I feel honoured that you used my remastered audio in your video! I’m rather irked that the King was not referred to as ‘the High and Mighty Prince’ following precedence. Note: There is also a proclamation of King Edward VII, albeit from a television series - I shall upload it soon on my channel.
@@paolocabling Alas, just a re-enactment and a short section of the full proclamation - and it hasn’t got ‘God Save the King’. It comes from a British television series from the 1970s, which I’ll cut to include the important events of King Edward VII’s accession: the Accession Council, the Proclamation, the swearing in and the Coronation.
@@paolocabling Righty-ho! I’ve got a high definition transfer from the official DVD with bonus features on my channel, but it’s unlisted so you’ll have to click on my channel to see it! Here’s a link to the playlist with bonus features: ruclips.net/p/PLfHTB7ieJn3sqDfgJgCtb-wKOddQj2m9Y
At 5:45 I’m thinking “Wow they never had a Queen for a whole 50 years until this moment” almost ignoring the fact that we never until last year had a King for 70 years
As amazing as it is to listen to the proclamation of King George V 112 years ago, it amazes me still more to think that Queen Elizabeth II - who passed away barely 3 weeks ago - was born just 16 years later!
Anyone else notice the gentleman standing to the side of the announcer there for Edward VIII, George VI and Elizabeth II? He was there for 3 different monarchs!
That's Bernard Fitzalan-Howard, the 16th Duke of Norfolk who is the Earl Marshal, the master of royal ceremonies such as royal funerals and coronations. (I answered this to the same question asked by a channel here. Copied.)
@@sabbagels Anyone between 78-90 years old will probably still remember when George VI was monarch of Britain. For them it’s only the second time in their lifetime that they’ve had a king as head of state (first George VI and then his grandson Charles III).
I like in the first 3 Proclamations, the video is black and white and choppy and the audio cluttered, and the Royal Guards carrying bolt action rifles. And the next Proclamation has full HD Live streaming and Guards with 5.56 Modern Assault rifles. Really shows how long a time Queen Elizabeth ruled for
Hard to believe that even Queen Elibazeth II’s proclamation and coronation only exists as grainy black and white footage! Yet film has come a long way and we can now see it in glorious colour and video quality! There was an actual film shot of the coronation of Queen Elibazeth II - it exists somewhere - and it’s in colour - in theory, King Charles III’s coronation could be shot in full HD, and even 3-D - and you could even get a 360° all-round shot to view in those glasses - and it could be stored somewhere and kept for people who missed it - put on your Oculus Rifts and Google Cardboards - next thing you know, you’re there - regardless of where you really are!
Actually, there is a full BBC coverage of the 1953 coronation uploaded by Archive of Recorded Church Music on YT. Here's the link: ruclips.net/video/52NTjasbmgw/видео.html
There is short contemporary MovieTone film in genuine colour but with very crackly sound, showing highlights of the Coronation. This is on RUclips: ruclips.net/video/JJEUtX2_GwI/видео.html There also a lengthy contemporary documentary film with much better sound and consisting entirely of genuine colour footage entitled "A Queen is Crowned". available on RUclips. This shows the processions to and from the Abbey and the service (abridged but containing the main events). The narrator was Laurence Olivier. I find the commentary a bit flowery and over the top but the images and music are impressive: ruclips.net/video/wKzlKwpm17U/видео.html
@@paolocabling This contains the famous close-up at 02:51:00 when the BBC disobeyed their prior instructions and zoomed into the Queen's head and shoulders at the start of verse 2 of the National Anthem, lingering there, as the procession out of the Abbey was starting. That did not happen in the cinema colour film footage. Richard Dimbleby's hushed commentary was well-judged, fluent and flawless. This monochrome TV version shows the entire service including all the music and all in the right order (unlike 'A Queen is Crowned').
I've watched "A Queen is Crowned" before but I prefer the BBC coverage more than the film. I really don't mind if it's monochromatic, the recorded live events matter more as if you're in the spur of the moment. :)
@@paolocabling My favourite moment which gives me goose pimples only occurs in the full TV coverage. It's at 01:51:14 and is just after the Enthronement when everyone in the queue has finished doing homage and just before the offertory hymn (the arrangement of "Old Hundredth", by Vaughan Williams). Everyone is standing stock-still in their positions gathered around the throne in a sort of tableux made up of the enthroned queen, the bishops and peers in their robes and coronets. Then, out of the silence, there's a drum roll followed by a fanfare (by Sir Ernest Bullock) played antiphonally on trumpets (lots of them) and full organ, based on the Scottish metrical psalm tune "Montrose". There's no other recording of this short but impressive piece.
5:11 - so if I remember right, didn't they do a 96-gun salute (for every year of Elizabeth's life). Interesting that in the case of George VI's ascent due to abdication they instead did 41 for the new king's age instead (Edward was a year older).
