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The United Kingdom today marked the Coronation of Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen Camilla.
Charles, born Charles Philip Arthur George on November 14, 1948, became the oldest person to ever accede to the British throne on the passing of Queen Elizabeth II aged 96 on September 8 last year.
Reading about the details of the coronation sounds about as exciting as reading the full red herring prospectus of an IPO before the days of digitization. In some RHPs, the font was tinier than Jerome Powell’s pauses.
King Charles III has several connections with India, going back to Emmanuel College in Cambridge where he was tutored by Shomie Ranjan Das, who was principal of the Holy Trinity of education: Mayo, Lawrence & Doon.
King Charles’ ascension feels like a moody sandwich of all the ingredients that taste like nothing in particular but are still pumped in between the slices of our existence. It doesn’t feel era-defining or even era-relevant.
The biggest change in the royal title came in 1876, when the Royal Titles Act made Queen Victoria Empress of India.
Dhankhar, accompanied by his wife Dr Sudesh Dhankhar, will join an estimated 100 Heads of State and government from around the world invited to the historic crowning of Britain's new monarch.
King Charles III will be crowned alongside wife Camilla on May 6 in a centuries-old ceremony with celebrations marked by pomp and pageantry. There have been two King Charles who reigned before Charles III. Take a look…
More than 2,200 people will attend the coronation of Britain's King Charles, Buckingham Palace said on May 1, including international representatives from 203 countries as well as community and charity workers.
The overall theme of the Liturgy is Called to Serve, which is intended to reflect the commitment that the King will make to serve God and the people of the United Kingdom.
King Charles’ coronation ceremony will be held on 6th May. A look at what will happen during the ceremony that’s been in the making for years.
Prince Harry will attend the coronation in London of his father King Charles III but without his wife Meghan, Buckingham Palace said on Wednesday.
It marks a 70-year gap since this royal tradition was last seen in action for the late Queen in 1953