The Japan Times - Wedding, coronation, now funeral: emotive farewell to queen

EUR -
AED 4.24008
AFN 72.724514
ALL 96.508212
AMD 435.724665
ANG 2.066402
AOA 1058.549174
ARS 1611.776544
AUD 1.622763
AWG 2.07785
AZN 1.960194
BAM 1.960182
BBD 2.322973
BDT 141.516394
BGN 1.973159
BHD 0.435859
BIF 3429.606086
BMD 1.154361
BND 1.473795
BOB 7.970061
BRL 5.979824
BSD 1.153369
BTN 106.512363
BWP 15.674587
BYN 3.459434
BYR 22625.472664
BZD 2.319656
CAD 1.580741
CDF 2614.627194
CHF 0.905599
CLF 0.02653
CLP 1047.652011
CNY 7.94991
CNH 7.94404
COP 4269.692195
CRC 540.627436
CUC 1.154361
CUP 30.590563
CVE 112.146595
CZK 24.429622
DJF 205.153016
DKK 7.472137
DOP 70.358441
DZD 152.479986
EGP 60.311659
ERN 17.315413
ETB 181.6675
FJD 2.547792
FKP 0.867882
GBP 0.863953
GEL 3.139771
GGP 0.867882
GHS 12.565224
GIP 0.867882
GMD 84.83615
GNF 10135.288544
GTQ 8.834752
GYD 241.306816
HKD 9.046783
HNL 30.67094
HRK 7.536837
HTG 151.288898
HUF 388.410086
IDR 19588.349267
ILS 3.577884
IMP 0.867882
INR 106.666809
IQD 1512.212714
IRR 1516830.157279
ISK 143.59058
JEP 0.867882
JMD 181.435643
JOD 0.818461
JPY 183.486813
KES 149.548017
KGS 100.949257
KHR 4628.986439
KMF 492.91224
KPW 1038.975448
KRW 1713.590561
KWD 0.35402
KYD 0.961182
KZT 555.751774
LAK 24789.899418
LBP 103373.014559
LKR 359.166113
LRD 211.823654
LSL 19.26605
LTL 3.408527
LVL 0.698261
LYD 7.385146
MAD 10.845186
MDL 20.120682
MGA 4796.368931
MKD 61.715884
MMK 2424.334665
MNT 4126.260076
MOP 9.309756
MRU 46.295668
MUR 53.839473
MVR 17.834634
MWK 2003.970748
MXN 20.387028
MYR 4.530836
MZN 73.758321
NAD 19.266689
NGN 1566.110086
NIO 42.388525
NOK 11.057172
NPR 170.421662
NZD 1.967464
OMR 0.443817
PAB 1.153414
PEN 3.957729
PGK 4.966642
PHP 68.797607
PKR 322.384125
PLN 4.259188
PYG 7476.71599
QAR 4.205625
RON 5.092578
RSD 117.444885
RUB 95.089628
RWF 1684.21248
SAR 4.334119
SBD 9.294521
SCR 17.340571
SDG 693.770822
SEK 10.702431
SGD 1.472937
SHP 0.86607
SLE 28.396756
SLL 24206.382345
SOS 659.717532
SRD 43.432838
STD 23892.938954
STN 24.934194
SVC 10.091562
SYP 127.990792
SZL 19.266786
THB 37.228589
TJS 11.055152
TMT 4.051807
TND 3.385164
TOP 2.779423
TRY 51.000472
TTD 7.825462
TWD 36.765236
TZS 3018.653819
UAH 50.674456
UGX 4353.696015
USD 1.154361
UYU 46.884822
UZS 13973.538209
VES 516.932208
VND 30359.69036
VUV 138.04672
WST 3.179352
XAF 657.452522
XAG 0.014506
XAU 0.000231
XCD 3.119718
XCG 2.07872
XDR 0.819389
XOF 664.332234
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.373143
ZAR 19.214417
ZMK 10390.613359
ZMW 22.496979
ZWL 371.703723
  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    16.5

    +2.3%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.9

    -0.22%

  • NGG

    -0.4200

    90.47

    -0.46%

  • GSK

    -0.3050

    53.465

    -0.57%

  • AZN

    -0.7350

    191.275

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    -0.1200

    89.74

    -0.13%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    14.75

    +1.02%

  • BCE

    0.1050

    26.005

    +0.4%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    34.33

    -0.41%

  • BCC

    1.3400

    73.06

    +1.83%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.94

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    -0.4000

    60.54

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.46

    -0.64%

  • BP

    0.9450

    43.845

    +2.16%

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.

M.Matsumoto--JT