Assuming nothing is amiss and the monarchy is still functioning then, which I have little doubt it will be, the next British monarchs shall be: - King William V (Charles III is 73 currently so obviously his reign shall not be as long as his mother's for obvious reasons) - King George VII (following a trend of monarchs logically starting to get a bit younger when becoming monarch, Prince George who is 9 now, could still have to wait 40-50 years to be King, but still probably be a bit younger than King William V logically would be if he took the throne in the next 15-25 years) If Charles III lives to 100, it would mean William - now 40 years old - would be 67 or so (6 years younger than Charles III is now of course, at 73) If Charles III matches the lifespan of his mother Queen Elizabeth II, at 96 years of age, then that would obviously be in 23 years in ~2045. If Charles III matches the lifespan of the Queen Mother (Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon), at 101 (at time of passing in 2002), then of course William would inherit the throne at the age of 68; still 5 years younger than Charles III is now upon ascending to the throne. Logically, the newly crowned shall get younger, slowly. Unless Charles III happens to live for 105-110 years or something, then it's pretty much guaranteed to be the case that William will be in his 60's (or younger) Say if Charles III passes away in his mid-late 80's (as would still be considered a very good age globally), or early 90's, William would be about 50-60 years old. Prince George would be in his 20's or 30's by that point, and then potentially - assuming good health and bright days for all, we must hope - be direct heir to the throne as Crown-Prince for anywhere between 35-45+ years as a reasonable estimation (again, reasonably assuming everyone is doing well) I know it might seem a bit macabre to look at in that way, and it must be approached with due respect and decorum, though for sure, nobody lives forever. Assuming lifespans which last longer than the national average in the UK, and then some due to their royal existence, I do not think it is unreasonable to suggest lifespans of 85+ for every single one of them barring the unforeseeable or the tragic (and touch wood that it does not) Assuming long and happy lives, then they should all be reaching 85-100 for the foreseeable future. Prince William seems healthy enough. I'd say King Charles III has two decades plus. The only chance of there being another Queen after Elizabeth II in our lifetimes (I am 29) is if Prince George doesn't want to be King following his father, and steps aside for Princess Charlotte (Charlotte is now 3rd in line to the throne, behind her brother George in 2nd, and her father William, in 1st; her younger brother Prince Louis is 4th in line to the throne, as well) I know that others, being blunter, might speculate 'if George wasn't able to' in a more grim and macabre way, but I shall not go there. You get the point. Obviously it is far more likely that Prince George will simply inherit the throne after King William V. By then, George VII could be anywhere between 55-65. Still slightly younger (most likely) than King William V theoretically may be in the future, when he takes the throne after King Charles III. Assuming all is well and there is no need of the 'spare' rather than the 'heir', then the chances are, we shall never in our lifetimes see a reigning Queen of England again. Assuming George VII reigns for a similarly long time as his father, then it could create a pattern of British monarchs generally coming to the throne in their 50's or 60's. In past centuries, historically, all manner of things ended reigns far sooner than they deserved. For example, Queen Anne, came to the throne in 1702 at the age of 37, and passed away in 1714, aged 49, after just 12 years 145 days (split into 5 years and 53 days as Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland, and then 7 years, 92 days on the throne as Queen of Great Britain, after the 1707 Act of Union of Great Britain, the merger of England and Scotland; and in this time the faction of Great Britain controlled Ireland as well) Her reign was brief, but important. I suspect that had she been born in the 21st century, or late 20th century at least, her lifespan would have been much greater than 49 years of age. English and British history has many monarchs whom did not reign for very long (in Medieval times, especially, of course; such was the difficulty of maintaining power in such trying times, with rival factions fighting literally and figuratively for power) The world of medicine, the state of healthcare, the standards of scientific knowledge, the technology of the time and the developments over the generations, varied wildly of course. Now, in the 21st century, we live in a much more advanced time as far as medical care, clinical proficiency and scientific knowledge goes, so lifespans should be longer in tandem.
@@jamessergeant2136 I did quite specifically say, 'in our lifetimes'. I know George could have a direct female heir (assuming she is the first born, what with the British monarchy now having no preference of male heirs, in more recent times; hence why Princess Charlotte is ahead of Prince Louis in the line of succession) I am aware. What I was saying, was that it will logically take a long enough time for it to be considerably unlikely for a Queen to be crowned in the next hundred years, assuming (reasonably and without being too rudely morbid about it) that the heirs will all have long and happy lives. Charles III could rule into his 90's and that is two decades away. Two decades, going into the 2040's. Then King William V will be in his 60's and potentially reign for another 30-40 years or so. Again, the number you should be thinking of is the combined figure of the reigns of multiple generations. That is the point here. Of course their reigns could be much shorter than a natural maximal figure, but it is reasonable without evidence to the contrary that they will all reach a great age in this modern world. Any number of things could change that but it's grim to even speculate about it and it is moot anyway. King William V could have a terrible illness in his 70's or something from some future sickness we don't know even know about/might not exist yet. We cannot predict all things. Of course there is an undercurrent of risk in speculating who will live 'xyz', 'one-two-three', number of years. Of course nobody can really be sure. That's life. Assuming nothing terrible happens, then it's fair to guess that William would reign for nearly half a century (or just over, if he does extremely well) Yet more likely than passing in his 100's he'll pass in his 90's like with