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  1. In the weeks following the Coronation, The Queen reviewed the Royal Navy Fleet at Spithead, Portsmouth and visited Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales as part of continued celebrations.

  2. 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.

  3. 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
    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?1
    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?2
    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?3
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  4. After Queen Elizabeth II was crowned The Duke of Edinburgh was the first, after the archbishops and bishops, to pay homage to her. The Queen's Coronation took place on 2 June 1953 following her accession on 6 February 1952.

  5. Sep 13, 2022 · First stop was the North Atlantic island of Bermuda, a British territory she would visit a further four times during her reign. The trip would go on to include stops in Jamaica, Tonga,...

    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?1
    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?2
    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?3
    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?4
    • Where did Queen Elizabeth II visit after the coronation?5
  6. Jun 2, 2017 · The Coronation service used for Queen Elizabeth II descends directly from that of King Edgar at Bath in 973. The original 14th century order of service was written in Latin and was used until the Coronation of Elizabeth I.

  7. Though the husband of a reigning Queen, unlike a Queen Consort, is not crowned or anointed at the Coronation ceremony, The Duke of Edinburgh was the first peer to ‘do homage’ or pay his respects to The Queen, immediately after the Archbishops and Bishops.