Daily Mail

Want to help crown the King? Now’s your big chance

- By Sam Greenhill Chief Reporter

AT King Charles III’s Coronation, who has the honour of finding a glove for his right hand? And who has the hereditary right to provide a sword for the historic ceremony at Westminste­r Abbey?

These are not tricky pub quiz questions but real-life protocol conundrums facing organisers of the May 6 event that will be watched by billions around the world.

Now a special unit – the Coronation Claims Office – has been set up to help decide who can perform which roles. In the case of the glove, historic protocol dictates that the honour falls to whoever owns the Manor of Worksop in Nottingham­shire.

Anticipati­ng a deluge of offers to take part in the Coronation from members of the aristocrac­y – and anyone else who can point to a historic reason why they should be involved in the crowning of Charles – the Cabinet Office has marshalled a team to assess potential claims.

Oliver Dowden, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, said: ‘His Majesty The King’s Coronation will be a momentous occasion in the history of our country. The new Coronation Claims Office will ensure we fulfil The King’s wish that the ceremony is rooted in tradition and pageantry but also embraces the future.’

The new office replaces the Court of Claims, an ancient court set up to hear petitions from those

‘Rooted in pageantry but also embraces the future’

who believe they have the right to perform a particular honorific service for a new monarch on their Coronation day.

It last sat during the final weeks of 1952, ahead of the Coronation of Queen elizabeth in 1953.

On that occasion, the court considered claims from the Lord High Steward of Ireland who suggested he carry a white wand, several peers who offered to carry the ‘Great Gold Spurs’, and the Duke of Somerset who proposed he carry the Orb or Sceptre for the new Queen.

The new Coronation Claims Office will consider matters including whether the role or service was performed in 1953 or not, what the basis is for it to be performed now, and the claimant’s connection to those who previously performed the role or service.

Officials will consult ecclesiast­ical experts from Lambeth Palace and ceremonial experts from the Royal Household when considerin­g claims, said a spokesman.

The first recorded use of the Court of Claims was in 1377, when John of Gaunt, the uncle to a tenyear old Richard II, decided who would carry out which task during the infant king’s coronation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom