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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,400 --> 00:00:06,560 On one of the coldest June days of the century, 2 00:00:06,560 --> 00:00:10,680 after 16 months of planning, and watched by millions of people 3 00:00:10,680 --> 00:00:15,600 throughout the world, Her Majesty the Queen set out to be crowned. 4 00:00:20,040 --> 00:00:22,480 One of the world's oldest ceremonies 5 00:00:22,480 --> 00:00:26,720 was to mark the dawn of a new, Elizabethan age. 6 00:00:27,720 --> 00:00:32,120 Now, in what has become the longest reign of any British monarch, 7 00:00:32,120 --> 00:00:36,280 the Queen talks for the first time about that day. 8 00:00:36,280 --> 00:00:39,200 When you're taking part in something you don't actually see it. 9 00:00:39,200 --> 00:00:43,640 Her Majesty reveals her intimate knowledge of the Crown Jewels. 10 00:00:43,640 --> 00:00:47,600 He hands it that way, you see, so that I put it on... Right. 11 00:00:47,600 --> 00:00:50,600 ..when he hands it, and I put it on straight, 12 00:00:50,600 --> 00:00:52,960 so there are some disadvantages to crowns, 13 00:00:52,960 --> 00:00:56,320 but otherwise they're quite important things. 14 00:00:57,480 --> 00:00:59,880 No British monarch has ever talked 15 00:00:59,880 --> 00:01:02,680 about their coronation on camera until now. 16 00:01:04,120 --> 00:01:07,600 And with unprecedented access to the Royal Collection, 17 00:01:07,600 --> 00:01:11,920 this programme unlocks the story of the Crown Jewels. 18 00:01:13,680 --> 00:01:15,600 The Crown Jewels matter - 19 00:01:15,600 --> 00:01:18,920 they are conductors for a feeling that we have about our country, 20 00:01:18,920 --> 00:01:23,200 and that is something that comes alive when they're actually used. 21 00:01:23,200 --> 00:01:26,960 We meet those who witnessed the events of that day. 22 00:01:26,960 --> 00:01:29,680 Everybody thought the Queen had arrived so everybody stood up, 23 00:01:29,680 --> 00:01:32,520 8,000 people stood up, when from underneath the organ loft 24 00:01:32,520 --> 00:01:35,040 came four cleaners with carpet sweepers. 25 00:01:35,040 --> 00:01:38,880 In a Britain recovering from war and austerity, 26 00:01:38,880 --> 00:01:41,560 nothing could be allowed to go wrong. 27 00:01:41,560 --> 00:01:46,120 Under there, we had a phial of smelling salts. 28 00:01:47,200 --> 00:01:53,720 Finally, after 65 years, we tell the inside story of the Crown Jewels, 29 00:01:53,720 --> 00:01:55,960 and the Queen's coronation. 30 00:01:55,960 --> 00:01:58,480 I mean, I've seen one, one coronation, 31 00:01:58,480 --> 00:02:00,840 and been the recipient in the other, 32 00:02:00,840 --> 00:02:02,720 which is pretty remarkable. 33 00:02:16,280 --> 00:02:20,040 Today, the two crowns used in the Queen's coronation 34 00:02:20,040 --> 00:02:23,640 have just left their heavily guarded home in the Tower of London 35 00:02:23,640 --> 00:02:27,120 for an unprecedented assignment at Buckingham Palace. 36 00:02:42,920 --> 00:02:45,240 For the first time since her coronation, 37 00:02:45,240 --> 00:02:47,200 Her Majesty the Queen has agreed to 38 00:02:47,200 --> 00:02:52,160 talk about the ceremony that marked the start of her reign 65 years ago. 39 00:02:54,280 --> 00:02:57,400 With coronation expert Alastair Bruce, 40 00:02:57,400 --> 00:03:01,000 she is about to reacquaint herself firstly with the crown 41 00:03:01,000 --> 00:03:04,920 she has only ever worn once - at the moment of coronation. 42 00:03:06,480 --> 00:03:11,560 St Edward's Crown was made in 1661 for the coronation of Charles II. 43 00:03:13,960 --> 00:03:18,040 This priceless piece can only be handled by the Queen, 44 00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:21,360 the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Crown Jeweller. 45 00:03:23,400 --> 00:03:26,640 Today, it's been summoned from its fortress home 46 00:03:26,640 --> 00:03:29,680 to Her Majesty's throne room. 47 00:03:29,680 --> 00:03:34,000 Encrusted with 440 precious and semi-precious stones, 48 00:03:34,000 --> 00:03:38,880 and with a frame of solid gold, it weighs 5lb. 49 00:03:40,160 --> 00:03:42,120 Is it still as heavy? 50 00:03:42,120 --> 00:03:43,840 Yes, it is. 51 00:03:43,840 --> 00:03:45,680 It weighs a ton. 52 00:03:48,640 --> 00:03:50,280 It's very solid, isn't it? 53 00:03:55,360 --> 00:03:58,640 Ma'am, I don't suppose you've seen it much... 54 00:03:58,640 --> 00:04:01,680 No, I haven't. Thank goodness! ..since the coronation! 55 00:04:04,080 --> 00:04:07,720 And it is impossible to tell which is front and back, I suppose. 56 00:04:13,360 --> 00:04:15,080 It's identical, I think. 57 00:04:16,400 --> 00:04:18,840 The crowning with St Edward's Crown 58 00:04:18,840 --> 00:04:21,440 is the centrepiece of the coronation. 59 00:04:22,960 --> 00:04:26,400 It's the ceremony that marks the moment when the new sovereign 60 00:04:26,400 --> 00:04:29,960 is formally recognised in front of God and their people. 61 00:04:32,240 --> 00:04:35,520 And it goes back more than 1,000 years. 62 00:04:37,280 --> 00:04:40,800 The ritual of the coronation has been being performed 63 00:04:40,800 --> 00:04:43,160 pretty much exactly along the same lines, other than being 64 00:04:43,160 --> 00:04:47,800 translated into English from Latin, since the Anglo-Saxon period, 65 00:04:47,800 --> 00:04:50,480 and that is an extraordinary thing. 66 00:04:52,560 --> 00:04:56,400 The order of service was written down more than 600 years ago 67 00:04:56,400 --> 00:04:58,240 in a medieval manuscript. 68 00:04:58,240 --> 00:05:01,520 It outlines the five stages of the coronation. 69 00:05:02,680 --> 00:05:05,760 They move from the recognition, where the monarch shows they 70 00:05:05,760 --> 00:05:11,320 aren't an impostor, via an oath, and an anointing, to the crowning. 71 00:05:11,320 --> 00:05:16,400 And finally, the lords of the land pay their homage to the monarch. 72 00:05:19,680 --> 00:05:23,600 And central to each stage are the Crown Jewels. 73 00:05:28,080 --> 00:05:29,720 In the collection, 74 00:05:29,720 --> 00:05:32,160 there are 140 items, 75 00:05:32,160 --> 00:05:36,080 containing more than 23,000 precious stones. 76 00:05:37,880 --> 00:05:42,600 Most are used in the coronation and are known as the Regalia. 77 00:05:42,600 --> 00:05:45,840 We have this incredible continuity in this country 78 00:05:45,840 --> 00:05:47,320 in the form of the coronation. 79 00:05:47,320 --> 00:05:49,200 Other countries still have a monarchy, 80 00:05:49,200 --> 00:05:51,680 but very, very few have a medieval... In fact, 81 00:05:51,680 --> 00:05:54,040 none has a medieval coronation in the way that we do. 82 00:05:54,040 --> 00:05:57,000 And that we have a collection of regalia that is 83 00:05:57,000 --> 00:06:01,200 used for that...is astonishing. 84 00:06:04,120 --> 00:06:08,360 The concept of the crown dates back at least 2,000 years. 85 00:06:08,360 --> 00:06:12,000 Originally a simple band, a halo of light, 86 00:06:12,000 --> 00:06:14,920 it represents the sovereign as head of the nation. 87 00:06:16,960 --> 00:06:20,120 Then, there are the other sacred items in the collection 88 00:06:20,120 --> 00:06:23,040 that throughout the ceremony symbolise different aspects 89 00:06:23,040 --> 00:06:25,400 of the monarch's powers. 90 00:06:29,920 --> 00:06:33,720 The orb is an expression of religious and moral authority. 91 00:06:35,560 --> 00:06:37,240 The sceptre embodies power. 92 00:06:40,800 --> 00:06:45,360 The ampulla and spoon represent the most holy part of the ceremony, 93 00:06:45,360 --> 00:06:48,360 when the monarch is anointed with the coronation oil. 94 00:06:51,680 --> 00:06:56,560 And the Sovereign's Ring, known by some as the Wedding Ring of England, 95 00:06:56,560 --> 00:07:00,120 symbolises the lifetime commitment of the monarch. 96 00:07:03,040 --> 00:07:05,920 It's an amazing thing to see these objects which, in a way, 97 00:07:05,920 --> 00:07:08,960 are very familiar to people from afar, but to see them 98 00:07:08,960 --> 00:07:12,480 up close like this, actually, that proximity is extraordinary 99 00:07:12,480 --> 00:07:18,240 because you can really appreciate what astonishing objects they are. 100 00:07:20,800 --> 00:07:23,240 For many, the role of the Crown Jewels has been 101 00:07:23,240 --> 00:07:27,800 largely forgotten after 65 years without a coronation. 102 00:07:27,800 --> 00:07:30,920 They're not just objects of tremendous beauty and skill 103 00:07:30,920 --> 00:07:33,520 and craftsmanship and so on, 104 00:07:33,520 --> 00:07:38,640 they are an expression of the way in which authority has worked in this 105 00:07:38,640 --> 00:07:42,480 country, the relationship between the sovereign and the subject. 106 00:07:42,480 --> 00:07:47,240 So there's a kind of an expression of all of our history 107 00:07:47,240 --> 00:07:50,720 in that relationship in those objects. 108 00:07:53,800 --> 00:07:56,960 The most important items used in the coronation 109 00:07:56,960 --> 00:07:59,040 are the monarch's two crowns. 110 00:08:01,320 --> 00:08:05,320 If the Queen has only worn St Edward's gold crown once, 111 00:08:05,320 --> 00:08:07,800 she is much more familiar with this - 112 00:08:07,800 --> 00:08:11,920 the diamond-encrusted Imperial State Crown. 113 00:08:11,920 --> 00:08:14,240 She wore it at the end of her coronation 114 00:08:14,240 --> 00:08:17,360 and for most State Openings of Parliament since. 115 00:08:18,880 --> 00:08:22,440 You see, it's much smaller, isn't it? 116 00:08:22,440 --> 00:08:25,360 Significantly. I mean, it was... It was the same height. 117 00:08:26,680 --> 00:08:31,120 You know, it would have been up to about there when my father wore it. 118 00:08:33,680 --> 00:08:35,880 I mean, it was huge then. 119 00:08:35,880 --> 00:08:38,680 Yes. Very un... Unwieldy. 120 00:08:40,680 --> 00:08:45,720 It's difficult to always remember that diamonds are stones, 121 00:08:45,720 --> 00:08:47,840 and so they're very heavy. 122 00:08:47,840 --> 00:08:49,280 Yes. 123 00:08:49,280 --> 00:08:50,920 Fortunately, my father 124 00:08:50,920 --> 00:08:53,600 and I have about the same sort of shaped head. Hm. 125 00:08:53,600 --> 00:08:55,560 But once you put it on, it stays. 126 00:08:55,560 --> 00:08:58,480 I mean, it just remains itself. 127 00:08:58,480 --> 00:09:00,640 You have to keep your head very still. Yes. 128 00:09:00,640 --> 00:09:02,960 And you can't look down to read the speech - 129 00:09:02,960 --> 00:09:04,760 you have to take the speech up. 130 00:09:04,760 --> 00:09:08,840 Because if you did, your neck would break, or it would fall off. 131 00:09:11,720 --> 00:09:14,960 So there are some disadvantages to crowns, 132 00:09:14,960 --> 00:09:19,040 but otherwise they're quite important things. 133 00:09:19,040 --> 00:09:22,040 Can I ask if the crown could be brought a little bit closer to the Queen? 134 00:09:25,760 --> 00:09:27,280 Oh, there we go. 135 00:09:28,760 --> 00:09:31,120 This is what I do when I wear it. 136 00:09:31,120 --> 00:09:32,840 Can I look at this end? 137 00:09:32,840 --> 00:09:35,600 Yes, certainly, ma'am. I like the Black Prince's Ruby. 138 00:09:37,840 --> 00:09:41,160 This crown contains the story of 1,000 years 139 00:09:41,160 --> 00:09:43,600 of the history of the British monarchy. 140 00:09:43,600 --> 00:09:49,120 The ruby, actually a semi-precious stone mined in Afghanistan, is said 141 00:09:49,120 --> 00:09:53,800 to have been worn by Henry V in 1415 at the Battle of Agincourt. 142 00:09:55,400 --> 00:09:58,000 He is supposed to have placed a feather in the hole 143 00:09:58,000 --> 00:09:59,520 drilled into the ruby. 144 00:10:01,240 --> 00:10:02,800 It's fun to see, I think. 145 00:10:04,240 --> 00:10:09,200 Well, the idea that his plume was put into the stone... 146 00:10:10,800 --> 00:10:12,480 ..for his... On his helmet. 147 00:10:14,000 --> 00:10:17,040 Bit rash, but that was the sort of thing they did, 148 00:10:17,040 --> 00:10:18,720 I suppose, in those days. 149 00:10:18,720 --> 00:10:22,120 Four pearls hang underneath the arches. 150 00:10:22,120 --> 00:10:25,320 Two of them were said to have belonged to Mary, Queen of Scots, 151 00:10:25,320 --> 00:10:28,760 and were bought by her rival Elizabeth I 152 00:10:28,760 --> 00:10:31,160 after Mary's execution. 153 00:10:32,280 --> 00:10:35,560 They were meant to be Queen Elizabeth's earrings. 154 00:10:35,560 --> 00:10:39,280 Um...but they're not very happy now. 155 00:10:39,280 --> 00:10:40,880 They don't look very happy now. 156 00:10:42,400 --> 00:10:46,120 Most pearls like to be sort of living creatures, 157 00:10:46,120 --> 00:10:52,120 so they've just been out, hanging out here for years. It's rather sad. 158 00:10:52,120 --> 00:10:55,840 So they don't look very happy. 159 00:10:55,840 --> 00:10:57,080 Quite dead. 160 00:10:57,080 --> 00:10:58,600 Well, I'm afraid so. 161 00:10:58,600 --> 00:11:02,120 I mean, the trouble is that pearls are sort of live things... 162 00:11:04,720 --> 00:11:08,080 Yeah. ..and they need... They need warming. 163 00:11:13,640 --> 00:11:18,320 The Queen's relationship with the Regalia began in 1937, 164 00:11:18,320 --> 00:11:22,120 at her father King George VI's coronation. 165 00:11:24,800 --> 00:11:28,000 Her Majesty is about to look at footage of what happened 166 00:11:28,000 --> 00:11:29,840 when her father was crowned. 167 00:11:33,160 --> 00:11:36,120 The coronation didn't quite go to plan. 168 00:11:38,040 --> 00:11:41,720 The Archbishop of Canterbury, who conducts the service, 169 00:11:41,720 --> 00:11:42,920 thought he'd cunningly 170 00:11:42,920 --> 00:11:46,080 marked the front of St Edward's Crown with a piece of cotton... 171 00:11:47,400 --> 00:11:50,080 ..but at the vital moment, he couldn't find it. 172 00:11:51,600 --> 00:11:54,400 Now, this is when they'd lost the little piece of thread 173 00:11:54,400 --> 00:12:00,200 that the organisers had placed through the front arch. 174 00:12:02,480 --> 00:12:04,800 The King wrote in his diary, "I never did know 175 00:12:04,800 --> 00:12:07,160 "whether it was put on the right way or not." 176 00:12:08,560 --> 00:12:10,400 I don't think the King was best pleased. 177 00:12:10,400 --> 00:12:11,640 No, he wasn't. 178 00:12:14,880 --> 00:12:18,680 An 11-year-old Princess Elizabeth attended the service. 179 00:12:18,680 --> 00:12:22,360 Her father was determined that his daughter's coronation 180 00:12:22,360 --> 00:12:24,040 would run more smoothly. 181 00:12:26,120 --> 00:12:28,160 I remember my father making me 182 00:12:28,160 --> 00:12:30,920 write down what I remembered about his coronation. 183 00:12:32,560 --> 00:12:35,520 It was very valuable. Have you never seen it? 184 00:12:36,600 --> 00:12:40,600 The Queen's own account, written in a child's exercise book, 185 00:12:40,600 --> 00:12:42,880 contains remarkable insights. 186 00:12:44,360 --> 00:12:47,280 "I thought it all very, very wonderful, 187 00:12:47,280 --> 00:12:49,680 "and I expect the Abbey did, too. 188 00:12:49,680 --> 00:12:52,520 "The arches and beams at the top were covered with 189 00:12:52,520 --> 00:12:56,920 "a sort of haze of wonder as Papa was crowned, at least I thought so." 190 00:13:00,800 --> 00:13:04,360 The events left a lasting impression on the Queen. 191 00:13:04,360 --> 00:13:06,520 Can you remember that one almost better than yours? 192 00:13:06,520 --> 00:13:09,600 Much better because I wasn't doing anything - I was just sitting there. 193 00:13:09,600 --> 00:13:13,960 From that moment on, guided by her father, 194 00:13:13,960 --> 00:13:17,200 the Queen was preparing for her own coronation. 195 00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:24,520 No-one was more aware of the importance of the Crown Jewels 196 00:13:24,520 --> 00:13:28,640 to the coronation and to the nation than the Queen's father. 197 00:13:32,480 --> 00:13:34,840 In the Second World War, 198 00:13:34,840 --> 00:13:38,560 when Britain faced the threat of Nazi invasion, the King was 199 00:13:38,560 --> 00:13:42,880 intimately involved in plans to keep the jewels out of Hitler's hands. 200 00:13:48,760 --> 00:13:52,480 To protect them, they were taken from the Tower. 201 00:13:52,480 --> 00:13:56,560 Only a handful of people knew where they were hidden, until now. 202 00:13:58,200 --> 00:14:01,440 Recently uncovered private correspondence 203 00:14:01,440 --> 00:14:04,080 reveals that the Crown Jewels were actually hidden 204 00:14:04,080 --> 00:14:05,920 under Windsor Castle. 205 00:14:12,800 --> 00:14:15,800 Librarian Oliver Urquhart Irvine, 206 00:14:15,800 --> 00:14:18,920 who discovered the letters, is showing Alastair Bruce 207 00:14:18,920 --> 00:14:23,840 their specially built secret hiding place, 60 feet below the castle. 208 00:14:25,600 --> 00:14:30,560 It was accessed by a medieval tunnel known as a sally port - 209 00:14:30,560 --> 00:14:33,760 a secret passage with a concealed entrance 210 00:14:33,760 --> 00:14:36,240 that was used in times of siege. 