Berliner Boersenzeitung - Wedding, coronation, now funeral: emotive farewell to queen

EUR -
AED 4.256003
AFN 73.00991
ALL 94.83564
AMD 427.654283
ANG 2.074871
AOA 1058.196532
ARS 1656.629184
AUD 1.641143
AWG 2.08889
AZN 1.968014
BAM 1.955142
BBD 2.337673
BDT 142.47207
BGN 1.959536
BHD 0.43776
BIF 3469.817713
BMD 1.158885
BND 1.488093
BOB 8.020336
BRL 5.882613
BSD 1.160689
BTN 109.870563
BWP 15.572358
BYN 3.213388
BYR 22714.148505
BZD 2.334274
CAD 1.62212
CDF 2689.772142
CHF 0.921377
CLF 0.02622
CLP 1031.940886
CNY 7.834701
CNH 7.836323
COP 4046.247424
CRC 528.031472
CUC 1.158885
CUP 30.710456
CVE 110.560865
CZK 24.154408
DJF 206.676903
DKK 7.475841
DOP 67.736659
DZD 154.264951
EGP 58.344341
ERN 17.383277
ETB 187.11942
FJD 2.56798
FKP 0.8647
GBP 0.86465
GEL 3.076909
GGP 0.8647
GHS 13.008502
GIP 0.8647
GMD 84.01891
GNF 10169.21677
GTQ 8.847985
GYD 242.829355
HKD 9.077814
HNL 31.037023
HRK 7.535301
HTG 151.69962
HUF 350.475259
IDR 20529.476206
ILS 3.363774
IMP 0.8647
INR 109.63471
IQD 1520.462246
IRR 1594339.10353
ISK 144.420112
JEP 0.8647
JMD 183.98128
JOD 0.821651
JPY 185.520141
KES 150.041506
KGS 101.34431
KHR 4647.128755
KMF 492.526507
KPW 1042.997021
KRW 1752.657298
KWD 0.357146
KYD 0.967291
KZT 568.158665
LAK 25524.444643
LBP 103778.163157
LKR 385.913511
LRD 211.119863
LSL 18.797512
LTL 3.421886
LVL 0.700999
LYD 7.393432
MAD 10.745473
MDL 20.189556
MGA 4822.252864
MKD 61.65751
MMK 2432.604363
MNT 4144.971711
MOP 9.365887
MRU 46.425215
MUR 54.919334
MVR 17.904898
MWK 2012.983232
MXN 19.960047
MYR 4.705192
MZN 74.064411
NAD 18.774308
NGN 1575.168516
NIO 42.71563
NOK 11.072359
NPR 175.796892
NZD 1.99465
OMR 0.445588
PAB 1.16061
PEN 3.947289
PGK 5.083356
PHP 69.897575
PKR 322.916105
PLN 4.25363
PYG 7106.486592
QAR 4.231358
RON 5.235957
RSD 117.370677
RUB 83.961935
RWF 1705.055811
SAR 4.348362
SBD 9.323895
SCR 14.671901
SDG 695.909343
SEK 10.907746
SGD 1.486757
SHP 0.865225
SLE 28.567018
SLL 24301.245934
SOS 663.288304
SRD 43.479044
STD 23986.582365
STN 24.492077
SVC 10.155627
SYP 128.094004
SZL 18.770199
THB 37.782552
TJS 10.759234
TMT 4.067687
TND 3.396843
TOP 2.790318
TRY 53.66924
TTD 7.878214
TWD 36.597018
TZS 3047.865553
UAH 52.034397
UGX 4311.568104
USD 1.158885
UYU 47.073554
UZS 13904.082431
VES 674.422285
VND 30461.295584
VUV 138.487978
WST 3.179393
XAF 655.74771
XAG 0.016664
XAU 0.000268
XCD 3.131945
XCG 2.091805
XDR 0.815505
XOF 655.725084
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.508374
ZAR 18.794046
ZMK 10431.356246
ZMW 20.402784
ZWL 373.160538
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.34