many elderly people these days. Obviously it's rarer to surpass 100. Even Queen Elizabeth II could not, at 96 and 70 years as Queen. The point is that if you think about it, assuming as I say, longevously lived and happy lives, then it will simply be beyond our lifetimes when the next Queen will rule (again, other than if Princess Charlotte came to the throne one day for whatever unforeseen reason; highly, highly unlikely) Again, most likely it will be King Charles III then King William V then King George VII. So at least: - 20 or so years (King Charles III) From 2022. Charles III in 2022 is 73. - 40-50 or so years (King William V) From the mid-2040's. Prince William is 40 in 2022. - another 40-50 years (King George VII) From the mid-2080's/2090's. Prince George of Wales is currently 9 in 2022. Again, assuming full lives, only diminished towards the end by natural ageing, then King George VII would likely be in his 60's by this time, much as his father was (in the theoretical mid-2040's) when he had his own ascent to the throne. To reiterate, I'm fully-aware that those lifespans are deliberately optimistic and purposefully ignore anything to the contrary, like terrible misfortunes or calamities. But there you go. Natural ageing could mean some of those reigns are 10-20 years shorter than I stated. Not everyone ages the same way and some people just happen to live longer. I dare say Prince William probably has lived slightly healthier than King Charles III did in his own youth, thus far. I dare say George VII will be the most healthy living of all princes in history, highly well-looked after by his mother and father even by royal standards. It really depends on how long King Charles III and then King William V reign. Between them, they could reign for another 60-70 years after one another. Assuming 60 years, I'd be 89, or 99 if it's 70 years. I know for a fact, then, that I would almost certainly never see the end of the reign of King George VII, whom might reign 30-40 more years after William. And if his future children happen to be all male or at least a male is born first, then again, there could be no Queen for 150 years. Maybe 200. Maybe 250. It really just depends on who is born after that in the future generations to follow, of course. Even if Charles III only reigns 10 years and William only reigns 30 (in really ridiculously lowball estimates which seem very unconvincing to me) then that itself is 40 years (still long enough for me to be about 69 by the time a theoretically 49 year old King George VII was crowned. More than likely, he'd reign anywhere between 30-40 (maybe even over 50) in that scenario, even in a 'lowball, negative estimates' scenario where the lower figures are used instead. Again, I don't really believe Charles III will only reign 10 years. I'm just showing the difference to illustrate the point. He'll at least reign 20 years in my opinion. Could be wrong but time will tell, as it always does. If William's reign after him is much shorter than we might imagine, then yes, this gives more time for George VII to rule. But the fact that three Kings in a row are lined up to be on the British throne, shows the reality that it's very unlikely for any adult aged people around now to see that time through. It's basically 70 years from now at the earliest/most negative projections, and much more likely (assuming long reigns for all, fairly enough) 90-100 years from now. Maybe people around Prince George's age (9) will logically see those times. But I am two decades older than that and I will inevitably not see out my time as far as that. It is the way of things. Mortality, eh... Nothing and nobody lasts forever. I would like to make it to the 22nd century just to giggle at the futuristic folks in the 2100's, to say, 'my life spanned three different centuries as a child of the 1990's', but the odds of that, even assuming I improved my health and well-being to a great degree as I go forward, are pretty low indeed. I'd have to be over 110 or something. Even if I was 100, I'd die in the 2090's. I wish I could get to the 2100's though just to say I did (historically, there were Victorians whom were born in the late 1890's whom managed to span 3 centuries by making it past the new millennium marker of the year 2000; technically, these luckier people spanned two millennia, as well) It won't be until the 2900's that someone can span two millennia again (by then, the 3rd and 4th millennia) and it is reasonably doubtful that any/all that many spanned the 1st to 2nd millennia back in the 900's AD (with life expectancies being drastically shorter back then; though I imagine a few old timers managed to reach over 100 even back then) Of course, futuristic genetic engineering and other technology could extend lifespans by potentially decades/centuries/even millennia. We cannot now be sure enough to know. Organ replacement, deoxygenation of cells, cybernetics, biological enhancements, de-ageing processes. Who knows what might be possible (without going all 'Dr Lazarus' and things just going wrong) That would really change humanity forever, though maybe only the super-rich could ever have it (which itself would create a moral nightmare which would be hard to justify and divide society more than it already is; morally, I'd argue such technology, if ever made, would have to be for all, not just for the few; all or none at all; and knowing how humanity is, well, good luck with that either way) Point being, we'd be very very very unlikely to see a Queen of England again in our lifetimes. We shall _never_ see Queen Elizabeth II's like again. She was a historical fluke so rare she even surpassed the legacy of Queen Victoria herself (and lived and reigned longer than her, in spite of Victoria being even younger than she was when ascending to the throne; in fairness, though, Victoria eponymously lived in Victorian times, with lower healthcare standards and greater pollution etc so it's still very impressive how long Victoria reigned in her literal own era) I would reason that someone like Queen Elizabeth II only comes around once every 300-500 years. There will _never_ be one quite like her again. Never. Not this side of the year 3000, most likely, if ever (and as many a Republican or Socialist might remind us rudely, perhaps there will _be no monarchy_ by then?) Some Commies now actually believe the British monarchy is 'finished' but I think that is just wishful thinking for sour and rebellious fifth columnists. Queen Elizabeth III would be fascinating, though.
"nobody lives forever". Im not sure about that. No simples person lives forever. There a few relacts of imortals, even thoug we dont know about then. Saint German, for example. Its not possible to say they're as false.
