At exactly 12:02 pm (1102 GMT), the Archbishop of Canterbury
Justin Welby placed the solid gold St Edward’s Crown on Charles’s head as a
sacred and ancient symbol of the monarch’s authority.
Cries of “God Save the King” rang out from the 2,300-member
congregation at Westminster Abbey and trumpet fanfares sounded at the climax of
the solemn religious confirmation of his accession.
Outside, ceremonial gun salutes blasted out across land and
sea while bells pealed in celebration at churches.
Charles, 74, will wear the St Edward’s Crown only once
during his reign. His wife, Camilla, 75, was crowned queen in a simpler
ceremony soon afterwards.
The build-up to the Christian ceremony of prayer and praise
— steeped in 1,000 years of British history and tradition, with sumptuous robes
and priceless regalia — has been mostly celebratory.
But even before Charles and Camilla left Buckingham Palace
for a rainy procession to the abbey, police arrested dozens of protesters using
new powers rushed onto the statute book to crack down on direct action groups.
The anti-monarchy movement Republic — which wants an elected
head of state — said six of its organisers were detained, while climate
activists Just Stop Oil said 19 of its number were held.
Nevertheless, dozens of Republic activists held aloft
banners on the route of the procession route, declaring: “Not My King.”
Both Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International voiced
concern at the arrests. “This is something you would expect to see in Moscow,
not London,” HRW said.
London’s Metropolitan Police has some 11,500 officers on the
streets in one of its biggest ever security operations. It has warned that it
has an “extremely low threshold” for protests.
As well as being the first coronation in 70 years, it was
the first of a king since 1937. It was only the second to be televised and the
first in colour and streamed online.
Changes
Much of the two-hour Anglican service, in which Charles
pledged “I come not to be served but to serve”, would have been recognisable to
the 39 other monarchs crowned at Westminster Abbey since 1066.
But while many of the intricate rituals and ceremony to
recognise Charles as his people’s “undoubted king” remained, the king sought to
bring other aspects of the service up to date.
Female bishops and choristers participated for the first
time, as did leaders of Britain’s non-Christian faiths, while its Celtic
languages — Welsh, Scottish Gaelic and Irish Gaelic — featured prominently.
A gospel choir sang for the first time at a coronation while
a Greek choir intoned a psalm in tribute to Charles’s late father, Prince
Philip, who was born on the island of Corfu.
As king, Charles is supreme governor of the Church of
England and has described himself as a “committed Anglican Christian”.
But he heads a more religiously and ethnically diverse
country than the one his mother inherited in the shadow of World War II.
As such, he sought to make the congregation more reflective
of British society, inviting ordinary members of the public to sit alongside
heads of state and global royalty.
In another change, the coronation themes mirrored his
lifelong interest in biodiversity and sustainability.
Seasonal flowers and foliage were brought from the
wind-battered Isle of Skye in northwest Scotland to Cornwall at the tip of
England’s southwest coast to fill the abbey.
Ceremonial vestments from previous coronations were reused,
and the anointing oil — created from olives on groves on the Mount of Olives
and perfumed with essential oils — was vegan.
Charles was anointed out of sight of the congregation behind
a three-sided screen in front of the High Altar, to the strains of Handel’s
soaring anthem “Zadok the Priest”, sung at every coronation since 1727.