Thu. Nov 21st, 2024
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King Charles III and his wife Camilla, the Queen Consort, will travel to and from their coronation next month in Britain’s oldest and newest royal carriages.

The grand procession will be shorter than the one taken by Queen Elizabeth II 70 years ago, Buckingham Palace said on Sunday.

The King will be crowned at London’s Westminster Abbey on May 6, in a ceremony full of pomp and pageantry, with traditions dating back 1,000 years.

The palace has been slowly releasing details of the event, which is set to have a few differences from the King’s mother in 1953, most notably in its scale, partly reflecting the modern age and the current cost of living crisis.

But in an example of the modern nature of the coronation, the palace has also announced that a new emoji had been unveiled to coincide with the event.

The new Twitter emoji is based on the historic St Edward’s Crown which will be placed on Charles’s head during the service.

It will appear whenever the hashtags #Coronation, #CoronationConcert, #TheBigHelpout, #CoronationWeekend, #CoronationBigLunch are used.

The Big Help Out is a call to volunteer announced as part of the three-day coronation event.

Australian-built carriage taking Charles to coronation ceremony

The King and Camilla will be taken from Buckingham Palace to the Abbey in the Diamond Jubilee State Coach, built to commemorate Elizabeth’s 60th year on the throne and first used in 2014.

It was built in Sydney by W J Frecklington, at the time only the second royal carriage constructed in a century.

Queen Elizabeth II rode in the Diamond Jubilee coach to the State Opening of Parliament in 2014.

Mr Frecklington also built Queen Elizabeth’s Australian State Coach, which was given to her during the Australian Bicentennial in 1988.

The carriage’s interior includes samples of objects taken from historic buildings and palaces while on top sits a gilded crown, carved from oak from HMS Victory, one of the Royal Navy’s 18th century flagships.

After the service, the couple will return in the Coronation Procession, which while much larger in size than their journey to the Abbey, will be about a third of the 7.2 km route taken by the Queen when millions thronged the streets of London to watch.

The Gold State Coach was last used during the Platinum Jubilee Pageant.()

For this, Charles and Camilla will travel in the 260-year-old Gold State Coach which has been used at every coronation since King William IV’s in 1831.

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