@@charlesswitzer8378 In my view, the monarchy is not sacrosanct. According to it's own internal theological grounding, then yes, it is, according to itself. I do not see the Constitutional Monarchy as sacrosanct or sacred. Others are entitled to believe it is but I do not go so far. I understand that in a sense, all British Monarchs are 'obligate Protestants' in that they cannot be Catholic to sit the throne of Great Britain, by it's own internal ruling since the 17th century. They don't really have much of a say in it by definition, if they want the throne. Of course, they can keep up appearances and not truly 'defend the faith', but nobody could ever say that was what Queen Elizabeth II was about. She was devoutly Christian and made no qualms about it and was certainly resolute in her public speeches about her faith, especially the Christmas speeches. She wore her faith openly and did not hide it away in spite of the decline in the popularity of Christianity across her reign, in the United Kingdom. While it is still well-represented, nobody could deny it has diminished in status, in the face of the 'social revolution' (more like anarchism and materialistic excess) since especially the 1960's. I respect Queen Elizabeth II for many things, and one of them was her unyielding faith, even knowing that it didn't 'play well' with an increasingly faithless flock. But there you go. I myself do not place much stock in how 'sacrosanct' something is. Naturally, there cannot be theistic monarchy without religion. Yet I am inclined to not care so much about it anymore, in a neutral way. For instance, I would defend vociferously the right of British Christians, whether Anglican or otherwise, to continue to believe what they believe and practice what they like. I was raised Roman Catholic. I respect the values of Christianity and Christian teaching. But not for myself, in all things. I believe mostly in their historical and socio-cultural value to the British people, and yet nuance and temper that with the understanding that Christianity was brought here by invaders and that many, many sectarian conflicts have raged, costing the lives of millions all told, within our shores. Without it's legacy, the galvanising, outwardly pioneering and free enterprising, god-fearing Britons of the Victorian Era, would not have been as they were. I do not ignore the past. It isn't quite sufficient, when describing my views on the place of Christianity, for me to say that I merely tolerate it. I place it on a higher pedestal in terms of the cultural and historical significance of culture. We are a 'multicultural society' (as the anti-monarchists will also shout as they fall over themselves to install a Republic; and as those fifth columnists with no interest in _anything_ British still decide to live here at our collective expense, and do not care for our customs and traditions, only the benefits they can reap) Simply because I value the historical place of Christianity in British history, some progressive would probably say it is favouritism. I consider myself Agnostic for a start, in the original and simplistic meaning of the word coined by naturalist Thomas Henry Huxley. I proudly sit on that fence because I would not deign to know otherwise. I accept the cognitive limitations of mankind and do not pretend to know more than anyone else about the great mysteries of why we are here. I have my ideas and theories, natural philosophies and thoughts. But I am not too proud to admit there is no shame in not knowing such things. Never been an atheist, never will be. Agnosticism is fine by me. I have plenty of reasons in my own life and observations, not to believe in a God. But I do not say there is not one or more. It is not for me to stay. And I make my peace with that. I tolerate theism in general more than organised religion, but it's all relative. I still tolerate religion. However, even just for _acknowledging_ how Christianity is factually, categorically and magnanimously more important to British history than any other religion, that in itself would be deemed, 'unfair' and 'wrongminded' in multi-culti 21st century Britain. Britain has culturally, fallen very far in some ways, while arising in others. I see it as good that Britain is tolerant of many faiths and viewpoints, as a democratic and advanced realm. Yet I do not think we should so lightly allow Christianity to fade away. I say that as a neutral, and a British patriot. My patriotism does not require religiosity or particular piety. It is well-founded in other ways, such as the pride in Britain's place in science, technology and the very fabric of the history itself. The monarchy is a part of our glorious history and our present reality. I believe Constitutional Monarchy should remain, as a wise alternative to many options opted for on the continental mainland of Europe. Intemperate, reactionary and unstable paths, trodden by the idealistic and the tyrannical, leading from one bad situation to another. The British did not have an easy path themselves but due to our maritime power and liberal (as in English Classic Liberal) disposition, and cultural character, so to speak the English Pragmatism of the Age of Enlightenment and beyond, spread out globally to eventually produce the Anglosphere. Of course, the British monarchy was integral to all of that story, as much as British Parliament ever was in tandem. The dichotomy between Crown and Commons, most of all, making for a better Britain. For this reason, and many others, I respect the institution, and cannot see a reasonable alternative in the short-term. Many would clamour for abolition of the monarchy. I see that as a _disastrous_ path to take, even as a relative neutral on the monarchy. I see it as too valuable to British society, too prominent and intertwined with the style of government, to be so lightly and carelessly cast aside. And yet, for all that, many have worried about the future of the British monarchy in Charles III's hands. I think it'll be fine. People like the squawk and worry about things that are mostly far too complicated to make reductive claims over. There is a strong support network around Charles III and he won't just squander everything for climate agendas and activism. However, I do think he is being manipulated by pressure groups into well-meaning but biased perspectives. In terms of his views on conservationism I wholly agree with his charity work around that as Prince. But it should not always be the case that some other activists get to steer the ship from the stern, so to speak (it would be the tail wagging the dog) The point here, is that I understand why yourself and others are concerned about Charles III. I too fear that he will water things down to the point where the monarchy is scaled back enough to become irrelevant. I think that would be a bad thing, for Britain. Even though I do not agree with the theocratic principles inherent in the monarchy, and some of the more silly traditions and quirks, I do ultimately want it to be preserved for what it is; a symbol of British cultural iconography, heritage and achievement. I do not think the great unwashed anti-Monarchists could actually replace it with anything approaching civilised or anywhere near as powerful. Although it is a morally vapid argument, devoid of heart and feeling, the financial argument is clear; the monarchy more than pays for itself (I tire of seeing random prigs crying about 'the cost to the tax payer' etc etc for ceremonial events; the lack of insight and lateral, holistic thinking on this matter is, atrocious; obviously they are bringing in billions through tourism alone and have justified themselves financially many, many times over. That is not the concern. The concern is how every gobsh!te with a social media profile can just pretend as though this isn't true. There is a complete cognitive dissonance. I've argued with people who literally just deny it's truth, and deny it is a thing, when clearly a lot of tourism money generated in the UK is squarely due to the intrigue in the Royal Family. Not all of it is, yet even just based on the amount of visitors to the palaces and the other royal buildings, it is quite obvious massive quantities are being generated by them. They are financially justifiable. They've spent nearly 200 years getting their public image right (with many detractors but plenty of success nonetheless) Yet on a purely monetary basis, they are of course, a net positive to Britain. It's not even close. They cost each taxpayer a few pennies but bring in literal billions and give Britain a more respected soft-power aura. Geopolitically and symbolically, it makes absolute sense to keep them around.
