Berliner Boersenzeitung - Queen Elizabeth II ends historic jubilee in person with vow to carry on

EUR -
AED 4.264247
AFN 74.311769
ALL 94.886725
AMD 427.875417
ANG 2.07889
AOA 1060.246009
ARS 1659.56396
AUD 1.642496
AWG 2.091804
AZN 1.976736
BAM 1.956111
BBD 2.338872
BDT 142.544511
BGN 1.963331
BHD 0.437975
BIF 3471.611904
BMD 1.16113
BND 1.488862
BOB 8.02438
BRL 5.859292
BSD 1.161285
BTN 109.927376
BWP 15.580746
BYN 3.214967
BYR 22758.141333
BZD 2.335512
CAD 1.62337
CDF 2664.791999
CHF 0.921176
CLF 0.026413
CLP 1039.547747
CNY 7.862592
CNH 7.847187
COP 4055.256948
CRC 528.293117
CUC 1.16113
CUP 30.769936
CVE 110.282064
CZK 24.144589
DJF 206.784667
DKK 7.473954
DOP 68.25203
DZD 154.291311
EGP 58.464623
ERN 17.416945
ETB 187.217793
FJD 2.597683
FKP 0.866375
GBP 0.864815
GEL 3.082819
GGP 0.866375
GHS 12.890217
GIP 0.866375
GMD 84.762343
GNF 10172.749236
GTQ 8.852522
GYD 242.95073
HKD 9.096615
HNL 31.05334
HRK 7.533175
HTG 151.776752
HUF 350.621103
IDR 20571.734184
ILS 3.380792
IMP 0.866375
INR 109.857903
IQD 1521.261586
IRR 1597572.177044
ISK 144.606684
JEP 0.866375
JMD 184.069273
JOD 0.823274
JPY 185.974669
KES 150.215376
KGS 101.540995
KHR 4666.822571
KMF 494.641517
KPW 1045.0171
KRW 1757.719493
KWD 0.357895
KYD 0.967771
KZT 568.437745
LAK 25570.396909
LBP 103994.082106
LKR 386.118057
LRD 211.347252
LSL 18.783611
LTL 3.428514
LVL 0.702355
LYD 7.384302
MAD 10.735515
MDL 20.19956
MGA 4824.850425
MKD 61.642149
MMK 2437.315839
MNT 4152.999704
MOP 9.370852
MRU 46.358171
MUR 54.712206
MVR 17.95136
MWK 2013.654925
MXN 19.975026
MYR 4.703043
MZN 74.199814
NAD 18.78353
NGN 1578.184391
NIO 42.737349
NOK 11.056335
NPR 175.884001
NZD 1.988353
OMR 0.446461
PAB 1.1612
PEN 3.949279
PGK 5.085765
PHP 70.05444
PKR 323.081699
PLN 4.245618
PYG 7110.069513
QAR 4.233546
RON 5.236748
RSD 117.350726
RUB 84.210575
RWF 1705.900681
SAR 4.356668
SBD 9.341953
SCR 15.90431
SDG 697.260686
SEK 10.899287
SGD 1.488719
SHP 0.866901
SLE 28.622323
SLL 24348.312657
SOS 663.616969
SRD 43.55339
STD 24033.039647
STN 24.503897
SVC 10.160747
SYP 128.342097
SZL 18.78031
THB 37.790707
TJS 10.764751
TMT 4.075565
TND 3.398511
TOP 2.795722
TRY 53.735635
TTD 7.882389
TWD 36.607518
TZS 3049.710573
UAH 52.061976
UGX 4313.76034
USD 1.16113
UYU 47.098302
UZS 13911.152452
VES 675.728508
VND 30526.098758
VUV 138.756202
WST 3.185551
XAF 656.072639
XAG 0.016371
XAU 0.000268
XCD 3.138011
XCG 2.09286
XDR 0.816711
XOF 656.072639
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.063999
ZAR 18.81801
ZMK 10451.55903
ZMW 20.41351
ZWL 373.883277
  • RYCEF

    0.6300

    18.13

    +3.47%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.0800

    52.96

    -0.15%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.39

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    0.0381

    24.315

    +0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.4100

    15.12

    -2.71%

  • BTI

    -0.1850

    62.135

    -0.3%

  • RELX

    -0.3000

    33.44

    -0.9%

  • BCC

    1.3100

    72.45

    +1.81%

  • RIO

    0.8600

    106.21

    +0.81%

  • CMSD

    0.0010

    22.261

    0%

  • BP

    -1.3250

    41.455

    -3.2%

  • NGG

    -0.6300

    81.21

    -0.78%

  • AZN

    -1.1300

    177.62

    -0.64%

  • JRI

    0.1385

    12.805

    +1.08%

Queen Elizabeth II ends historic jubilee in person with vow to carry on
Queen Elizabeth II ends historic jubilee in person with vow to carry on / Photo: Frank Augstein - POOL/AFP

Queen Elizabeth II ends historic jubilee in person with vow to carry on

Queen Elizabeth II on Sunday brought the curtain down on her historic Platinum Jubilee celebrations, making a rare public appearance on the last of four days of festivities and vowing to maintain her record-breaking reign.

