Boston Sunday Globe

An ancient ceremony with modern twists

Charles crowned king in spectacle of the digital age

- By Mark Landler

‘I come not to be served, but to serve. Grant that I may be a blessing to all thy children, of every faith and belief.’

KING CHARLES III, during a personal prayer during his coronation

LONDON — Anointed with holy oil and enthroned on St. Edward’s chair, King Charles III was crowned Saturday in a solemn ritual that stretches back more than a millennium but unfolded with multiple concession­s to the modern age.

The coronation, the first since Queen Elizabeth II’s in 1953, was a royal spectacle of the kind that only Britain still stages: four hours of pageantry that began with the clip-clop of horses’ hoofs on Pall Mall and ended with the vaporous trails of acrobatic jets streaking above Buckingham Palace as Charles watched from the balcony with Queen Camilla, who had been crowned shortly after him.

Yet this was a coronation for a radically different country than when Elizabeth first wore the crown. Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, and Sikh leaders greeted Charles as he left Westminste­r Abbey, and there were various attempts — not always successful — to make a medieval ritual more inclusive and democratic.

Female bishops from the Church of England took part in the liturgy; hymns were sung in Welsh, Scottish, and Irish Gaelic; and when Charles, 74, took a sacred oath to defend the Protestant faith, he also offered a personal prayer, in which he promised to be a pluralisti­c monarch for a diverse society.

“I come not to be served, but to serve,” Charles said, moving gingerly in a velvet and gold lace robe first worn by his grandfathe­r, King George VI. “Grant that I may be a blessing to all thy children, of every faith and belief.”

At the invitation of the archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev. Justin Welby, who presided over the service, the congregati­on chanted, “God save King Charles,” their voices echoing in the abbey’s vaulted nave.

Among those in the audience of 2,200 were heads of state, including President Emmanuel Macron of France; entertainm­ent figures like singer Lionel Richie; and first lady Jill Biden, although not President Biden, who posted his congratula­tions to Charles on Twitter from the White House.

Outside, thousands of spectators lined the streets under a steady drizzle. There was little of the excitement that has electrifie­d crowds after royal weddings or the sadness that suffused mourners during the queen’s funeral in September. But there was a collective sense of history in the making, and even a tingle or two as the newly crowned king and queen passed in their gold stagecoach.

History, of course, had been made already: Charles ascended to the throne upon the death of the queen. But the coronation sanctifies a monarch’s rule and, through a national celebratio­n, aims to bind the sovereign to the people.

If Elizabeth’s coronation was one of the world’s first mass media events, its black-and-white images transmitte­d globally by the BBC, this was the first coronation of the digital age, shared by spectators on Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook.

“I am just intrigued,” Zoë Boyce, 24, said as she waited on a blanket in a park with a friend, Sarah Chappell, 23. Boyce insisted she was “not a big fan” of the monarchy but said, “I think you can appreciate it without supporting it.”

“It’s just a day in history, isn’t it?” Chappell added.

There were discordant notes. Hours before the service began, police arrested the head of Britain’s most prominent republican movement, Graham Smith, and others who had planned to protest in Trafalgar Square, along the procession route.

Smith said this past week that the anti-monarchist­s would chant and brandish placards saying, “Not My King,” but would not disrupt the proceeding­s. Yet police, armed with a much-disputed new law that allows them to crack down on demonstrat­ions, rounded up Smith and others well before Charles appeared.

As word of the arrests spread, other protesters milled restively outside the cordonedof­f area around Trafalgar Square.

“I think it’s disgusting,” said Charlie Willis, 20. “To have a giant party about having a crown put on your head when you have people dying of starvation and poverty. I mean, would you do that?”

One misstep in the days leading up to the ceremony was the archbishop’s plan to “call upon” millions of people across the United Kingdom and its realms to pay homage to the king, a modificati­on that he framed as a democratiz­ing step because that ritual had traditiona­lly been reserved for the aristocrac­y.

But after a backlash, Welby softened the wording. “I now invite those who wish to offer their support do so, with a moment of private reflection, by joining in saying, ‘God save King Charles,’” he said a touch tentativel­y.

The royal family’s awkward dynamics were on display in the ceremony. Prince Harry, the king’s estranged younger son, arrived alone with a gaggle of his cousins. Harry’s wife, Meghan, stayed home in Montecito, Calif., with the couple’s children, Lilibet and Archie, who celebrated his fourth birthday Saturday.

Harry was seated in the third row, between the husband of his cousin, Princess Eugenie, and Princess Alexandra, an 86-yearold cousin of the queen who is 56th in line to the throne. He did not appear in the lineup on the palace balcony, with British papers reporting that he was on his way back to California by midafterno­on.

By contrast, Harry’s brother, Prince William; his wife, Kate; and their children played a conspicuou­s role. Prince George, 9, their eldest son, held the king’s robe as one of the pages. Their 8-year-old daughter, Princess Charlotte, beguiled onlookers in an ivory silk crepe dress by designer Alexander McQueen — a miniature version of the dress worn by her mother.

For Camilla, 75, now elevated from queen consort to queen, the coronation represente­d the end of a decadeslon­g rehabilita­tion project that began with her marriage to Charles in 2005, after the messy dissolutio­n of his marriage to Princess Diana.

The day’s enduring focus, however, was on Charles. Somber throughout the two-hour ceremony, he looked like a man feeling the weight of the crown — in his case, an imperial one set with 2,868 diamonds, 17 sapphires, 11 emeralds, and 269 pearls. Only when he appeared on the balcony later did he flash a smile.

 ?? HANDOUT/CHRIS JACKSON/GETTY IMAGES FOR BUCKINGHAM PALACE ?? King Charles III and Queen Camilla waved from the balcony of Buckingham Palace after the coronation ceremony on Saturday in London.
HANDOUT/CHRIS JACKSON/GETTY IMAGES FOR BUCKINGHAM PALACE King Charles III and Queen Camilla waved from the balcony of Buckingham Palace after the coronation ceremony on Saturday in London.
 ?? AARON CHOWN/WPA POOL/GETTY IMAGES ?? The king was crowned by the archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev. Justin Welby (not pictured).
AARON CHOWN/WPA POOL/GETTY IMAGES The king was crowned by the archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev. Justin Welby (not pictured).
 ?? YUI MOK/WPA POOL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Above, from left, Prince William, Prince of Wales; Princess Charlotte; Prince Louis; and Catherine, Princess of Wales.
YUI MOK/WPA POOL/GETTY IMAGES Above, from left, Prince William, Prince of Wales; Princess Charlotte; Prince Louis; and Catherine, Princess of Wales.
 ?? PIROSCHKA VAN DE WOUW/POOL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Below, people protested against the monarchy.
PIROSCHKA VAN DE WOUW/POOL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Below, people protested against the monarchy.

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