Tuesday, 1 Oct 2024

Coronation ‘will still feel grand’ despite push to cut down spending

King Charles: Coronation ‘will feel grand’ says pundit

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Earlier this week, Buckingham Palace confirmed that the coronation ceremony of King Charles and the Queen Consort will take place on May 6, 2023 at Westminster Abbey. According to The Sunday Times royal editor Roya Nikkhah, the coronation “will still feel grand”, despite the newly-appointed King’s demands.

Speaking on True Royalty TV’s The Royal Beat, Ms Nikkhah said: “[For] the coronation day in May next year, I think you will have all that great ceremonial style around it that you saw for the [Queen’s] funeral.

“Perhaps not on the scale of the funeral.”

She added that despite this, we will still “see the Household Cavalry, you will see a very strong military element”.

She expressed: “[It] will still feel grand.

“It’s the crowning of the King, and the Queen.

“It’s a very big moment.”

She also made reference the despite the Charles’s demands that he “understands that people like to see some of the grandeur”.

The ceremony, which will be an hour in length, will be conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury.

King Charles’ coronation will be ‘less than an hour’ says insider

The ceremony will be significantly shorter than the Queen’s coronation ceremony in 1953.

The late Her Majesty’s ceremony lasted around three hours.

Despite it being the first coronation in over 70 years, there will undoubtedly be some traditional elements that will mirror the 1953 ceremony.

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Royal fans of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have expressed their anger over the chosen day for the ceremony.

May 6 next year will mark their son Archie’s fourth birthday.

One Twitter user, @hrhpluggles questioned whether the date was chosen “deliberately”.

However, royal experts have noted May has often been selected to hold special royal events, such as the coronation of King George V in 1911 and the wedding of Princess Margaret in 1960.

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