211 00:14:39,760 --> 00:14:42,600 Oh, my goodness, look down there! 212 00:14:43,640 --> 00:14:45,760 You'd better lead us down. Yes, absolutely. 213 00:14:47,080 --> 00:14:48,840 Descend right underneath the castle. 214 00:14:54,360 --> 00:14:58,640 One imagines that, you know, the King was determined to make sure 215 00:14:58,640 --> 00:15:02,600 that right down here, the Nazis would never find the Crown Jewels. 216 00:15:02,600 --> 00:15:06,520 So here are the chambers built to hold the jewels. 217 00:15:06,520 --> 00:15:08,880 It is far bigger than I thought. 218 00:15:10,760 --> 00:15:13,440 And so, literally all the symbols, 219 00:15:13,440 --> 00:15:18,120 the regalia of this nation that go back centuries, held here. 220 00:15:18,120 --> 00:15:21,440 Of all the things that were to be kept close by 221 00:15:21,440 --> 00:15:24,080 and guarded most securely at the largest 222 00:15:24,080 --> 00:15:26,880 and most significant of the Royal palaces and fortresses, 223 00:15:26,880 --> 00:15:30,680 it is those actual jewels and I think that is... That's a measure, 224 00:15:30,680 --> 00:15:34,400 really, of the importance which he attached to the jewels. 225 00:15:35,800 --> 00:15:39,760 The correspondence also reveals that some key items 226 00:15:39,760 --> 00:15:44,280 were prised from their settings and placed in a biscuit tin. 227 00:15:44,280 --> 00:15:47,440 It meant they could easily have been spirited away to an even more 228 00:15:47,440 --> 00:15:51,520 secure location had the Nazis closed in on Windsor Castle. 229 00:15:53,480 --> 00:15:58,760 For Her Majesty the Queen, it's an intriguing and unknown story. 230 00:15:58,760 --> 00:16:00,560 Do you think they were at Windsor? 231 00:16:00,560 --> 00:16:03,320 They were definitely, ma'am, yeah. Oh. 232 00:16:03,320 --> 00:16:09,440 The librarian gouged the principal stones out of the Crown Jewels 233 00:16:09,440 --> 00:16:13,240 and put them into a... Wrapped them up and put them into a jar 234 00:16:13,240 --> 00:16:15,280 and put them in a Bath Oliver tin. 235 00:16:15,280 --> 00:16:16,480 Hm. 236 00:16:16,480 --> 00:16:17,760 And hid them. 237 00:16:18,880 --> 00:16:21,200 Brilliant, absolutely brilliant. 238 00:16:21,200 --> 00:16:23,080 Did he remember where he put them? 239 00:16:24,280 --> 00:16:25,520 In the sal... 240 00:16:25,520 --> 00:16:28,040 Because he might have died in the middle. 241 00:16:28,040 --> 00:16:29,880 I think the King was told, ma'am. 242 00:16:31,840 --> 00:16:35,960 The Queen, like the Crown Jewels, spent the war at Windsor, 243 00:16:35,960 --> 00:16:39,080 but she was never aware of the treasure beneath her feet. 244 00:16:40,440 --> 00:16:42,640 I mean, we were told nothing. 245 00:16:42,640 --> 00:16:45,040 I mean, we were only children then, but, I mean, 246 00:16:45,040 --> 00:16:47,200 we didn't know anything, 247 00:16:47,200 --> 00:16:51,280 I mean, all the pictures disappeared and all... Everything disappeared, 248 00:16:51,280 --> 00:16:53,920 and one was never told anything. 249 00:16:55,440 --> 00:16:58,520 It was... It was, you know, a secret, I suppose. 250 00:17:01,840 --> 00:17:04,240 The road to the Queen's own coronation 251 00:17:04,240 --> 00:17:07,280 began on February 6th, 1952. 252 00:17:10,160 --> 00:17:14,440 The 25-year-old Princess Elizabeth was on royal duties in Kenya, 253 00:17:14,440 --> 00:17:16,640 standing in for her father, George VI. 254 00:17:17,640 --> 00:17:21,760 The King, suffering from lung cancer, was too ill to travel. 255 00:17:23,760 --> 00:17:26,000 The Princess filmed these images 256 00:17:26,000 --> 00:17:28,520 at the famous Treetops Safari Lodge. 257 00:17:30,680 --> 00:17:32,720 They were taken at a moment 258 00:17:32,720 --> 00:17:35,800 when the Princess's life was about to change for ever. 259 00:17:41,720 --> 00:17:45,280 Hours later, on the morning of the 6th February, 260 00:17:45,280 --> 00:17:47,840 the King died at Sandringham in his sleep. 261 00:17:49,520 --> 00:17:54,080 At that moment, in Africa, the Princess became Queen. 262 00:17:55,200 --> 00:17:58,160 Losing a parent for anyone is tough, particularly if, 263 00:17:58,160 --> 00:18:02,360 like the Princess, you're as close as she was to her father, 264 00:18:02,360 --> 00:18:06,120 but knowing that everything has changed now, she's now 265 00:18:06,120 --> 00:18:09,560 the Queen, the head of state, it's a very lonely place to be. 266 00:18:18,320 --> 00:18:22,600 The Queen flew home for the lying in state of her beloved father. 267 00:18:25,960 --> 00:18:30,080 The Imperial State Crown, the sceptre and the orb were 268 00:18:30,080 --> 00:18:34,560 taken from the Tower to lie on the King's coffin in Westminster Hall. 269 00:18:45,480 --> 00:18:47,520 After a period of mourning, 270 00:18:47,520 --> 00:18:52,920 the date for the coronation was set for Tuesday 2nd of June, 1953. 271 00:18:55,280 --> 00:18:58,240 There were 16 months to get everything ready. 272 00:18:59,880 --> 00:19:03,400 The preparations were overseen by a coronation committee, 273 00:19:03,400 --> 00:19:05,120 chaired by the Duke of Edinburgh. 274 00:19:06,880 --> 00:19:11,120 In charge was the formidable Bernard, Duke of Norfolk. 275 00:19:11,120 --> 00:19:14,280 He had masterminded George VI's coronation. 276 00:19:15,640 --> 00:19:18,480 Since 1386, the Dukes of Norfolk 277 00:19:18,480 --> 00:19:22,320 have had a role in organising great state occasions. 278 00:19:22,320 --> 00:19:25,440 Even though it be 1953, 279 00:19:25,440 --> 00:19:27,560 everyone in their procession 280 00:19:27,560 --> 00:19:30,160 will either drive in a carriage, 281 00:19:30,160 --> 00:19:33,080 ride a horse, or walk, 282 00:19:33,080 --> 00:19:35,920 and there will not be any mechanisation at all. 283 00:19:38,840 --> 00:19:43,360 The plan was to deliver the perfect coronation for a new 284 00:19:43,360 --> 00:19:47,920 Elizabethan age in a country still suffering from the ravages of war. 285 00:19:49,160 --> 00:19:53,120 Rationing was still in place, the country was still physically 286 00:19:53,120 --> 00:19:57,000 very visibly damaged by the impact of war. 287 00:19:57,000 --> 00:20:02,000 This was an opportunity to celebrate both the future and the past 288 00:20:02,000 --> 00:20:06,560 and the accession of a young woman as sovereign 289 00:20:06,560 --> 00:20:09,600 provided a wonderful opportunity to do that, 290 00:20:09,600 --> 00:20:12,400 to sort of feel like it was a fresh start. 291 00:20:12,400 --> 00:20:16,440 The very long period of time that it took between the death 292 00:20:16,440 --> 00:20:18,720 of George VI and the coronation of the Queen 293 00:20:18,720 --> 00:20:23,400 was used to design something that would have a Hollywood movie glamour 294 00:20:23,400 --> 00:20:26,600 to it as well as all the ancient tradition to it. 295 00:20:29,040 --> 00:20:31,360 The plan included organising food 296 00:20:31,360 --> 00:20:35,320 and accommodation for 30,000 troops from across the Commonwealth... 297 00:20:37,760 --> 00:20:42,640 ..and building 27 miles of seating along the processional route. 298 00:20:43,640 --> 00:20:46,920 It put the whole country to work to achieve the greatest 299 00:20:46,920 --> 00:20:49,680 coronation show ever. 300 00:20:49,680 --> 00:20:54,000 The world's widest power loom is being used to make the great 301 00:20:54,000 --> 00:20:56,720 coronation carpet at a factory in Glasgow. 302 00:20:56,720 --> 00:20:58,400 When it is completed, 303 00:20:58,400 --> 00:21:02,360 the carpet will measure 188 feet long by 17 feet wide. 304 00:21:05,680 --> 00:21:08,440 Home to every coronation 305 00:21:08,440 --> 00:21:13,200 since that of King Harold in 1066 is Westminster Abbey. 306 00:21:15,120 --> 00:21:19,760 It's witnessed the crowning of 39 kings and queens. 307 00:21:21,400 --> 00:21:24,920 John Hall is the Dean of Westminster. 308 00:21:24,920 --> 00:21:28,360 It is the Dean's responsibility to ensure the abbey becomes 309 00:21:28,360 --> 00:21:30,920 the perfect stage for the coronation. 310 00:21:32,480 --> 00:21:35,280 For six months, they closed the abbey. 311 00:21:36,480 --> 00:21:41,040 They laid a railway track down the centre of the abbey, 312 00:21:41,040 --> 00:21:44,480 bringing in tonnes and tonnes of wood and iron. 313 00:21:48,720 --> 00:21:54,800 The stage on which the ceremony takes place is called the theatre - 314 00:21:54,800 --> 00:21:59,960 a specially raised platform at the central crossing of the abbey. 