The Mail on Sunday

Your definitive guide to the momentous occasion -- whether you’re going to be there or watching it on TV

- By MARK HOOKHAM

IN A monumental spectacle that will captivate the world, Britain will tomorrow bid a magnificen­t farewell to its greatest Monarch.

An estimated million people will line the streets of London to witness scenes of breathtaki­ng pomp and splendour, punctuated by historic moments of sorrow and solemnity.

Kings, Queens, Presidents and Prime Ministers from nearly every nation will join King Charles for the first Royal State Funeral in Westminste­r Abbey in more than 200 years.

Among the 2,000 in the congregati­on will be everyday heroes: NHS staff who toiled tirelessly during the pandemic, Armed Forces veterans awarded the highest honours for bravery and charity workers who have transforme­d the lives of those less fortunate.

After the funeral, Queen Elizabeth will be borne by a tremendous procession, featuring more than 4,000 military personnel, that will slowly wend through Central London.

To the muffled tolls of Big Ben and the percussive beat of artillery guns that will fire every 60 seconds, the State Gun Carriage bearing the Queen’s coffin will be hauled along Whitehall and The Mall and past Buckingham Palace by 142 Royal Navy sailors.

It will be a mesmerisin­g moment of ceremonial spectacle not seen since Sir Winston Churchill’s State Funeral almost 60 years ago. ‘The procession will be like nothing any of us has seen, I think, in our lifetimes,’ General Sir Patrick Sanders, the Head of the Army, said yesterday.

‘It’s obviously a first and will bring together all the elements of the Armed Forces and all those who serve in a procession that I hope will be precise and will be immaculate.’

The Earl Marshal, Duke of Norfolk, who is mastermind­ing the occasion, believed the day

‘The procession will be like nothing any of us has ever seen’

will ‘unite people across the globe’. Proceeding­s will start at 6.30am when the last members of the public file past the Queen’s coffin in Westminste­r Hall, marking the end of four-and-a-half days of lying-in-state during which up to 500,000 will have paid their respects.

At 10.35am a company of Grenadier Guards, the Queen’s most senior guardsmen, will lift her coffin from the catafalque and place it on to the State Gun Carriage. The 2.8-ton carriage has taken four other Monarchs on their final journeys, including her father King George VI in 1952. It has been hauled by Royal Navy ratings using ropes since Queen Victoria’s funeral in 1901, when the horses due to pull the coffin reared up.

The short procession from Westminste­r Hall to Westminste­r Abbey, via Parliament Square, will be the first moment of jaw-dropping pageantry with 200 military musicians.

World leaders will arrive at the Abbey in a fleet of buses from 8am. In the only exception, US President Joe Biden has been allowed to use his armoured limousine, known as ‘The Beast’.

The hour-long service will start at 11am and will be conducted by the Dean Of Westminste­r, with the sermon by the Archbishop of Canterbury and a reading by Prime Minister Liz Truss. At around 11.55am the Last Post will sound and a mourning nation will come to a halt for two minutes of poignant silence.

Minutes later, the coffin, followed by King Charles and the Queen Consort, will emerge through the Abbey’s Great West Door before its extraordin­ary procession to Wellington Arch at Hyde Park Corner where it will be placed on a hearse for its final journey to Windsor.

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