Coronation have
taken place at Westminster since at least 1066, when William the Conqueror
arrived in London after his victory at the battle of Hastings. Whether or not
Harold, his predecessor as monarch, had been crowned in Edward the Confessor’s
Abbey is uncertain - coronations do not seem to have had a fixed location
before 1066, though several monarchs were crowned at Kingston-upon-Thames,
where the King’s Stone still exists - but William was determined to reinforce
his victory, which gave him the right to rule by conquest, with the sacred
hallowing of his sovereignty which the coronation ceremony would give him. He
was crowned in the old Abbey - then recently completed and housing Edward the
Confessor’s body- on Christmas Day 1066.
The service to-day
has four parts: first comes the Introduction ,consisting of: the entry of the
Sovereign into the Abbey; the formal recognition of the right of the Sovereign
to rule - when the Archbishop presents the Sovereign to the congregation and
asks them if they agree to the service proceeding, and they respond with an
assent; the oath, when the Sovereign promises to respect and govern in
accordance with the lows of his or her subjects and to uphold the Protestant
reformed Church of England and Scotland; and the presentation of the Bible to
the Sovereign, to be relied on as the source of all wisdom and low. Secondly,
the Sovereign is anointed with holy oil, seated on the Coronation Chair.
Thirdly, the Sovereign is invested with the royal robes and insignia, then
crowned with St Edward’s crown. The final ceremony consists of the enthronement
of the Sovereign on a throne placed on a raised platform, bringing him or her
into full view of the assembled company for the first time, and there he or she
receives the homage of the Lords Spiritual, the Lords Temporal and the
congregation, representing the people of the realm.
The service has
changed little - English replaced Latin as the main language used during the
ceremony following Elizabeth Ist coronation, and from 1689 onwards the
coronation ceremony has been set within a service of Holy Communion although
indeed this was a return to ancient custom rather than the creation of a new
precedent).
Coronations have
not always followed an identical pattern. Edward YI, for example, was crowned
no less than three times, with three different crowns placed in turn upon his
head; while at Charles I’s coronation there was a misunderstanding and, instead
of the congregational assent following the Recognition Question, there was dead
silence, the congregation having finally to be told to respond - an ill omen
for the future, as it turned out. Charles II’s coronation, following on the
greyness of the puritan Commonwealth, was a scene of brilliant colour and great
splendour. As the old regalia had been destroyed, replacements were made for
the ceremony, and the clergy were robed in rich red copes - the same copes are
still used in the Abbey
George IY saw his
coronation as an opportunity for a great theatrical spectacle and spent vast
sums of money on it. He wore an auburn wig with ringlets, with a huge plumed
hat on top, and designed his own robes for the procession into the Abbey. After
the coronation, because Queen Caroline had been forcibly excluded from the
ceremony, the crowds in the streets were extremely hostile to him and he had to
return to Carlton House by an alternative route.
In complete
contrast, William IY took a lot of persuading before he would agree to have a
coronation at all, and the least possible amount of money was spent no it -
giving it the name the «penny coronation». Despite his dislike of extravagant
show and ceremony, he still brought a slightly theatrical touch to the scene by
living up to his nickname of the «sailor king» and appearing , when disrobed
for the Anointing, in the full-dress uniform of an Admiral of the Fleet.
The last three
coronations have demonstrated continuing respect for the religious significance
of the ceremony and recognition of the importance of such a public declaration
by Sovereign of his or her personal dedication to the service of the people.
At the coronation
of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953 , for the first time the service was televised
and millions of her subjects could see and hear the ceremony taking place. It
is possible that few watching realised just how far back into history the roots
of that historic ceremony starched, and how little fundamental change had
occurred over the centuries.
Список литературы
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