315 00:22:04,320 --> 00:22:08,040 The rest of the abbey had to be transformed into a stadium 316 00:22:08,040 --> 00:22:10,120 for thousands of guests. 317 00:22:13,440 --> 00:22:17,520 I think there were 400 people in the choir, and they were all up there, 318 00:22:17,520 --> 00:22:20,400 and there was an orchestra on the choir screen. 319 00:22:21,760 --> 00:22:25,760 2,200 people can sit on the floor of the abbey. 320 00:22:25,760 --> 00:22:30,040 8,000 people were in here in 1953. 321 00:22:30,040 --> 00:22:33,480 They took a long time, actually, to get the whole thing ready. 322 00:22:37,200 --> 00:22:40,920 But all these impressive preparations were no guarantee 323 00:22:40,920 --> 00:22:43,760 that the Queen's coronation would run smoothly - 324 00:22:43,760 --> 00:22:48,040 in the past, they'd gone notoriously wrong. 325 00:22:48,040 --> 00:22:50,840 I think Queen Victoria's coronation here was absolutely amazing, 326 00:22:50,840 --> 00:22:53,880 because they hadn't got much of a clue how to handle it. 327 00:22:53,880 --> 00:22:57,320 And she writes very clearly about how chaotic the whole thing is 328 00:22:57,320 --> 00:23:00,080 and how long it lasts, it goes on for ever. 329 00:23:00,080 --> 00:23:04,720 And she goes into the St Edward's Chapel, behind the High Altar, 330 00:23:04,720 --> 00:23:08,160 earlier than she should, and she finds the whole place 331 00:23:08,160 --> 00:23:12,680 a litter of bottles and sandwiches, and is rather disgusted by this. 332 00:23:14,440 --> 00:23:17,600 Afterwards, the Archbishop of Canterbury wondered 333 00:23:17,600 --> 00:23:19,800 if they should have had a full rehearsal. 334 00:23:22,360 --> 00:23:25,560 In May 1953, with a month to go, 335 00:23:25,560 --> 00:23:29,320 building work within the abbey was complete. 336 00:23:32,480 --> 00:23:35,840 Outside, London was being transformed, 337 00:23:35,840 --> 00:23:38,520 with giant stands for the spectators, 338 00:23:38,520 --> 00:23:42,400 temporary accommodation in World War II air raid shelters 339 00:23:42,400 --> 00:23:45,200 and a tented city in Kensington Gardens. 340 00:23:47,960 --> 00:23:52,040 As the day approached, the rehearsals to deliver the perfect 341 00:23:52,040 --> 00:23:54,840 coronation reached fever pitch. 342 00:23:56,080 --> 00:23:59,240 The Queen practised at Buckingham Palace 343 00:23:59,240 --> 00:24:02,320 and attended several rehearsals at the abbey in secret. 344 00:24:03,880 --> 00:24:08,640 The press offered workmen £50 to find out what had happened. 345 00:24:12,800 --> 00:24:16,840 Lady Anne Glenconner, then aged 19, 346 00:24:16,840 --> 00:24:21,080 was chosen by the Queen as one of her six maids of honour. 347 00:24:21,080 --> 00:24:25,280 We had to be daughters of earls, marquises, or dukes, 348 00:24:25,280 --> 00:24:28,880 and have sort of nice figures and that sort of thing. 349 00:24:31,040 --> 00:24:35,320 In post-war Britain, they provided much-needed glamour. 350 00:24:35,320 --> 00:24:36,720 In those days, 351 00:24:36,720 --> 00:24:40,800 there weren't any sort of girl bands like there are, and I always, 352 00:24:40,800 --> 00:24:43,840 perhaps rather sillily, say we were rather like the Spice Girls 353 00:24:43,840 --> 00:24:47,640 because suddenly we were in all the newspapers, the press followed us. 354 00:24:50,520 --> 00:24:55,560 Well, this is my box I've got my coronation dress in. 355 00:24:55,560 --> 00:24:57,240 A huge box. 356 00:24:57,240 --> 00:25:00,040 It's very, very fragile, my old dress. 357 00:25:01,200 --> 00:25:05,240 The maids of honour's costumes were designed by Norman Hartnell, 358 00:25:05,240 --> 00:25:08,360 the designer of the Queen's coronation dress. 359 00:25:08,360 --> 00:25:11,120 It was all beautifully embroidered. 360 00:25:11,120 --> 00:25:14,360 The pearls and gold, and I think they're zircons. 361 00:25:14,360 --> 00:25:19,080 And there are leaves, little golden leaves there. 362 00:25:19,080 --> 00:25:21,760 And it was all hand embroidered, 363 00:25:21,760 --> 00:25:25,320 and we just felt like princesses, actually, 364 00:25:25,320 --> 00:25:30,600 because we were all brought up in the war when there were rationing 365 00:25:30,600 --> 00:25:34,760 and clothes coupons, and we never had an amazing dress like this. 366 00:25:37,480 --> 00:25:41,880 The rehearsals were so secret, even the dresses were kept under wraps. 367 00:25:44,040 --> 00:25:49,880 The last rehearsal, they said, "Wear your dresses," but they didn't 368 00:25:49,880 --> 00:25:53,440 say, "Completely top secret, and you've got to wear a coat." 369 00:25:53,440 --> 00:25:56,040 So anyway, I just had a white shawl 370 00:25:56,040 --> 00:26:00,560 and as we came out with the wind blowing it blew my shawl back, 371 00:26:00,560 --> 00:26:05,080 and there was I exposed head to toe in this wonderful dress. 372 00:26:05,080 --> 00:26:09,680 And, so embarrassing, on the front of a newspaper, headline saying, 373 00:26:09,680 --> 00:26:11,920 "She didn't know it was a secret." 374 00:26:11,920 --> 00:26:15,160 So I felt, "Well, I'm going to be struck off. I'm going 375 00:26:15,160 --> 00:26:17,680 "to get a telephone call by the Duke of Norfolk saying, 376 00:26:17,680 --> 00:26:21,280 " 'Sorry,' you know, 'we're going to have to find somebody else.' " 377 00:26:21,280 --> 00:26:22,920 But anyway, it didn't happen. 378 00:26:24,480 --> 00:26:28,720 For the final dress rehearsal, four days before the coronation, 379 00:26:28,720 --> 00:26:31,640 all the key participants other than the Queen 380 00:26:31,640 --> 00:26:34,800 were brought together for the first time. 381 00:26:34,800 --> 00:26:39,320 The ringmaster, Bernard, Duke of Norfolk, was in his element. 382 00:26:39,320 --> 00:26:41,480 That brings back lots of memories. 383 00:26:41,480 --> 00:26:45,040 There am I, second from the right, by the train. 384 00:26:46,360 --> 00:26:49,960 The Duke of Norfolk was absolutely fantastic. 385 00:26:49,960 --> 00:26:52,920 He'd done the coronation of the late King, 386 00:26:52,920 --> 00:26:56,880 so he knew exactly every detail about exactly what 387 00:26:56,880 --> 00:27:00,320 we were to wear, the jewellery, the height of our shoes. 388 00:27:01,760 --> 00:27:05,600 Duke Bernard was an absolute stickler for discipline. 389 00:27:05,600 --> 00:27:08,640 When a bishop took an unauthorised holiday, 390 00:27:08,640 --> 00:27:12,080 the Duke sent a police car to drag him back. 391 00:27:12,080 --> 00:27:15,920 I think it must have been pretty scary to be at a rehearsal 392 00:27:15,920 --> 00:27:17,720 with Bernard Norfolk! 393 00:27:17,720 --> 00:27:21,720 He knew minute by minute where every single person should be, 394 00:27:21,720 --> 00:27:25,080 and when you see the plans, it is literally a ballet. 395 00:27:25,080 --> 00:27:28,000 Things move, everything moves precisely, 396 00:27:28,000 --> 00:27:31,200 and when Randolph Churchill, who was the son of Winston Churchill, 397 00:27:31,200 --> 00:27:34,120 thought it looked like a bit of an untidy ballet, 398 00:27:34,120 --> 00:27:36,920 very quickly Bernard's representative came over and said, 399 00:27:36,920 --> 00:27:39,560 "I think you need to remember, there's room in the Tower still." 400 00:27:40,920 --> 00:27:44,640 For the dress rehearsal, Bernard's wife, the Duchess of Norfolk, 401 00:27:44,640 --> 00:27:46,760 stood in for the Queen. 402 00:27:51,120 --> 00:27:56,240 There is the Crown. The Duchess of Norfolk is being crowned. 403 00:27:57,680 --> 00:27:59,200 It all seemed so much more real. 404 00:27:59,200 --> 00:28:01,520 We realised what it was going to look like. 405 00:28:06,400 --> 00:28:10,280 On the eve of the coronation, two million people 406 00:28:10,280 --> 00:28:13,360 descended on the rainy capital. 407 00:28:13,360 --> 00:28:17,720 6,500 extra trains and 6,000 coaches 408 00:28:17,720 --> 00:28:21,040 had been laid on to get them there. 409 00:28:21,040 --> 00:28:23,480 ARCHIVE: Up went the umbrellas, on went the raincoats, 410 00:28:23,480 --> 00:28:26,880 and under the shelter of blankets and newspapers they stuck it out. 411 00:28:28,720 --> 00:28:31,160 As people settled down for the night, 412 00:28:31,160 --> 00:28:33,720 the Crown Jewels were brought to the abbey. 413 00:28:38,200 --> 00:28:42,040 James Wilkinson was a 12-year-old choirboy at the coronation, 414 00:28:42,040 --> 00:28:44,880 and has subsequently written about the event. 