Many of us will see
another Coronation within our lifetimes, and possibly even two ... and remotely
for some of you three ... but I certainly expect to see at least one.
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The Ascot Gold Cup 1834 by James Pollard |
The
next one is bound to be different in some ways as was shown during last year’s
Jubilee celebrations, when the Queen acceded, and the recent 60th
anniversary of the Queen’s anointing ... but with all its pomp and pageantry
...
... the
Coronation at heart is a spiritual ritual based on ancient practice, focussing
on the duty of the monarch to God and to the people.
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Henry VIII and family 1545 in front of a iconographic tapestry - a cloth of state |
... “no one does pomp and ceremony like the
Brits. Interesting the inclusion of other
faiths these days considering the big deal the Catholic/Church of England
dichotomy used to be – off with his/her head!
I love progress”.
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George II (c 1727) by Henry Jervas |
I sincerely hope thankfully we will always have a similar emphasis on the traditional, the ritual, the inclusion of wonderful music composed centuries ago such as Handel’s anthem ‘Zadok the Priest’ used at George II’s coronation ...
... new
works composed for each Coronation and in our case the Diamond celebration of that
event 60 years ago: Bob Chilcott, the choral composer, commissioned by the
choristers from the 1953 Coronation, to write an anthem for today’s choristers
to sing at the 60th anniversary.
English
Literature, Poetry and Music have always intertwined for celebratory occasions
... wonderful reaffirmation of pastoral themes revived, rewritten, updated
somewhat – incorporating pageantry into the solemnity of the Celebration of the
Queen’s Coronation those sixty years ago.
It’s a
history lesson to the social and cultural life of ancient eras (arias even),
biblical music, plainsong (Gregorian chants), sacred music, Renaissance,
Baroque, Classical and Romantic periods, orchestral works, and on into the 20th
and 21st century when through radio and newer technologies we are
able to listen and to appreciate music of all those eras.
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Queen Salote - and yes her companion at the Coronation is behind her! |
... as
each Coronation afforded the artistic creative spirits to add to the
magnificent ceremony that makes up much of our British music and literary
archive that was symbolically used in the re-consecration and re-dedication Service.
Ramblings
come to mind ... and I’m stopping here to add a few extra snippets of royal or
coronation history ...
I meant
to put in the piece about Queen Salote – perhaps this is why I remember
the Coronation ‘so well’ ? ... to quote from the Daily Telegraph supplement put
out about the Coronation:
“Queen Salote of Tonga, alone among the
carriage-riding classes, ignored the weather and travelled with the top down so
she could smile and wave to the crowds. (it was
bucketing ... another wet June day – no change in sixty years of English
weather then!).
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Blues and golds |
The gold and blue
Glaswegian carpet laid along the Abbey’s medieval floor was later
sliced into pieces to fit Anglican churches across the world.
The timber floorboards used for the platforms
for the 8,251 spectators in the Abbey were sliced to lengths that could be recycled
for the building trade.
The number of
coaches required for the horse-drawn coronation procession was far
more than the Queen possessed, so film producer Sir Alexander lent her some from
his Denham film studios (soon to be merged with Pinewood Studios)!!
In
Angela Kelly’s book “Dressing the Queen”
she describes all the processes ... it is fascinating ... but also mentions
that fitting
sessions can typically last half a day, or occasionally if there are
one or two important outfits to try on the Queen will set aside a shorter time
...
... during
these fittings there are other watchful eyes!
.. the royal Corgis!
This
leads me on to the last item, where the Queen wore a royal purple ensemble, from
this year’s Royal
Ascot ... a four-legged filly – the Queen’s horse “Estimate” –
topped the Jubilee and Coronation celebrations off with a right royal win ...
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The Queen with Estimte |
As I
posted in my “Horses – the counter balance to Monarchy” this win really defines
and tops off the Queen’s year ... horses are her passion and her life – just sad
the Duke could not share the event, but at least they can have some happy
conversations back home in Windsor Castle.
The
Queen’s smile at her win – really crowns her life – a wonderful full relaxed
smile ... a golden glow to gladden all
our hearts ...
So to
finish off ... :
The Coronation Ceremony could no more be invented from scratch than the function of monarchy itself ...
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happiness is .... |
The Coronation Ceremony could no more be invented from scratch than the function of monarchy itself ...
The
British are pragmatic people. They go
with whatever works. For decades, for
centuries, the monarchy has worked.
That is
why the Coronation at which the Queen was crowned is recognisably the same as
that which her ancestors underwent, century after century.
And as
I totter towards those very aged years ... when I will hear fanfares greet the
new King ... the Elizabethan madrigals and early music, exuberant choral
writing conveying a sense of freshness of progress ... a new Albion – that changing
world around us ...
... we
British, and those whose ancestors started life here, will remember the social
and cultural life of ancient eras ... biblical, music, literature, poetic ...
now available across all mediums – to coin an uncomfortable phrase!
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Richard I being crowned |
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Queen Victoria in her Coronation robes |
... which now has been digitally enhanced and from which we can learn something of our history and also be reminded of what is to come ...
In the
meantime, if I keep the Coronation information I have available now, I’ll be
able to write an intelligent post about the music and the poetry that will
celebrate our next sovereign incumbent!
How’s that for forward thinking?!
The Daily Telegraph article on The Queen's Coronation anniversary
Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II - see Wiki
50 Facts about the Queen's Coronation ... from 2003 anniversary ... official British Monarch website
Hilary
Melton-Butcher
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