edward VIII with his mother Queen Mary, a month before his abdication

The coronation of King Edward VIII was scheduled to take place at Westminster Abbey on May 12, 1937. Preparations were already underway and souvenirs were on sale when Edward VIII abdicated on December 11, 1936. His brother and successor King George VI instead was crowned on May 12, 1937. Read more at Wikipedia: Abandoned Coronation of Edward VIII.

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King George VI of the United Kingdom

 

Coronation of King George VI

King George V and his wife Queen Elizabeth were crowned on May 12, 1937, the day George VI’s elder brother, the abdicated King Edward VIII, had been scheduled to be crowned. Guests for the coronation began arriving at 6:00 AM. Many peers carried sandwiches in their coronets.

On the right side, Princess Elizabeth can be seen standing next to her grandmother Queen Mary while Princess Margaret rests her head next to her aunt Mary, Princess Royal; Credit – Getty Images

George VI’s mother Queen Mary attended the coronation, the first British dowager queen to do attend a coronation. Also in attendance were the king’s daughters, 11-year-old Princesses Elizabeth and 7-year-old Princess Margaret, who watched the coronation from the Royal Gallery, between their grandmother Queen Mary and their paternal aunt Mary, Princess Royal, Countess of Harewood.

There were some mishaps did occur during the service. Cosmo Gordon Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury thought he had been handed St. Edward’s Crown backward, a bishop stepped on King George V’s train, and another bishop put his thumb over the words of the oath when the King was about to read it.

Read more at the links below.

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Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom

A rather bored-looking 4 1/2-year-old Prince Charles at the coronation with his grandmother The Queen Mother and his aunt Princess Margaret; Credit – www.abc.net.au

The doors to Westminster Abbey opened at 6:00 AM for reporters and cameramen to get positioned. By 7:00 AM, the guests began taking their seats. Queen Elizabeth II entered the nave of the Abbey at 11:20 AM while the choirs sang the anthem “I Was Glad”. At 12:34 PM, she was crowned in the Coronation Chair with St. Edward’s Crown. At 1:28 PM, Queen Elizabeth II entered St Edward’s Chapel to exchange St. Edward’s Crown with the lighter Imperial State Crown and to into the Robe of purple velvet for the final procession. A packed lunch of smoked salmon, foie gras, sausage rolls, cheese, and biscuits was provided for the Queen and her party in the retiring rooms of the Abbey. The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh left Westminster Abbey at 2:53 PM and rode in the State Coach through the streets of London before returning to Buckingham Palace at 4:30 PM.

There is much information in the links below:

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King Charles III of the United Kingdom

With the accession of King Charles III, British monarchs will be descended from two children of Queen Victoria. Charles III’s mother was the great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria’s successor King Edward VII, and his father Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh was the great-grandson of Queen Victoria’s daughter Princess Alice, Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine.

To prepare for the coronation, Westminster Abbey was closed to visitors and worshippers from April 25, 2023 and will re-open on Monday, May 8, 2023.

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Note: Many biography articles at Unofficial Royalty and Wikipedia royal biography articles were used to research this article besides the works cited below.

Works Cited

  • A Guide to Coronations (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/a-guide-to-coronations (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • A History of Coronations (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/a-history-of-coronations (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • Coronation Chair (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/spotlight-on-coronations/coronation-chair (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • Coronation Theatre (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/spotlight-on-coronations/coronation-theatre (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • England and Scotland Monarch Coronations and Other Related British Royal Information (2022) Coronation of British Kings & Queens. Available at: http://kingscoronation.com/ (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • Flantzer, Susan. (2019) Coronations after the Norman Conquest (1066 – present), Unofficial Royalty. Available at: https://www.unofficialroyalty.com/coronations-after-the-norman-conquest-1066-present/ (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • Flanzter, Susan. (2019) Coronations before the Norman conquest (871 – 1066), Unofficial Royalty. Available at: https://www.unofficialroyalty.com/coronations-before-the-norman-conquest-871-1066/ (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • Keay, Anna. (2012) The Crown Jewels. London: Thames and Hudson, Historic Royal Palace.
  • Order of Service (no date) Westminster Abbey. Available at: https://www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/coronations-at-the-abbey/spotlight-on-coronations/order-of-service (Accessed: March 22, 2023).
  • Strong, Roy. (2005, 2022) Coronation – A History of the British Monarchy. London: William Collins.
  • Weir, Allison. (2011) The Wars of the Roses. New York: Ballantine Books Trade Paperbacks.