415 00:28:47,440 --> 00:28:51,560 This is a most historic room - this is the Jerusalem Chamber. 416 00:28:51,560 --> 00:28:56,280 This is where, the night before the coronation, the Regalia is set out. 417 00:28:56,280 --> 00:29:00,440 And now, it comes with 12 Yeomen warders of the Tower, 418 00:29:00,440 --> 00:29:04,720 and it's set out on this table, and they were all armed with 419 00:29:04,720 --> 00:29:07,920 revolvers, and they each had 12 rounds of ammunition. 420 00:29:07,920 --> 00:29:11,520 What would have happened if they'd had to discharge it, I don't know - 421 00:29:11,520 --> 00:29:15,920 it would have left a few holes around this very significant room. 422 00:29:15,920 --> 00:29:19,120 I would have thought that these days they would have probably had 423 00:29:19,120 --> 00:29:21,160 slightly more sophisticated ways 424 00:29:21,160 --> 00:29:24,200 of making sure that the Crown Jewels are untouched. 425 00:29:26,640 --> 00:29:31,480 Amongst the most valuable items guarded that night were two gems 426 00:29:31,480 --> 00:29:34,920 from one of the most famous diamonds ever discovered. 427 00:29:37,320 --> 00:29:40,800 The Cullinan Number One sits in the sceptre, 428 00:29:40,800 --> 00:29:44,240 and is the largest colourless cut diamond in the world. 429 00:29:46,720 --> 00:29:50,680 Its smaller sister, the Cullinan Number Two, 430 00:29:50,680 --> 00:29:53,400 is mounted in the Imperial State Crown. 431 00:29:56,400 --> 00:29:59,080 In total, nine diamonds were fashioned 432 00:29:59,080 --> 00:30:02,000 from the legendary Cullinan. 433 00:30:07,360 --> 00:30:11,120 It was discovered in 1905 and, astonishingly, 434 00:30:11,120 --> 00:30:14,280 sent to Britain in the post. 435 00:30:16,440 --> 00:30:20,680 In 1908, the cutting of this priceless rough diamond 436 00:30:20,680 --> 00:30:25,280 was entrusted to Antwerp jeweller Joseph Asscher. 437 00:30:25,280 --> 00:30:28,720 He was reputedly the best diamond cutter in the world. 438 00:30:31,200 --> 00:30:35,560 I always wish I'd been there when they smashed it into pieces. 439 00:30:37,400 --> 00:30:41,360 These are the chips that were left. There are two other... 440 00:30:41,360 --> 00:30:43,600 Two or three other bits, too. 441 00:30:43,600 --> 00:30:48,800 He hit it with his...whatever you hit a diamond with to get 442 00:30:48,800 --> 00:30:52,600 the right thing, and he spent hours looking at it, you know, 443 00:30:52,600 --> 00:30:55,920 and then he fainted when he'd done it. 444 00:30:55,920 --> 00:30:58,720 But I don't know if that's just a story. 445 00:30:58,720 --> 00:31:01,400 It had a brown flaw in it. 446 00:31:01,400 --> 00:31:05,800 He hit it and all the bits fell out and the brown bit disappeared. 447 00:31:05,800 --> 00:31:10,160 Well, I think these have never seen each other since they were smashed. 448 00:31:10,160 --> 00:31:12,120 Really? That is amazing. 449 00:31:14,160 --> 00:31:17,800 As dawn broke on June 2nd 1953, 450 00:31:17,800 --> 00:31:21,880 the scene was set for the greatest show on Earth. 451 00:31:23,520 --> 00:31:26,200 Parliament Square, quarter to six this morning. 452 00:31:26,200 --> 00:31:29,640 Many had never been out so early before, yet here they were, 453 00:31:29,640 --> 00:31:32,200 rapidly filling every vantage point. 454 00:31:32,200 --> 00:31:36,040 More than 8,000 specially invited guests rushed 455 00:31:36,040 --> 00:31:41,520 to their places in the abbey before the doors closed at 8.30. 456 00:31:41,520 --> 00:31:46,240 European royalty mingled with sheikhs, sultans and maharajahs. 457 00:31:47,440 --> 00:31:50,640 Thousands of aristocrats in their ermine picked their way 458 00:31:50,640 --> 00:31:52,120 through the puddles. 459 00:31:53,720 --> 00:31:55,720 Many had hidden strong drink 460 00:31:55,720 --> 00:31:58,840 and sandwiches in their coronets to get them through the day. 461 00:32:03,240 --> 00:32:07,560 Among the 8,000 was the choir of 400 voices. 462 00:32:08,800 --> 00:32:12,680 Today, James Wilkinson is meeting three of his fellow choristers 463 00:32:12,680 --> 00:32:14,440 from the Abbey Choir School. 464 00:32:16,000 --> 00:32:18,880 At the time, Richard Watts, William Wallace 465 00:32:18,880 --> 00:32:22,680 and David Brown were aged between nine and 13. 466 00:32:22,680 --> 00:32:26,280 Well, it's a very long time since I was up here. 467 00:32:26,280 --> 00:32:30,600 My goodness me. But it hasn't changed very much. 468 00:32:30,600 --> 00:32:33,720 And what a superb view you get, don't you, now? 469 00:32:33,720 --> 00:32:35,960 Yes, this is marvellous to be back. 470 00:32:35,960 --> 00:32:37,480 And we're so close to where we were. 471 00:32:37,480 --> 00:32:40,720 I mean, you, David, were standing just there on the corner there. 472 00:32:40,720 --> 00:32:42,680 Absolutely, right on that corner there. 473 00:32:42,680 --> 00:32:44,840 And we were just lined up on the front two rows, 474 00:32:44,840 --> 00:32:47,440 and it was extremely cramped, if you remember? Yes. 475 00:32:48,800 --> 00:32:53,720 By 11am, the abbey was ready for the arrival of the Queen. 476 00:32:53,720 --> 00:32:57,680 The penultimate procession was the procession of the Queen Mother 477 00:32:57,680 --> 00:32:59,720 and Princess Margaret. 478 00:32:59,720 --> 00:33:02,360 Everybody got terribly excited because the next one was 479 00:33:02,360 --> 00:33:04,960 the Queen, and then there was this sort of bustle at the west end 480 00:33:04,960 --> 00:33:07,840 and everybody thought the Queen had arrived so everybody stood up. 481 00:33:07,840 --> 00:33:08,960 8,000 people stood up, 482 00:33:08,960 --> 00:33:12,160 when from underneath the organ loft came four cleaners with 483 00:33:12,160 --> 00:33:16,040 carpet sweepers, and started to sweep the carpet to restore it to 484 00:33:16,040 --> 00:33:19,960 its pristine state and everybody, of course, laughed and sat down again. 485 00:33:24,560 --> 00:33:28,760 At Buckingham Palace, the Queen is viewing film of her coronation. 486 00:33:31,560 --> 00:33:33,840 Cameras filmed throughout the day, 487 00:33:33,840 --> 00:33:37,120 and even though the Queen commissioned some of the footage, 488 00:33:37,120 --> 00:33:40,440 it's the first time she has ever reviewed the event. 489 00:33:42,720 --> 00:33:45,200 A very long day. 490 00:33:45,200 --> 00:33:48,640 When you're taking part in something you don't actually see it. 491 00:33:48,640 --> 00:33:53,920 No. I don't suppose you've seen these films very often, ma'am? 492 00:33:53,920 --> 00:33:56,160 I don't suppose I've ever seen it. 493 00:33:58,680 --> 00:34:02,120 As the Queen's carriage left the Palace courtyard, 494 00:34:02,120 --> 00:34:04,160 her children remained at home. 495 00:34:05,720 --> 00:34:08,120 Now, there are your children watching. Mm-hm. 496 00:34:10,160 --> 00:34:15,800 And Prince Charles says that you rehearsed wearing the crown 497 00:34:15,800 --> 00:34:18,440 before the event - in fact, he says at bath times, 498 00:34:18,440 --> 00:34:20,200 which is rather sweet. 499 00:34:21,840 --> 00:34:24,000 Because only Prince Charles actually witnessed it - 500 00:34:24,000 --> 00:34:26,720 Princess Anne stayed back here. Hm. 501 00:34:27,880 --> 00:34:31,200 And he only came for ten minutes, I think. 502 00:34:31,200 --> 00:34:33,760 What did the two children do for most of the day - 503 00:34:33,760 --> 00:34:35,040 can you remember, ma'am? 504 00:34:35,040 --> 00:34:36,480 No idea, I wasn't there. 505 00:34:36,480 --> 00:34:39,680 No! I wasn't there. I have no idea what they did. 506 00:34:39,680 --> 00:34:44,080 There were a lot of other people in the palace as well, I think. 507 00:34:44,080 --> 00:34:45,560 Lots of children. 508 00:34:48,760 --> 00:34:53,480 The Queen set out for Westminster Abbey in the Gold State Coach. 509 00:34:53,480 --> 00:34:56,520 It weighs nearly four tonnes. 510 00:34:56,520 --> 00:35:01,880 Horrible. It's not meant for travelling in at all. 511 00:35:01,880 --> 00:35:05,360 I mean, it's only sprung on leather. 512 00:35:05,360 --> 00:35:07,120 So, it rocks around a lot. 513 00:35:07,120 --> 00:35:08,520 Yes, not very comfortable. 514 00:35:09,640 --> 00:35:12,840 Were you in it for a long time, ma'am? 515 00:35:12,840 --> 00:35:14,920 Halfway around London. 516 00:35:14,920 --> 00:35:18,720 Really? We must have gone about four or five miles. 517 00:35:18,720 --> 00:35:20,760 It can only go at a walking pace. Yeah. 518 00:35:20,760 --> 00:35:23,760 The horses couldn't possibly go any faster. Right. 