Text size:

The 96-year-old monarch, who has been dogged by problems with walking and standing, appeared for the first time in person since two showings Thursday on the Buckingham Palace balcony after the Trooping the Colour military parade.

That effort forced her to pull out of a thanksgiving church service on Friday, plus the Epsom Derby horse race and a star-studded concert on Saturday.

Huge crowds stretching hundreds of metres (yards) down The Mall outside the palace cheered as she re-emerged onto the balcony briefly Sunday afternoon.

It followed a public parade reflecting changes in music, dance, fashion, culture and society since she came to the throne way back in 1952.

Dressed in green with a matching hat, her white gloved hand clutching a walking stick, she was flanked by the three future kings: princes Charles, William and George.

In a statement issued shortly after, the monarch said she had been "humbled and deeply touched" by the turnout for her Platinum Jubilee celebrations and "inspired by the kindness, joy and kinship that has been so evident in recent days".

"While I may not have attended every event in person, my heart has been with you all; and I remain committed to serving you to the best of my ability, supported by my family," Britain's longest-serving sovereign added.

- Pageant -

Sunday's £15-million ($18.7-million, 17.5-million-euro) "Platinum Jubilee Pageant", featuring some 10,000 people, began with a parade of armed forces from the UK and the Commonwealth she heads.

The queen's hologram was projected onto the sovereign's 260-year-old Gold State Coach that led the celebration of her record-breaking reign.

Some 6,000 disabled and non-disabled performers from street theatre, carnival and puppetry joined in to celebrate the queen's life and reign.

Highlights included an aerial artist suspended under a vast helium balloon, known as a heliosphere, bearing the sovereign's image.

The carnival included a giant oak tree flanked with maypole dancers, a huge moving wedding cake, bangra drummers, steel bands, plus African-Caribbean carnival animals and a towering dancing dragon.

In the royal box, Charles kept his four-year-old grandson Prince Louis entertained, bouncing him on his knees to the rhythm of the music.

Singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran wrapped up the pageant with a rendition of his 2017 hit "Perfect", and the national anthem "God Save the Queen".

Elsewhere across the country, more than 10 million people are estimated to have braved overcast skies to share food with friends, family and neighbours to mark the occasion.

- End of era -

Two public holidays on Thursday and Friday, longer pub opening hours, street parties and other events have temporarily lifted the gloom of soaring inflation and political turmoil plus two years of enforced Covid closures.

Many saw it as a once-in-a-generation event to mark the closing of an extraordinary chapter in British life and to recognise its most famous national symbol.

On Saturday night, she put in a surprise on-screen appearance, taking tea with the beloved children's book and film character Paddington Bear.

In the pre-recorded video, she tapped out the drumbeat of rock band Queen's "We Will Rock You" -- the concert's opening number -- on a fine china teacup and saucer to get the party started.

A peak of 13.4 million viewers watched the concert on television, the BBC said.

The queen previously made a cameo with James Bond actor Daniel Craig for the opening of the London 2012 Olympics.

A running theme has been the dramatic social, political and technological changes in Britain and the world since the queen came to the throne -- and her constant presence through it all.

With Charles now 73, the next jubilee -- probably for his eldest son William's 25th year on the throne -- could be at least 50 years away.

"She's been the queen my whole life," said visiting American John Barli, 66.

"She's the world's grandmother as far I'm concerned," he told the Sunday Times.

But there was also acknowledgement the second Elizabethan era -- five centuries after the first -- is nearly over.

- 'Long goodbye' -

A spectacular light show illuminated the palace and the night sky above it on Saturday, including images of a corgi, a handbag and a teapot.

One message said simply: "Thank you, Ma'am."

"Inevitably, this celebration had a valedictory feel," the Sunday Telegraph said of Saturday's concert, which was headlined by Diana Ross.

"But there is also the keen awareness that we will never see the likes of this monarch again."

"It won't be the same without our queen," Julie Blewitt, 56, from Manchester, told AFP outside St Paul's Cathedral on Friday.

"It's such a shame she won't be here for much longer."

The Observer weekly called it "part of a long goodbye that began with her solitary attendance at Prince Philip's funeral last year".

The queen has gradually been preparing the public for the familiar figure of Charles to take over as king.

The jubilee was "an opportunity to reflect on all that has been achieved during the last 70 years, as we look to the future with confidence and enthusiasm", she said in a message on Wednesday.

Yet the institution that Charles and, after him, William will lead will be different from the one Elizabeth inherited in the aftermath of World War II.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)