Free Web Submission http://addurl.nu FreeWebSubmission.com Software Directory www britain directory com education Visit Timeshares Earn free bitcoin http://www.visitorsdetails.com CAPTAIN TAREK DREAM: احتفالات بمناسبة الذكرى الستين لتتويج ملكة بريطانيا اليزابيث الثانية - Queen marks Coronation anniversary at Westminster Abbey

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

احتفالات بمناسبة الذكرى الستين لتتويج ملكة بريطانيا اليزابيث الثانية - Queen marks Coronation anniversary at Westminster Abbey

اليزابيث الثانية

يشارك في القداس بعض الشخصيات التي حضرت مراسم تتويج الملكة منذ 60 عاما

يشارك نحو ألفي شخص في قداس يقام بكاتدرائية ويستمنستر بمناسبة الذكرى الستين لتتويج ملكة بريطانيا إليزابيث الثانية.
وسيصحب الملكة أكثر من 20 شخصا من أفراد عائلتها بينهم دوق ادنبره الأمير فيليب.

ومن بين المشاركين في القداس أشخاص حضروا مراسم تتويج الملكة عام 1953.
وأكد قصر باكنغهام مشاركة الأمير فيليب في القداس، على الرغم من شعوره ببعض التعب مساء الاثنين.
وقال متحدث باسم القصر: "سيشارك الدوق في القداس يوم الثلاثاء".
وسيعرض خلال مراسم الاحتفالات تاج سانت إدوارد وكرسي التتويج، وهو واحد من أقدم قطع الأثاث الإنجليزية.
ومن المقرر أن تدخل الملكة في صحبة زوجها الأمير فيليب إلى كاتدرائية ويستمنستر بينما تعزف نفس الموسيقى التي استقبلتها عام 1953.
ويشارك في الاحتفالات دوق ودوقة كورنوول ودوق ودوقة كامبريدج والأمير هاري ودوق يورك.
كما سيشارك أيضا رئيس الوزراء البريطاني ديفيد كاميرون.

The Queen and other Royals leave the service

In 1953, aged 27, the Queen was the 38th sovereign to be crowned in Westminster Abbey

The Queen has joined 2,000 guests for a service at Westminster Abbey to mark 60 years since her Coronation.

Some who took part in the 1953 service were among the congregation.

Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev Justin Welby said the event honoured "60 years of commitment".

The Queen was accompanied by more than 20 members of her family, including the Duke of Edinburgh, who pulled out of an engagement on Monday night because he was feeling unwell.

Several key items from the Coronation were placed in Westminster Abbey for the service.

They included the heavy, solid gold St Edward's Crown, displayed on the High Altar - the first time it has left the Tower of London since 1953.

Beside it was the Ampulla, the gold, eagle shaped bottle from which the holy oil was poured for the Queen's anointing.

The Coronation Chair, one of the oldest pieces of English furniture still in use, was also on show.

'Utter self-sacrifice'
The Queen and Prince Philip entered Westminster Abbey to the same music that greeted her in 1953.

Back then, aged 27, she was the 38th sovereign to be crowned in an abbey that has been conducting such ceremonies since the coronation of William the Conqueror in 1066.

The Archbishop of Canterbury told those gathered in the abbey the Coronation had been "an ordination, a setting aside of a person for service".

He said that during the ceremony the Queen knelt at the abbey's altar and prayed.

"We do not know what was prayed. Her Majesty knelt at the beginning of a path of demanding devotion and utter self-sacrifice, a path she did not choose, yet to which she was called by God.

"Today we celebrate 60 years since that moment, 60 years of commitment."

'Pomp and ceremony'
At the time the Coronation was a major television spectacle, with an estimated 27 million Britons tuning in.

The weather was dull and wet, but warm sunshine greeted those gathering in London for the anniversary.

The Archbishop said the Coronation had been "the first time the whole nation had watched anything as it happened".

Duke and Duchess of Cambridge

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge married in the Abbey two years ago

"Pomp and ceremony on a rainy June day, all so very British, wrapped in time and custom."

Her Majesty wore an Angela Kelly dress, hat and coat - made from oyster coloured silk-satin brocade - for the service.

She was joined at the abbey by the Prince of Wales - who was just four in 1953 - and Duchess of Cornwall, as well as the Duke of Cambridge and the pregnant Duchess of Cambridge.

It is the first time the couple, whose first baby is due next month, have attended a public event at the abbey since they married there two years ago.

Other royals present include Prince Harry, the Duke of York, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, the Earl and Countess of Wessex, Lady Louise Windsor, the Princess Royal and Zara Phillips with her husband Mike Tindall.

The congregation sang the National Anthem before UK Prime Minister David Cameron gave a reading from the Book of Kings.

Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Kamalesh Sharma, will also give a reading.

Actress Claire Skinner, from the BBC sitcom Outnumbered, read a poem called The Throne, written for the anniversary by Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy.

The Dean of Westminster the Very Reverend John Hall, Dean of Westminster, told the BBC the service marked "60 years of duty done with a glad heart".

'Most beautiful thing'
Lady Glenconner was one of the Queen's six maids of honour in 1953.

Crowd outside Westminster Abbey

The weather in 1953 was wet and dull, but the anniversary crowds enjoyed warm sunshine

She told the BBC: "I remember standing by the door... I remember a roar coming round, we could hear everybody shouting. Then suddenly around the corner came this amazing golden coach, it was like a fairy tale.

"She was so beautiful. When she got out of the coach, the tiny waist she had, the wonderful complexion, she just looked the most beautiful thing I'd ever seen."

The Queen, whose reign began in 1952, practised wearing the crown around Buckingham Palace in the weeks before her Coronation, including at her children's bath time.

The Coronation was a strictly Anglican Christian event, but 60 years later Sikhism, Islam, Buddhism, Judaism and other faiths will be represented.

Last year's Diamond Jubilee marked the 60th anniversary of the Queen's accession to the throne.

Prince Philip had been due to accompany the Queen to a gala reception for the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) at St James's Palace in London on Monday but was unwell.

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