If you listen to the full recording you’ll catch more of this - for example, ‘our only awful and right- liegeful- liege- rightful liege Lord Edward the Egg-’
I wonder how many people brought that phonograph recording and how many would have seen the newsreel in cinemas of the next three proclamations. My late parents would have seen those newsreels, having been children then, having been part of the same generation as the late Queen Elizabeth the second.
So historic! What a wonderful thing to witness the proclamation of all these great monarchs. As an American, I still appreciate the culture and lasting traditions of the UK. God Save The King!
I know a lot of people mention how wild it is to be listening to something on a cell phone or a computer but just think for a moment we're listening to a recording of something that for most of us happened thousands of miles away from where we are now, during a time nearly a century before most of us were born as of 2023 this was 113 years ago. And yet here I am holding a battery powered wireless device in my hand sitting in my hot tub
King Edward VII, King George V, King Edward VIII, King George VI and King Charles III God Save our gracious King Long live our noble king God save the king Send him victouris Happy and glourious Long to reign over us God save the king
Queen Elizabeth II God save our gracious queen Long live our noble queen God save the queen Send her victouris Happy and glourious Long to reign over us God save the queen
For Queen Elizabeth II’s proclamation, God save the King is played for the first six bars to commemorate the King’s devotion during the Second Wold War, then God save the Queen after. And for now King Charles III, the entirety was God save the Queen to commemorate the service of Her late Majesty the Queen, a service unlike previous monarchs.
Who is that guy off to the side in all 3 black-and-white proclamations? I was going to comment on how the same guy read out Edward VIII and George VI but now I'm obsessed with the dude standing next to him who was still around doing the same job (silently doffing his hat)
That's Bernard Fitzalan-Howard, the 16th Duke of Norfolk who is the Earl Marshal, the master of royal ceremonies such as royal funerals and coronations.
My mum was born under the latter years of the reign of H. M. George V & my Papa was born while H. M. Edward VIII was King. I only have known, H. M. Queen Elizabeth II & my heart is still broken. 💔😢 My parent's hearts as well are broken. 💔 😢 We like H. M. King Charles III!! God Save The King!! ✝️ 🇬🇧 👏
I am also irked by that! Also irking me is the removal of ‘gentlemen of quality’. If they wanted to be more ‘inclusive’, they could have changed it to ‘ladies and gentlemen of quality’ or ‘personages of quality’ instead of ‘and others’.
Anyone know why the Garter King of Arms (or whichever official read out the proclamation) for George VI wore a different type of hat from all the others in the other proclamations? Seems a bit unlikely but was it anything to do with the time of day as it was dusk for George VI?
@@gidzmobug2323 Sorry: I expressed myself ambiguously! I wasn't comparing the Garter King of Arms with the other heralds and pursuivants at the same (George VI) proclamation. I was comparing the headdress of the Garter King of Arms at the George VI proclamation with what the Garter King of Arms wore for Edward VIII's (earlier in the year) and Elizabeth II's proclamations - a different type of hat for George VI so perhaps not following tradition?
Why at 4.36 in King George VI proclamation the announcer doesnt mention Defender of the Faith and Emperor of India? As India was still ruled by Britain at that time in 1936.
Historical values of the British Colony in Malaya and Singapore with The East India Company. The Straits Settlements comprised of Penang, Malacca & Singapore. Gone were the days when a big 'ice-ball' costs only 5 cents. Well, now 75 years i begun to think of the "good old days'' with the winking of an eye passed me by. Once in a lifetime!
@@Shkk That's because at the old times, some footage needed to be cut and as the mystery of why didn't mentioned *emperor of India*, We can't have evidence. But i think that George VI is one of the most bravest British monarchs. GOD SAVE THE KING- EMPEROR OF INDIA
I was 5 and a half when Elizabeth was proclaimed queen. Living in New York I had no idea what it meant. I can also say that president didn't mean much to me at that age. The world around me at that time was strange and frightening. What I knew was what I learned from my family in Brooklyn ,New York. That I considered to be my world. Queen Elizabeth was to me when she was crowned wearing a funny birthday party hat by a man wearing a bathrobe.
I feel honoured that you used my remastered audio in your video! I’m rather irked that the King was not referred to as ‘the High and Mighty Prince’ following precedence.
Note: There is also a proclamation of King Edward VII, albeit from a television series - I shall upload it soon on my channel.
WOW! Thank you for appreciating it! And thank you too for providing George V's proclamation! I thought it doesn't exists until I found yours!
I'll wait for Edward VII's! By the way, is it an actual proclamation or just a reenactment? And does it include "God Save the King"?
@@paolocabling Alas, just a re-enactment and a short section of the full proclamation - and it hasn’t got ‘God Save the King’. It comes from a British television series from the 1970s, which I’ll cut to include the important events of King Edward VII’s accession: the Accession Council, the Proclamation, the swearing in and the Coronation.
You mean "Edward the Seventh" series on ATV? I'm about to binge watching it as if I'm watching The Crown!
@@paolocabling Righty-ho! I’ve got a high definition transfer from the official DVD with bonus features on my channel, but it’s unlisted so you’ll have to click on my channel to see it! Here’s a link to the playlist with bonus features: ruclips.net/p/PLfHTB7ieJn3sqDfgJgCtb-wKOddQj2m9Y
At 5:45 I’m thinking “Wow they never had a Queen for a whole 50 years until this moment” almost ignoring the fact that we never until last year had a King for 70 years
As amazing as it is to listen to the proclamation of King George V 112 years ago, it amazes me still more to think that Queen Elizabeth II - who passed away barely 3 weeks ago - was born just 16 years later!