519 00:35:23,760 --> 00:35:25,200 It's so heavy. 520 00:35:25,200 --> 00:35:26,760 Really? Mm. 521 00:35:28,640 --> 00:35:31,960 But you look really high up there, so I presume the view... 522 00:35:31,960 --> 00:35:33,480 It is very high. 523 00:35:33,480 --> 00:35:35,400 I mean, look at the size of the man. 524 00:35:35,400 --> 00:35:36,640 Yeah. 525 00:35:44,960 --> 00:35:48,280 As the carriage approached the abbey, Lady Anne's 526 00:35:48,280 --> 00:35:50,480 first task was to greet the Queen. 527 00:35:51,680 --> 00:35:54,520 Oh, yes, that's the golden... The lovely golden coach. 528 00:35:55,960 --> 00:35:59,080 There's me, there's me looking through the window there! 529 00:36:02,880 --> 00:36:06,920 Well, this is the Queen coming... Well, there's the Duke of Norfolk, 530 00:36:06,920 --> 00:36:10,720 there's me on the left taking up my bit of the train. 531 00:36:10,720 --> 00:36:12,280 There I am going past. 532 00:36:12,280 --> 00:36:14,560 It was so exciting seeing her. I mean, 533 00:36:14,560 --> 00:36:17,560 she looked absolutely beautiful, you know. 534 00:36:17,560 --> 00:36:21,240 We hadn't seen her in her dress, and she had the tiniest waist 535 00:36:21,240 --> 00:36:23,280 and the most wonderful complexion 536 00:36:23,280 --> 00:36:26,040 and she was beautiful - absolutely beautiful. 537 00:36:26,040 --> 00:36:29,360 And of course the Duke of Edinburgh looked pretty dishy, too, 538 00:36:29,360 --> 00:36:31,760 but he was a little bit fussy. 539 00:36:31,760 --> 00:36:34,640 I think he wanted it all to go perfectly and he was 540 00:36:34,640 --> 00:36:38,880 sort of telling us, "Do this, Anne," or, "Do that," that sort of thing. 541 00:36:41,320 --> 00:36:45,160 After a moment's pause in the annexe, it was time. 542 00:36:47,480 --> 00:36:50,120 She hadn't said anything. People said, "Did she say something 543 00:36:50,120 --> 00:36:53,240 "when she arrived?" and we said, "No, nothing." 544 00:36:53,240 --> 00:36:56,840 Anyway, we were all waiting like this, 545 00:36:56,840 --> 00:37:02,400 and she just turned around and she said, "Ready, girls?" 546 00:37:02,400 --> 00:37:04,720 And we nodded and off we went. 547 00:37:13,080 --> 00:37:16,560 The 8,000 guests were packed to the rafters 548 00:37:16,560 --> 00:37:19,520 to see a 27-year-old crowned Queen. 549 00:37:25,080 --> 00:37:28,720 They were so high up, they were massed up in the... I mean, 550 00:37:28,720 --> 00:37:31,640 we were in the bottom and everything was happening, you know, 551 00:37:31,640 --> 00:37:33,240 they were all sitting at the top. 552 00:37:33,240 --> 00:37:35,200 It was so full... 553 00:37:37,000 --> 00:37:41,160 ..that it rather takes away the height of it. 554 00:37:46,760 --> 00:37:50,320 And here we are coming up. I'm on the right there. 555 00:37:54,200 --> 00:37:55,880 There's the Queen. 556 00:37:55,880 --> 00:37:59,560 But, of course, at that point she hasn't got any of her regalia on, 557 00:37:59,560 --> 00:38:03,360 so we felt she should have had some flowers or something 558 00:38:03,360 --> 00:38:05,200 but perhaps that wasn't correct. 559 00:38:12,520 --> 00:38:19,800 # Vivat Regina! Vivat Regina! 560 00:38:19,800 --> 00:38:22,120 # Vivat, vivat, vivat! # 561 00:38:22,120 --> 00:38:24,680 The Queen's coronation dress 562 00:38:24,680 --> 00:38:29,720 was embroidered in silk with pearls, and gold and silver bullion thread. 563 00:38:31,360 --> 00:38:34,440 Well, I remember one moment when I was 564 00:38:34,440 --> 00:38:37,920 going against the pile of the carpet and I couldn't move at all. 565 00:38:37,920 --> 00:38:41,320 Really? Yes, they hadn't thought of that. 566 00:38:42,520 --> 00:38:48,120 In the organ loft, choirboy David Brown was one of three soloists. 567 00:38:48,120 --> 00:38:50,160 There were just four bars' intro 568 00:38:50,160 --> 00:38:52,360 and I came in... 569 00:38:52,360 --> 00:38:56,880 And there were three of us who were going to do this solo 570 00:38:56,880 --> 00:39:01,800 and I think, looking back, to have three boys on standby, as it were, 571 00:39:01,800 --> 00:39:04,760 to do the solo, you never know what's likely to happen 572 00:39:04,760 --> 00:39:06,240 in a situation like that. 573 00:39:08,360 --> 00:39:11,960 Nerves weren't the only difficulty for the choir - 574 00:39:11,960 --> 00:39:16,000 they were so spread out, they needed three conductors. 575 00:39:16,000 --> 00:39:20,640 Some of the choir were stuck further back or even behind the organ pipes. 576 00:39:20,640 --> 00:39:23,200 Behind the organ pipes. They couldn't see anything 577 00:39:23,200 --> 00:39:24,880 that was being... 578 00:39:24,880 --> 00:39:27,800 They needed a sort of relay system of conducting. Yeah. 579 00:39:29,800 --> 00:39:34,120 The ceremony began with the first stage, the recognition. 580 00:39:35,480 --> 00:39:39,000 The tradition dates back to the year 973. 581 00:39:41,680 --> 00:39:46,840 I here present unto you Queen Elizabeth, your undoubted Queen. 582 00:39:48,600 --> 00:39:51,960 The Queen faced the peers of the land to confirm 583 00:39:51,960 --> 00:39:53,920 she wasn't an impostor. 584 00:39:53,920 --> 00:39:55,800 Are you willing to do the same? 585 00:39:55,800 --> 00:39:58,120 God save Queen Elizabeth! 586 00:40:02,000 --> 00:40:06,000 Then, after the second stage, where the Queen signed an oath, 587 00:40:06,000 --> 00:40:08,480 she was stripped of all her regalia 588 00:40:08,480 --> 00:40:12,800 and dressed in a simple gown for the anointing, the third stage. 589 00:40:14,960 --> 00:40:17,880 The only thing we couldn't remove were the earrings. 590 00:40:19,520 --> 00:40:21,240 That would have taken too long. 591 00:40:21,240 --> 00:40:23,480 We had enough trouble with the necklace. 592 00:40:26,040 --> 00:40:28,720 Awful lot of walking backwards, wasn't there? 593 00:40:28,720 --> 00:40:30,680 It's such a ballet, isn't it? 594 00:40:30,680 --> 00:40:32,880 Everyone knows precisely where to go. 595 00:40:32,880 --> 00:40:34,880 Well, they jolly well should have done 596 00:40:34,880 --> 00:40:37,520 after the number of rehearsals we had. 597 00:40:41,920 --> 00:40:46,040 The anointing of the monarch with holy oil is so sacred 598 00:40:46,040 --> 00:40:48,200 it's carried out under a canopy. 599 00:40:50,480 --> 00:40:55,280 The secrecy transforms the moment into a deeply personal experience 600 00:40:55,280 --> 00:40:57,200 between the Queen and God. 601 00:41:00,400 --> 00:41:04,560 Shakespeare's Richard II summed up its power - 602 00:41:04,560 --> 00:41:07,920 "Not all the water in the rough rude sea 603 00:41:07,920 --> 00:41:10,960 "Can wash the balm from an anointed king." 604 00:41:13,240 --> 00:41:15,920 This was when the TV cameras, 605 00:41:15,920 --> 00:41:20,520 broadcasting a coronation live for the first time, turned away. 606 00:41:26,440 --> 00:41:31,400 The anointing oil is held in a solid gold flask called an ampulla. 607 00:41:31,400 --> 00:41:35,560 It is eight inches tall and shaped like an eagle. 608 00:41:37,200 --> 00:41:40,360 It's to give the biblical impression that 609 00:41:40,360 --> 00:41:43,120 the word of God is flown down to us 610 00:41:43,120 --> 00:41:47,360 from heaven on the back of the greatest of the beasts of the air. 611 00:41:47,360 --> 00:41:50,760 And so the essence is that the oil is being brought to 612 00:41:50,760 --> 00:41:52,720 the point of coronation from God himself. 613 00:41:55,800 --> 00:41:58,720 The oil is then poured into a golden spoon - 614 00:41:58,720 --> 00:42:01,240 it's the oldest item of the Regalia. 615 00:42:03,200 --> 00:42:04,720 And the only one to survive 616 00:42:04,720 --> 00:42:07,360 the darkest days of the British monarchy. 617 00:42:11,040 --> 00:42:18,000 In 1649, Charles I became the only English king ever to be executed. 618 00:42:19,440 --> 00:42:22,800 Civil war had led to the creation of a republic 619 00:42:22,800 --> 00:42:25,080 presided over by Oliver Cromwell. 620 00:42:26,240 --> 00:42:29,720 The Crown Jewels, the symbols of monarchy, 621 00:42:29,720 --> 00:42:32,800 were melted down and sold off by Parliament. 