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  1. The coronation ceremony of Elizabeth II followed a pattern similar to the coronations of the kings and queens before her, being held in Westminster Abbey, and involving the peerage and clergy. However, for the new queen, several parts of the ceremony were markedly different.

  2. June 2, 1953. Location: London. United Kingdom. coronation of Elizabeth II, coronation of Elizabeth II as queen of “the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, Pakistan and Ceylon,” and “Possessions and other Territories.”

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Was the Queen crowned in a different country?1
    • Was the Queen crowned in a different country?2
    • Was the Queen crowned in a different country?3
    • Was the Queen crowned in a different country?4
    • Was the Queen crowned in a different country?5
    • Accession. In 1952, King George VI's health was poor, and illness forced him to abandon a proposed Commonwealth tour. Princess Elizabeth, accompanied by Prince Philip, took his place, departing from London Airport on 31 January 1952.
    • The Coronation ceremony. On the eve of her Coronation, the day before she was to make her formal oath at Westminster Abbey, The Queen made a radio broadcast to the Commonwealth in which she pledged her devotion to its people, saying,
    • The first televised Coronation. The ceremony was broadcast on radio around the world and, at The Queen's request, on television for the first time. Television brought the splendour and significance of the Coronation to millions of people around the world, in a way never before possible.
    • Regalia and dress. On the journey to Westminster Abbey, The Queen wore the State Diadem, a circlet of diamonds, which she went on to wear for the State Opening of Parliament throughout her reign.
    • Childhood and Education of A Princess
    • Prince Philip and Queen Elizabeth
    • Queen Elizabeth's Coronation
    • Royal Scandals
    • Response to Lady Diana's Death
    • A Modern Monarchy
    • Sources

    When Elizabeth Alexandra Mary, the elder daughter of Prince Albert, Duke of York, and his wife, Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, was born on April 21, 1926, she apparently had little chance of assuming the throne, as her father was a younger son of King George V. But in late 1936, her uncle, King Edward VIII, abdicated to marry an American divorcée, Wall...

    Elizabeth and Margaret spent much of World War IIliving apart from their parents in the Royal Lodge at Windsor Castle, a medieval fortress outside London. In 1942, the king made Elizabeth an honorary colonel in the 500 Grenadier Guards, a Royal Army regiment. Two years later, he named her as a member of the Privy Council and the Council of State, e...

    With her father’s health declining in 1951, Elizabeth stepped in for him at various state functions. After spending that Christmaswith the royal family, Elizabeth and Philip left on a tour of Australia and New Zealand, making a stopover in Kenya en route. They were in Kenya on February 6, 1952, when King George VI succumbedto lung cancer at the age...

    In 1981, all eyes were on the royal family once again as Prince Charles wed Lady Diana Spencer at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. Though the couple soon welcomed two sons, William and Harry, their marriage quickly imploded, causing considerable public embarrassment for the queen and the entire royal family. In 1992, Elizabeth’s 40th year on the thr...

    After Charles and Diana divorced in 1996, Diana remained incredibly popular with the British (and international) public. Her tragic death the following year triggered a tremendous outpouring of shock and grief, as well as outrage at the royal family for what the public saw as its ill treatment of the “People’s Princess.” Though Queen Elizabeth init...

    The queen’s popularity, and that of the entire royal family, rebounded during the first decade of the 21st century. Though 2002 marked Queen Elizabeth’s Golden Jubilee—50 years on the throne—the death of her mother (the beloved Queen Mum) and sister early that year cast a pall on the celebrations. In 2005, the queen enjoyed public support when she ...

    Her Majesty the Queen, The Royal Household website. Sally Bedell Smith, Elizabeth the Queen (Penguin Random House, 2012). Queen Elizabeth II – Fast Facts, CNN. “Will Queen Elizabeth Give Prince Charles the Throne in 2018?” Newsweek.

  3. Mar 25, 2022 · She is also the queen of more than a dozen other independent countries that were once under direct British colonial rule. In 2021, Barbados became the latest country to sever its ties with the...

    • James Mcbride
  4. Jun 2, 2017 · Queen Elizabeth II is the sixth Queen to have been crowned in Westminster Abbey in her own right. The first was Queen Mary I, who was crowned on 1 October, 1553. 4. The Queen succeeded to the Throne on the 6 February, 1952 on the death of her father, King George VI.

  5. The number of states headed by Elizabeth II varied during her 70 years as queen, altogether seeing her as sovereign of a total of 32 independent countries during this period.