Anyone else notice the gentleman standing to the side of the announcer there for Edward VIII, George VI and Elizabeth II? He was there for 3 different monarchs!
That's Bernard Fitzalan-Howard, the 16th Duke of Norfolk who is the Earl Marshal, the master of royal ceremonies such as royal funerals and coronations. (I answered this to the same question asked by a channel here. Copied.)
@@paolocabling he would've been the guy phillip replaced as chairman on the coronation committee in the crown right
@@paolocabling meanwhile the 17th Duke never got to MC a coronation
That's not hard to do when one abdicates and another dies young.
Anyone 70 years or younger (anyone born post-1952) had never seen the proclamation of a British monarch before. 😮
I'm no Brit but I haven't seen one until that of King Charles. I only watch pre-Elizabethan proclamations on archived reels.
You'd probably have to be at least 78 (and still have good memory) to remember it.
@@sabbagels Anyone between 78-90 years old will probably still remember when George VI was monarch of Britain. For them it’s only the second time in their lifetime that they’ve had a king as head of state (first George VI and then his grandson Charles III).
@@stephenmurphy2212 Perhaps they would also remember the brief reign of King Edward VIII.
@@MarvinClarence If they remember Edward VIII they would probably be pushing 100 or well over the age of 100.
From no video camera during proclamation of George V to every hand holding a Camera
Technology has evolved
I like in the first 3 Proclamations, the video is black and white and choppy and the audio cluttered, and the Royal Guards carrying bolt action rifles.
And the next Proclamation has full HD Live streaming and Guards with 5.56 Modern Assault rifles.
Really shows how long a time Queen Elizabeth ruled for
Well done.
These are some historic moments from the empire to commonwealth
Actually this topic was in my queue
Thanks for posting :)
THANKS!
7:26 gave me chills! Proud to be a brit
Hard to believe that even Queen Elibazeth II’s proclamation and coronation only exists as grainy black and white footage! Yet film has come a long way and we can now see it in glorious colour and video quality!
There was an actual film shot of the coronation of Queen Elibazeth II - it exists somewhere - and it’s in colour - in theory, King Charles III’s coronation could be shot in full HD, and even 3-D - and you could even get a 360° all-round shot to view in those glasses - and it could be stored somewhere and kept for people who missed it - put on your Oculus Rifts and Google Cardboards - next thing you know, you’re there - regardless of where you really are!
Actually, there is a full BBC coverage of the 1953 coronation uploaded by Archive of Recorded Church Music on YT. Here's the link: ruclips.net/video/52NTjasbmgw/видео.html
There is short contemporary MovieTone film in genuine colour but with very crackly sound, showing highlights of the Coronation. This is on RUclips:
ruclips.net/video/JJEUtX2_GwI/видео.html
There also a lengthy contemporary documentary film with much better sound and consisting entirely of genuine colour footage entitled "A Queen is Crowned". available on RUclips. This shows the processions to and from the Abbey and the service (abridged but containing the main events). The narrator was Laurence Olivier. I find the commentary a bit flowery and over the top but the images and music are impressive:
ruclips.net/video/wKzlKwpm17U/видео.html
@@paolocabling This contains the famous close-up at 02:51:00 when the BBC disobeyed their prior instructions and zoomed into the Queen's head and shoulders at the start of verse 2 of the National Anthem, lingering there, as the procession out of the Abbey was starting. That did not happen in the cinema colour film footage.
Richard Dimbleby's hushed commentary was well-judged, fluent and flawless.
This monochrome TV version shows the entire service including all the music and all in the right order (unlike 'A Queen is Crowned').
I've watched "A Queen is Crowned" before but I prefer the BBC coverage more than the film. I really don't mind if it's monochromatic, the recorded live events matter more as if you're in the spur of the moment. :)
@@paolocabling My favourite moment which gives me goose pimples only occurs in the full TV coverage. It's at 01:51:14 and is just after the Enthronement when everyone in the queue has finished doing homage and just before the offertory hymn (the arrangement of "Old Hundredth", by Vaughan Williams).
Everyone is standing stock-still in their positions gathered around the throne in a sort of tableux made up of the enthroned queen, the bishops and peers in their robes and coronets. Then, out of the silence, there's a drum roll followed by a fanfare (by Sir Ernest Bullock) played antiphonally on trumpets (lots of them) and full organ, based on the Scottish metrical psalm tune "Montrose".
There's no other recording of this short but impressive piece.
After 1952 it’s like let’s go 70 years 214 days plus later into the future unbelievably great reign the great queen Elizabeth II had
5:11 - so if I remember right, didn't they do a 96-gun salute (for every year of Elizabeth's life). Interesting that in the case of George VI's ascent due to abdication they instead did 41 for the new king's age instead (Edward was a year older).
That I don't know but that was interesting to know!
Yes.
They did it the 96 -gun salute the day before
Wonderful collection Paolo! God save the King!
Thanks! God save the King!
Assuming nothing is amiss and the monarchy is still functioning then, which I have little doubt it will be, the next British monarchs shall be:
- King William V (Charles III is 73 currently so obviously his reign shall not be as long as his mother's for obvious reasons)
- King George VII (following a trend of monarchs logically starting to get a bit younger when becoming monarch, Prince George who is 9 now, could still have to wait 40-50 years to be King, but still probably be a bit younger than King William V logically would be if he took the throne in the next 15-25 years)
If Charles III lives to 100, it would mean William - now 40 years old - would be 67 or so (6 years younger than Charles III is now of course, at 73)
If Charles III matches the lifespan of his mother Queen Elizabeth II, at 96 years of age, then that would obviously be in 23 years in ~2045.