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    81.57

    -0.33%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    71.59

    +0.63%

  • RYCEF

    1.0700

    18.11

    +5.91%

  • BCE

    -0.2369

    24.04

    -0.99%

  • RBGPF

    2.1500

    62.87

    +3.42%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.32

    +0.27%

  • VOD

    -0.5300

    15

    -3.53%

  • RIO

    0.5400

    105.89

    +0.51%

  • RELX

    -0.9000

    32.84

    -2.74%

  • JRI

    0.1135

    12.78

    +0.89%

  • GSK

    -0.8100

    52.23

    -1.55%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    177.27

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -1.2600

    61.06

    -2.06%

  • BP

    -1.1900

    41.59

    -2.86%

Wedding, coronation, now funeral: emotive farewell to queen
Wedding, coronation, now funeral: emotive farewell to queen / Photo: Ben Stansall - POOL/AFP

Wedding, coronation, now funeral: emotive farewell to queen

Queen Elizabeth II was married and crowned in Westminster Abbey. In death, she entered and departed the thousand-year-old church to the same words of prayer: "May God grant to the living, grace; to the departed, rest."

Text size:

The words are engraved on a stone slab next to the Great West Door through which Elizabeth's coffin was borne for Monday's Anglican funeral service, attended by leaders of all faiths from around the world.

They were the same words intoned by the dean of the abbey, David Hoyle -- part of the final blessing concluding the hour-long service, before trumpeters sounded the Cavalry Last Post.

Then followed a two-minute silence in the abbey and throughout the new kingdom of the late monarch's eldest son, now Charles III.

The ceremony closed with the national anthem, "God Save the King", symbolising the transition from one reign to another, and a lone piper playing the Scottish lament "Sleep, dearie, sleep".

Eight minutes before arriving at the abbey, the coffin had departed on a gun carriage pulled by Royal Navy sailors from Westminster Hall, where hundreds of thousands of public mourners had filed past since Wednesday.

At one end of the medieval hall, it passed under a stained-glass window commissioned by parliament for the queen's record-breaking Platinum Jubilee this year, and then past a fountain erected in 1977 for her Silver Jubilee.

The window features the royal coat of arms with the monarch's motto "Dieu et mon droit" (God and my right) -- symbolising, like the funeral service, the monarch's divinely ordained role as guardian of the nation.

On the heavy lead-lined oak coffin lay a new wreath of flowers, with the message "In loving and devoted memory. Charles R" (for Rex, or king).

The coffin also bore the instruments of state -- the Imperial State Crown, the Orb and the Sceptre.

They were to be placed on the high altar of St George's Chapel in Windsor Castle, where the queen was to be buried after a final military procession from the abbey to London's Wellington Arch.

- 'We will meet again' -

The burial was to be a private affair for the royal family -- in contrast to the grandeur and public nature of the televised abbey service, a last opportunity for the nation and world to bid adieu.

Leading up to the service, Westminster Abbey's tenor bell tolled every minute for 96 minutes, signifying the age at which Britain's longest-reigning sovereign died on September 8.

Through the Great West Door, eight pallbearers from the Grenadier Guards bore the coffin past the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior, an eternal tribute to Britain's war dead.

They processed down the nave to the high altar, accompanied by a choir singing biblical verses starting with words from the New Testament book of John: "I am the resurrection and the life."

In his sermon, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby noted words the queen used in a broadcast when Britain went into lockdown at the start of the Covid pandemic, plunging millions into anxious isolation.

She in turn had drawn on a famous World War II song by much-loved singer Vera Lynn: "We will meet again."

"Service in life, hope in death," Welby intoned. "All who follow the queen's example, and inspiration of trust and faith in God, can with her say: 'We WILL meet again.'"

The service included New Testament readings by Commonwealth secretary-general Patricia Scotland and by Liz Truss -- who was appointed by the queen as her 15th prime minister only two days before she passed away.

As the coffin was borne out, the abbey organist played a sonata allegro movement by Edward Elgar -- part of a musical programme drawing heavily on English composers that was selected by the queen herself, along with the hymns and prayers.

When applause swept through the abbey from the crowds outside during the funeral of Diana, princess of Wales in 1997, it seemed revolutionary and a threat to the monarchy.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)