622 00:42:34,560 --> 00:42:36,560 But after the death of Cromwell, 623 00:42:36,560 --> 00:42:42,360 the monarchy was restored in 1660 under Charles's son, Charles II. 624 00:42:46,280 --> 00:42:49,800 This is the one object which absolutely unquestionably 625 00:42:49,800 --> 00:42:53,920 survived the destruction at the end of the Civil War. 626 00:42:53,920 --> 00:42:57,160 This is a 12th-century piece, 627 00:42:57,160 --> 00:43:02,320 and, like all the other objects that were in the collection 628 00:43:02,320 --> 00:43:05,360 before the restoration of the monarchy, it was sold. 629 00:43:06,680 --> 00:43:10,720 But the man who bought it held on to it, 630 00:43:10,720 --> 00:43:15,800 and when the restoration of the monarchy happened, he very sensibly 631 00:43:15,800 --> 00:43:19,080 presented himself to Charles II saying how thrilled he was 632 00:43:19,080 --> 00:43:20,760 that the restoration had happened 633 00:43:20,760 --> 00:43:22,560 and how it was what he always wanted. 634 00:43:22,560 --> 00:43:27,640 So it is a really, really special object because everything else 635 00:43:27,640 --> 00:43:31,360 is essentially a creation of the 1660s or later, 636 00:43:31,360 --> 00:43:35,840 and this isn't just a little bit before - it's 400 years earlier. 637 00:43:39,360 --> 00:43:43,640 The anointing oil is traditionally held in great secrecy 638 00:43:43,640 --> 00:43:46,200 by the Dean of Westminster at the abbey. 639 00:43:47,680 --> 00:43:49,520 It's kept very safe in the Deanery, 640 00:43:49,520 --> 00:43:52,840 in a very hidden place in a little box here... 641 00:43:57,560 --> 00:44:04,120 ..which has in it a flask containing the oil from 1953. 642 00:44:04,120 --> 00:44:06,640 And it's not just olive oil - 643 00:44:06,640 --> 00:44:10,600 it's quite a complex mixture of different things. 644 00:44:11,920 --> 00:44:14,640 This is the recipe for the coronation oil. 645 00:44:14,640 --> 00:44:17,680 The composition of the oil was founded upon that 646 00:44:17,680 --> 00:44:19,840 used in the 17th century. 647 00:44:19,840 --> 00:44:23,480 Then you see what it consists of - sesame and olive oil, 648 00:44:23,480 --> 00:44:29,520 perfume with roses, orange flowers, jasmine, musk, civet and ambergris. 649 00:44:31,240 --> 00:44:35,160 Each item of the Regalia has a role in the coronation. 650 00:44:36,400 --> 00:44:39,400 The Jewelled Sword of Offering was originally 651 00:44:39,400 --> 00:44:43,160 designed for the coronation of George IV, in 1821. 652 00:44:44,240 --> 00:44:48,360 The handle is emblazoned with English acorns and oak leaves, 653 00:44:48,360 --> 00:44:50,080 in emeralds and diamonds. 654 00:44:51,680 --> 00:44:54,760 It represents the monarch's defence of their kingdom. 655 00:44:58,280 --> 00:45:02,800 Then, just before the crowning, the Queen received the orb 656 00:45:02,800 --> 00:45:07,040 and the sceptre, the most important items after the crowns. 657 00:45:10,560 --> 00:45:14,440 The heavily jewelled orb represents earthly duty, 658 00:45:14,440 --> 00:45:18,120 and the cross above it, both religious and moral authority. 659 00:45:21,760 --> 00:45:26,080 Then the Queen receives the sceptre, the symbol of power. 660 00:45:26,080 --> 00:45:30,960 She holds it wearing a glove, to remind her to use that power wisely. 661 00:45:35,320 --> 00:45:38,360 The sceptre expresses something of the sovereign's 662 00:45:38,360 --> 00:45:43,000 military strength or authority, a baton of power, if you like, 663 00:45:43,000 --> 00:45:49,080 with the fact that it incorporates this, arguably, most important 664 00:45:49,080 --> 00:45:53,640 gem in the world, the largest flawless diamond in the world. 665 00:45:53,640 --> 00:45:58,040 And it is something to behold, it really is. 666 00:45:59,400 --> 00:46:02,440 CHORISTERS SING 667 00:46:08,800 --> 00:46:13,160 On the floor of the abbey in 1953, 668 00:46:13,160 --> 00:46:17,680 Lady Anne's tight dress was making it difficult for her to breathe. 669 00:46:19,000 --> 00:46:22,920 They were very, very, tight, and this was one of the reasons 670 00:46:22,920 --> 00:46:25,080 that I felt faint in the abbey. 671 00:46:25,080 --> 00:46:30,480 But we did have, in order to help us in case we felt faint, they had 672 00:46:30,480 --> 00:46:36,600 little buttons here, and under there we had a phial of smelling salts. 673 00:46:36,600 --> 00:46:39,120 And one of the maids of honour, 674 00:46:39,120 --> 00:46:44,360 Rosie Spencer Churchill, she was then, saw the Archbishop advancing 675 00:46:44,360 --> 00:46:47,120 so she shook his hand, "Hello, Archbishop," there was 676 00:46:47,120 --> 00:46:52,560 a terrible crack and everybody then, you know, our eyes started to water. 677 00:46:52,560 --> 00:46:58,680 Luckily, we laughed, actually, we thought it was quite funny. 678 00:46:58,680 --> 00:47:03,320 I was also told to wriggle my toes in case I felt faint. 679 00:47:03,320 --> 00:47:07,240 Luckily, I was standing with my back to a pillar and a wonderful 680 00:47:07,240 --> 00:47:12,000 gentleman called Black Rod saw me and I was sort of swaying about and 681 00:47:12,000 --> 00:47:15,720 I thought, "I cannot faint in front of millions and millions of people, 682 00:47:15,720 --> 00:47:20,960 "I just can't," and then luckily he put his arm like that, 683 00:47:20,960 --> 00:47:23,240 sort of pinning me to the pillar 684 00:47:23,240 --> 00:47:26,640 and just gave me that amount of time to recover. 685 00:47:31,200 --> 00:47:34,360 Then the fourth stage of the ceremony, 686 00:47:34,360 --> 00:47:37,440 the supreme moment everyone had been waiting for. 687 00:47:39,400 --> 00:47:44,200 St Edward's Crown, used solely for the moment of coronation, 688 00:47:44,200 --> 00:47:46,800 was blessed by the Archbishop of Canterbury 689 00:47:46,800 --> 00:47:48,680 and placed on the Queen's head. 690 00:47:58,040 --> 00:48:00,400 God save the Queen! 691 00:48:00,400 --> 00:48:02,760 God save the Queen! 692 00:48:02,760 --> 00:48:06,360 God save the Queen! 693 00:48:12,440 --> 00:48:17,360 I now crown you, with a crown of glory and righteousness, 694 00:48:17,360 --> 00:48:21,440 that having a right faith and manifold proof of good works, 695 00:48:21,440 --> 00:48:26,400 you may obtain the crown of an everlasting kingdom. 696 00:48:26,400 --> 00:48:29,680 I imagine your principal memory is wearing it, ma'am. 697 00:48:29,680 --> 00:48:31,640 And how heavy and unbalanced it was. 698 00:48:33,360 --> 00:48:37,480 One wonders whether it had a special frame beneath it 699 00:48:37,480 --> 00:48:39,280 to fit Your Majesty's head. 700 00:48:41,440 --> 00:48:43,200 I think it must have done. 701 00:48:48,120 --> 00:48:52,880 The St Edward's Crown we see today was made in 1661, 702 00:48:52,880 --> 00:48:56,880 and represents the return of monarchy after the Civil War. 703 00:49:06,560 --> 00:49:09,440 I think St Edward's Crown is pretty hard to beat. 704 00:49:09,440 --> 00:49:13,400 Made for Charles II when the monarchy itself was being restored, 705 00:49:13,400 --> 00:49:17,320 not just an object being made, but a whole institution recreated. 706 00:49:19,440 --> 00:49:22,680 They called it St Edward's Crown because it was to replace the one 707 00:49:22,680 --> 00:49:25,720 that had supposedly belonged to Edward the Confessor. 708 00:49:26,920 --> 00:49:31,560 Edward the Confessor, who reigned until 1066, represented 709 00:49:31,560 --> 00:49:35,520 hundreds of years of tradition that had gone before the Civil War, 710 00:49:35,520 --> 00:49:39,560 and that heritage was of particular importance to those restoring 711 00:49:39,560 --> 00:49:41,480 Charles II to the throne. 712 00:49:45,080 --> 00:49:48,720 When they were making this in 1660, people were brought out 713 00:49:48,720 --> 00:49:51,160 who could remember what the old crown looked like, 714 00:49:51,160 --> 00:49:54,440 and there was an attempt to try and recreate something 715 00:49:54,440 --> 00:49:57,040 that had been lost in 1649, 716 00:49:57,040 --> 00:50:01,440 and so, it's a sort of echo of the Middle Ages as well as being 717 00:50:01,440 --> 00:50:06,160 a really beautiful piece of 17th-century goldsmiths' work. 718 00:50:06,160 --> 00:50:07,960 It absolutely mattered 719 00:50:07,960 --> 00:50:13,480 in 1660 that this should be done to the highest possible standard, 720 00:50:13,480 --> 00:50:17,560 and it should be an expression of the clarity and the certainty 721 00:50:17,560 --> 00:50:21,240 of a people who had decided that they wanted monarchy back. 722 00:50:23,480 --> 00:50:27,080 For the fifth and final stage of the ceremony, the enthronement 723 00:50:27,080 --> 00:50:30,680 and the homage, the Queen was symbolically lifted onto 724 00:50:30,680 --> 00:50:35,840 a raised platform, by the Bishops of Bath and Wells, and of Durham. 