If Charles III matches the lifespan of the Queen Mother (Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon), at 101 (at time of passing in 2002), then of course William would inherit the throne at the age of 68; still 5 years younger than Charles III is now upon ascending to the throne. Logically, the newly crowned shall get younger, slowly.
Unless Charles III happens to live for 105-110 years or something, then it's pretty much guaranteed to be the case that William will be in his 60's (or younger)
Say if Charles III passes away in his mid-late 80's (as would still be considered a very good age globally), or early 90's, William would be about 50-60 years old. Prince George would be in his 20's or 30's by that point, and then potentially - assuming good health and bright days for all, we must hope - be direct heir to the throne as Crown-Prince for anywhere between 35-45+ years as a reasonable estimation (again, reasonably assuming everyone is doing well)
I know it might seem a bit macabre to look at in that way, and it must be approached with due respect and decorum, though for sure, nobody lives forever. Assuming lifespans which last longer than the national average in the UK, and then some due to their royal existence, I do not think it is unreasonable to suggest lifespans of 85+ for every single one of them barring the unforeseeable or the tragic (and touch wood that it does not) Assuming long and happy lives, then they should all be reaching 85-100 for the foreseeable future. Prince William seems healthy enough. I'd say King Charles III has two decades plus.
The only chance of there being another Queen after Elizabeth II in our lifetimes (I am 29) is if Prince George doesn't want to be King following his father, and steps aside for Princess Charlotte (Charlotte is now 3rd in line to the throne, behind her brother George in 2nd, and her father William, in 1st; her younger brother Prince Louis is 4th in line to the throne, as well) I know that others, being blunter, might speculate 'if George wasn't able to' in a more grim and macabre way, but I shall not go there. You get the point. Obviously it is far more likely that Prince George will simply inherit the throne after King William V.
By then, George VII could be anywhere between 55-65. Still slightly younger (most likely) than King William V theoretically may be in the future, when he takes the throne after King Charles III. Assuming all is well and there is no need of the 'spare' rather than the 'heir', then the chances are, we shall never in our lifetimes see a reigning Queen of England again. Assuming George VII reigns for a similarly long time as his father, then it could create a pattern of British monarchs generally coming to the throne in their 50's or 60's. In past centuries, historically, all manner of things ended reigns far sooner than they deserved.
For example, Queen Anne, came to the throne in 1702 at the age of 37, and passed away in 1714, aged 49, after just 12 years 145 days (split into 5 years and 53 days as Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland, and then 7 years, 92 days on the throne as Queen of Great Britain, after the 1707 Act of Union of Great Britain, the merger of England and Scotland; and in this time the faction of Great Britain controlled Ireland as well) Her reign was brief, but important. I suspect that had she been born in the 21st century, or late 20th century at least, her lifespan would have been much greater than 49 years of age.
English and British history has many monarchs whom did not reign for very long (in Medieval times, especially, of course; such was the difficulty of maintaining power in such trying times, with rival factions fighting literally and figuratively for power) The world of medicine, the state of healthcare, the standards of scientific knowledge, the technology of the time and the developments over the generations, varied wildly of course. Now, in the 21st century, we live in a much more advanced time as far as medical care, clinical proficiency and scientific knowledge goes, so lifespans should be longer in tandem.
well who knows maybe another pricess in the tower?
If George has a daughter as his first child, she would become Queen after him.
@@jamessergeant2136 I did quite specifically say, 'in our lifetimes'. I know George could have a direct female heir (assuming she is the first born, what with the British monarchy now having no preference of male heirs, in more recent times; hence why Princess Charlotte is ahead of Prince Louis in the line of succession)
I am aware. What I was saying, was that it will logically take a long enough time for it to be considerably unlikely for a Queen to be crowned in the next hundred years, assuming (reasonably and without being too rudely morbid about it) that the heirs will all have long and happy lives. Charles III could rule into his 90's and that is two decades away. Two decades, going into the 2040's.
Then King William V will be in his 60's and potentially reign for another 30-40 years or so. Again, the number you should be thinking of is the combined figure of the reigns of multiple generations. That is the point here. Of course their reigns could be much shorter than a natural maximal figure, but it is reasonable without evidence to the contrary that they will all reach a great age in this modern world. Any number of things could change that but it's grim to even speculate about it and it is moot anyway.
King William V could have a terrible illness in his 70's or something from some future sickness we don't know even know about/might not exist yet. We cannot predict all things. Of course there is an undercurrent of risk in speculating who will live 'xyz', 'one-two-three', number of years. Of course nobody can really be sure. That's life. Assuming nothing terrible happens, then it's fair to guess that William would reign for nearly half a century (or just over, if he does extremely well) Yet more likely than passing in his 100's he'll pass in his 90's like with many elderly people these days. Obviously it's rarer to surpass 100. Even Queen Elizabeth II could not, at 96 and 70 years as Queen.
The point is that if you think about it, assuming as I say, longevously lived and happy lives, then it will simply be beyond our lifetimes when the next Queen will rule (again, other than if Princess Charlotte came to the throne one day for whatever unforeseen reason; highly, highly unlikely)
Again, most likely it will be King Charles III then King William V then King George VII.
So at least:
- 20 or so years (King Charles III) From 2022. Charles III in 2022 is 73.
- 40-50 or so years (King William V) From the mid-2040's. Prince William is 40 in 2022.
- another 40-50 years (King George VII) From the mid-2080's/2090's. Prince George of Wales is currently 9 in 2022. Again, assuming full lives, only diminished towards the end by natural ageing, then King George VII would likely be in his 60's by this time, much as his father was (in the theoretical mid-2040's) when he had his own ascent to the throne.
