King Charles and his siblings held a vigil secret on the side of their mother’s coffin Ratu Elizabeth at that time rested in the historical Cathedral of Edinburgh, with thousands of queues for hours to pay homage to the longest king in England.
With his head down, Charles, wearing a skirt, along with Sister Princess Anne and Brother Prince Andrew and Edward, stood seriously for 10 minutes next to Oak coffin, wrapped in a royal flag known as the standard of the Scottish kingdom.
The flag is on it with a white bouquet of flowers and scottish crown, which is historically used for the coronation of the Scottish king.They left the Cathedral of St. Giles in the city to clap the audience.
The coffin had previously been brought from the Holyroushouse Palace, the official residence of the king in Scotland, in a procession that was mostly witnessed in silence by a grieving large crowd, with Charles and other members of the royal family walked slowly behind the corpse.
Mourners, some cry, and others with their heads bowed or worse, walk slowly through the coffin after waiting patiently for hours to be allowed to enter the cathedral.
I went to see the queen so you could imagine my surprise when I saw members of the royal family there,” said Frances Thain, 63. “I’m just overwhelmed because there is so much to be taken.”
Michael Hainsworth, 70, a retired music teacher, was one of the first to enter the cathedral to see the coffin after waiting for seven hours, and people were expected to pass through the night until the guard ended at 3 pm. (1400 GMT) on Tuesday.”We are very upset. It’s very emotional. It brought everything home,” Hainsworth said when he comforted his crying wife.
Queen Elizabeth died on Thursday at her holiday home in Balmoral, in the highlands of Scotland, at the age of 96 after the 70 -year reign, plunged Britain to mourn even when she faced the economic crisis and changes in government.A poll of Yougov said 44% of respondents said they had been crying or crying since his death.
A Bagpipe’s lament was the only sound when the Kilt army from the Scottish Royal Regiment brought a coffin from the palace and placed it in a corpse for a short trip along the kingdom’s mili to the Cathedral.
Salute the weapon exploded from the battery in the Edinburgh castle when the corpse was moving and one round was fired every minute from the procession. In addition there is only silence – except for a brief scream from a Heckler addressed to Prince Andrew.
Under the bright sky, Charles, 73, who automatically became the king of the death of his mother, and his brothers walked slowly behind the hearse, while the royal company archery gave an honorary guard.
Tina Richardson, 63, a retired from Dunbar, including those who stand on the miles of the kingdom for centuries next to the cathedral. He said his middle name was Elizabeth after the late Ratu.
There will never be someone like him,” he told Reuters. “She is a beautiful woman who gives us a lot. She dedicates her whole life to the country. At the time of good and bad she was there, especially during Covid. He united everyone.”
Ellie Merton, 52, an art producer, who traveled from the Scottish border region, said: “We have piper, horses and archers. There is a feeling of the Scottish community here when he traveled his last trip.”
In a crowded schedule for the new king, Charles went to the Scottish assembly which was handed over after the service to hear the condolences. He started the day in London, when he spoke to members of the British Parliament at Westminster Hall.
Michael Hainsworth, 70, a retired music teacher, was one of the first to enter the cathedral to see the coffin after waiting for seven hours, and people were expected to pass through the night until the guard ended at 3 pm. (1400 GMT) on Tuesday.
He called the parliament as “Our Democratic Life and Breathing Instruments” and promised to follow the example of his late mother in maintaining his independence.
Like all ceremonies to mark the death of Queen and Charles accession to the throne, there are many wine.
He arrived at the Westminster Hall with the hubbub of trumpet with his wife Camilla, Ratu Consort. The royal couple sat in the ceremony chair, with cavalry troops in the red tunic and a rotating helmet standing for attention behind.
He gave examples of selfless tasks that, with the help of God and your advice, I was completed faithfully to be followed,” he told members of the House of Commons and House of Lords.
Charles, who are now the King of England and 14 other realms including Australia, Canada, Jamaica, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea, are known for expressing their views on problems ranging from the environment to youth problems.
He has suggested that as a king, he will moderate his style, in accordance with the tradition guarded by the king of political problems.
On Tuesday, the coffin will be flown to London, where on Wednesday it will start a lying period in the country until September 19 – Elizabeth’s state funeral day – at a Catafalque at the Westminster Hall.
In London, members of the community will be allowed to process through the coffin, which will be borne by the royal standard with orb and the ruling stick placed above, for 24 hours a day to 6.30 am (0530 GMT) on September 19 on September 19.
The government says those who want to do it must expect to queue for hours and may be overnight because of the many people expected.
The last Britain saw the appearance of public mourning in 1997 after the death of Charles’s first wife, Princess Diana, in a Paris car accident.
In his first public comment since the death of the Queen, Prince Harry – Putra Diana – gave emotional respect to his “grandmother” on Monday, saying he would be very missed not only by family, but throughout the world.