725 00:50:35,840 --> 00:50:39,480 You can see that the Bishop of Bath and Wells is very attentive. 726 00:50:39,480 --> 00:50:41,000 Yeah, he was very good. 727 00:50:41,000 --> 00:50:43,480 Now, the role of those two bishops is supposed to take 728 00:50:43,480 --> 00:50:47,040 the weight of the crown, but they never needed to do that, ma'am. 729 00:50:47,040 --> 00:50:51,320 Really? Hm. I thought they were just there to hold one's clothes. 730 00:50:51,320 --> 00:50:53,640 Stop one...falling over them. 731 00:50:55,160 --> 00:50:57,880 After her peers had paid homage, 732 00:50:57,880 --> 00:51:00,880 the Queen retired to the shrine behind the altar. 733 00:51:01,920 --> 00:51:05,120 This time, unlike at Queen Victoria's coronation, 734 00:51:05,120 --> 00:51:08,360 there were no half-finished sandwiches or bottles of wine. 735 00:51:10,600 --> 00:51:13,560 This is the shrine of Edward the Confessor. 736 00:51:15,600 --> 00:51:19,720 It's the place where five kings and four queens are buried - 737 00:51:19,720 --> 00:51:21,640 Edward the Confessor... 738 00:51:23,480 --> 00:51:26,880 ..Henry V, 739 00:51:26,880 --> 00:51:29,720 and Edward III. 740 00:51:29,720 --> 00:51:34,800 The Queen was surrounded by 1,000 years of royal history. 741 00:51:34,800 --> 00:51:39,800 Here, St Edward's Crown, the symbol of the moment of coronation, 742 00:51:39,800 --> 00:51:44,800 was replaced with the glorious, gem-encrusted Imperial State Crown. 743 00:51:47,560 --> 00:51:50,840 Within its cross is a blue sapphire said to have been 744 00:51:50,840 --> 00:51:54,360 taken from the ring finger of Edward the Confessor's body 745 00:51:54,360 --> 00:51:56,080 as it lay within the shrine. 746 00:51:57,440 --> 00:51:59,560 In the circlet 747 00:51:59,560 --> 00:52:05,160 is a second, larger sapphire of 104 carats known as the Stuart Sapphire. 748 00:52:06,720 --> 00:52:08,960 It's a pale... 749 00:52:08,960 --> 00:52:11,360 But never mind, it's... 750 00:52:11,360 --> 00:52:13,240 And also it's extremely useful 751 00:52:13,240 --> 00:52:16,480 because it tells one which is the back and which is the front. 752 00:52:16,480 --> 00:52:20,360 Very useful. No difficulties like the Archbishop. 753 00:52:20,360 --> 00:52:23,880 No. Well, the Lord Great Chamberlain has to hand it properly. 754 00:52:23,880 --> 00:52:26,000 Which way round does he hand it to you? 755 00:52:26,000 --> 00:52:28,200 Well, he hands it that way, you see... Right. 756 00:52:28,200 --> 00:52:30,680 ..so that I put it on, when he hands it. 757 00:52:30,680 --> 00:52:32,240 And I put it on straight. 758 00:52:34,440 --> 00:52:36,680 Yeah. Yeah. 759 00:52:36,680 --> 00:52:40,080 It fits very... 760 00:52:40,080 --> 00:52:41,800 Heavy? 761 00:52:41,800 --> 00:52:44,400 Well, I think it's 3lb or something. 762 00:52:45,800 --> 00:52:47,320 Quite heavy. 763 00:52:47,320 --> 00:52:49,680 Comfortable, ma'am? No! 764 00:52:51,480 --> 00:52:54,920 Nothing like that is comfortable. No. 765 00:52:54,920 --> 00:52:57,800 The more jewels the better. 766 00:52:57,800 --> 00:53:00,480 George IV invented that, didn't he? 767 00:53:00,480 --> 00:53:02,840 I think so, ma'am, yes. Hm. 768 00:53:02,840 --> 00:53:07,760 He loved jewellery and colour. 769 00:53:10,560 --> 00:53:16,760 George IV's coronation was the most expensive and extravagant ever. 770 00:53:16,760 --> 00:53:20,080 Following revolution and republicanism in 18th-century France 771 00:53:20,080 --> 00:53:24,640 and America, he delivered a much-needed show of regal splendour. 772 00:53:27,360 --> 00:53:29,640 When you go to Parliament, ma'am, 773 00:53:29,640 --> 00:53:33,160 you wear what he originally wore on the way to his coronation. 774 00:53:33,160 --> 00:53:35,560 That diadem. 775 00:53:35,560 --> 00:53:41,440 Yes. Can you imagine a man having that made for him? Fascinating. 776 00:53:41,440 --> 00:53:42,960 He did have a sense of some style. 777 00:53:42,960 --> 00:53:44,240 Oh, he did. 778 00:53:46,960 --> 00:53:51,080 At the coronation, after private contemplation within St Edward's 779 00:53:51,080 --> 00:53:56,040 shrine, the Queen emerged wearing the Imperial State Crown. 780 00:53:59,480 --> 00:54:04,120 Oh, here we are. We've been behind the rood screen, we've got 781 00:54:04,120 --> 00:54:08,240 a different train on, as you can see - 782 00:54:08,240 --> 00:54:14,000 it's got much more embroidery, this train. The other one was plain. 783 00:54:14,000 --> 00:54:17,200 We were having to walk down these steps. I remember thinking, 784 00:54:17,200 --> 00:54:19,960 "I must look... I mustn't look down," you know, 785 00:54:19,960 --> 00:54:23,000 we were told not to look down, but it's quite difficult. 786 00:54:23,000 --> 00:54:26,040 I thought, "Oh, goodness, if one of us trips...!" But we didn't. 787 00:54:31,520 --> 00:54:34,040 16 months of preparations 788 00:54:34,040 --> 00:54:38,840 had delivered a day of perfectly executed ritual. 789 00:54:46,240 --> 00:54:49,080 As two million well-wishers cheered her on, 790 00:54:49,080 --> 00:54:52,880 the Queen began her triumphant journey through the capital. 791 00:54:56,120 --> 00:55:00,800 It took the 29,000 troops from 129 nations 792 00:55:00,800 --> 00:55:05,800 two hours to march along the five-mile processional route. 793 00:55:13,160 --> 00:55:17,040 The Queen's reign may have begun at the moment of her father's death 794 00:55:17,040 --> 00:55:20,840 in 1952, but it was launched by the coronation in 1953. 795 00:55:20,840 --> 00:55:25,320 She was projected on to the world stage, she was seen to be steady 796 00:55:25,320 --> 00:55:28,640 and as a young woman to do her duty perfectly. 797 00:55:28,640 --> 00:55:34,080 It recognised in a moment an old-fashioned ancient kingdom 798 00:55:34,080 --> 00:55:37,160 marking the start of this new and vibrant reign. 799 00:55:45,840 --> 00:55:50,360 Five-and-a-half hours after leaving the Palace, the Queen returned home. 800 00:55:53,080 --> 00:55:56,680 As the crowd rushed to celebrate at the palace gates, the Queen's 801 00:55:56,680 --> 00:56:01,360 personal footage reveals a more informal mood behind the scenes. 802 00:56:02,920 --> 00:56:06,520 What did I do with the sceptre, then? It's gone. 803 00:56:07,680 --> 00:56:10,320 In that few moments they've given it back to you, 804 00:56:10,320 --> 00:56:13,160 I think, because there you are with both. 805 00:56:14,480 --> 00:56:17,120 Somebody picked up and took it out. 806 00:56:18,720 --> 00:56:24,000 That's Jane Stewart. She tripped - she was rather embarrassed. 807 00:56:24,000 --> 00:56:27,920 Look at the Queen smiling. We're all smiling. 808 00:56:27,920 --> 00:56:32,440 I've got the giggles behind Jane. There I am, laughing. 809 00:56:34,080 --> 00:56:35,920 Such fun for the children. 810 00:56:37,160 --> 00:56:39,160 Not what they're meant to do. 811 00:56:39,160 --> 00:56:40,720 Not what they're meant to do. 812 00:56:42,120 --> 00:56:46,120 Must be such a relief for her not to have the crown on. 813 00:56:46,120 --> 00:56:49,560 But it was lovely. I mean, that bit was such fun, 814 00:56:49,560 --> 00:56:53,640 because, you know, everything had gone exactly as it should have. 815 00:56:55,080 --> 00:56:59,200 People say, "Oh, was your wedding the most amazing day of your life?" 816 00:56:59,200 --> 00:57:01,840 and I have to say, "Well, actually, it wasn't," 817 00:57:01,840 --> 00:57:03,360 because the coronation was. 818 00:57:03,360 --> 00:57:07,000 It was something absolutely extraordinary, 819 00:57:07,000 --> 00:57:09,960 and I was so lucky to have been part of it. 820 00:57:14,920 --> 00:57:18,760 For the very first time, after 65 years, 821 00:57:18,760 --> 00:57:22,320 Her Majesty has added her unique voice to the events 822 00:57:22,320 --> 00:57:27,000 that announced her reign and marked the start of a new era. 823 00:57:27,000 --> 00:57:31,440 It's a sort of... I suppose, the sort of beginning of one's life, 824 00:57:31,440 --> 00:57:35,080 really, as the sovereign. 825 00:57:35,080 --> 00:57:38,400 It's a sort of pageant of chivalry 826 00:57:38,400 --> 00:57:43,000 and old-fashioned way of doing things, I think, really. 827 00:57:43,000 --> 00:57:49,040 But it's quite interesting to have it, you know, done again. 828 00:57:50,320 --> 00:57:53,480 I mean, I've seen one, one coronation, 829 00:57:53,480 --> 00:57:55,880 and been the recipient in the other, 830 00:57:55,880 --> 00:57:57,800 which is pretty remarkable. 72520

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