To reiterate, I'm fully-aware that those lifespans are deliberately optimistic and purposefully ignore anything to the contrary, like terrible misfortunes or calamities. But there you go. Natural ageing could mean some of those reigns are 10-20 years shorter than I stated. Not everyone ages the same way and some people just happen to live longer. I dare say Prince William probably has lived slightly healthier than King Charles III did in his own youth, thus far. I dare say George VII will be the most healthy living of all princes in history, highly well-looked after by his mother and father even by royal standards.
It really depends on how long King Charles III and then King William V reign. Between them, they could reign for another 60-70 years after one another. Assuming 60 years, I'd be 89, or 99 if it's 70 years. I know for a fact, then, that I would almost certainly never see the end of the reign of King George VII, whom might reign 30-40 more years after William. And if his future children happen to be all male or at least a male is born first, then again, there could be no Queen for 150 years. Maybe 200. Maybe 250. It really just depends on who is born after that in the future generations to follow, of course.
Even if Charles III only reigns 10 years and William only reigns 30 (in really ridiculously lowball estimates which seem very unconvincing to me) then that itself is 40 years (still long enough for me to be about 69 by the time a theoretically 49 year old King George VII was crowned. More than likely, he'd reign anywhere between 30-40 (maybe even over 50) in that scenario, even in a 'lowball, negative estimates' scenario where the lower figures are used instead.
Again, I don't really believe Charles III will only reign 10 years. I'm just showing the difference to illustrate the point.
He'll at least reign 20 years in my opinion. Could be wrong but time will tell, as it always does.
If William's reign after him is much shorter than we might imagine, then yes, this gives more time for George VII to rule. But the fact that three Kings in a row are lined up to be on the British throne, shows the reality that it's very unlikely for any adult aged people around now to see that time through. It's basically 70 years from now at the earliest/most negative projections, and much more likely (assuming long reigns for all, fairly enough) 90-100 years from now.
Maybe people around Prince George's age (9) will logically see those times. But I am two decades older than that and I will inevitably not see out my time as far as that. It is the way of things.
Mortality, eh...
Nothing and nobody lasts forever.
I would like to make it to the 22nd century just to giggle at the futuristic folks in the 2100's, to say, 'my life spanned three different centuries as a child of the 1990's', but the odds of that, even assuming I improved my health and well-being to a great degree as I go forward, are pretty low indeed. I'd have to be over 110 or something. Even if I was 100, I'd die in the 2090's.
I wish I could get to the 2100's though just to say I did (historically, there were Victorians whom were born in the late 1890's whom managed to span 3 centuries by making it past the new millennium marker of the year 2000; technically, these luckier people spanned two millennia, as well) It won't be until the 2900's that someone can span two millennia again (by then, the 3rd and 4th millennia) and it is reasonably doubtful that any/all that many spanned the 1st to 2nd millennia back in the 900's AD (with life expectancies being drastically shorter back then; though I imagine a few old timers managed to reach over 100 even back then)
Of course, futuristic genetic engineering and other technology could extend lifespans by potentially decades/centuries/even millennia. We cannot now be sure enough to know. Organ replacement, deoxygenation of cells, cybernetics, biological enhancements, de-ageing processes. Who knows what might be possible (without going all 'Dr Lazarus' and things just going wrong) That would really change humanity forever, though maybe only the super-rich could ever have it (which itself would create a moral nightmare which would be hard to justify and divide society more than it already is; morally, I'd argue such technology, if ever made, would have to be for all, not just for the few; all or none at all; and knowing how humanity is, well, good luck with that either way)
Point being, we'd be very very very unlikely to see a Queen of England again in our lifetimes. We shall _never_ see Queen Elizabeth II's like again. She was a historical fluke so rare she even surpassed the legacy of Queen Victoria herself (and lived and reigned longer than her, in spite of Victoria being even younger than she was when ascending to the throne; in fairness, though, Victoria eponymously lived in Victorian times, with lower healthcare standards and greater pollution etc so it's still very impressive how long Victoria reigned in her literal own era) I would reason that someone like Queen Elizabeth II only comes around once every 300-500 years.
There will _never_ be one quite like her again. Never. Not this side of the year 3000, most likely, if ever (and as many a Republican or Socialist might remind us rudely, perhaps there will _be no monarchy_ by then?) Some Commies now actually believe the British monarchy is 'finished' but I think that is just wishful thinking for sour and rebellious fifth columnists.
Queen Elizabeth III would be fascinating, though.
"nobody lives forever". Im not sure about that. No simples person lives forever. There a few relacts of imortals, even thoug we dont know about then. Saint German, for example. Its not possible to say they're as false.
@@charlesswitzer8378 In my view, the monarchy is not sacrosanct. According to it's own internal theological grounding, then yes, it is, according to itself. I do not see the Constitutional Monarchy as sacrosanct or sacred. Others are entitled to believe it is but I do not go so far. I understand that in a sense, all British Monarchs are 'obligate Protestants' in that they cannot be Catholic to sit the throne of Great Britain, by it's own internal ruling since the 17th century. They don't really have much of a say in it by definition, if they want the throne.
Of course, they can keep up appearances and not truly 'defend the faith', but nobody could ever say that was what Queen Elizabeth II was about. She was devoutly Christian and made no qualms about it and was certainly resolute in her public speeches about her faith, especially the Christmas speeches. She wore her faith openly and did not hide it away in spite of the decline in the popularity of Christianity across her reign, in the United Kingdom. While it is still well-represented, nobody could deny it has diminished in status, in the face of the 'social revolution' (more like anarchism and materialistic excess) since especially the 1960's.
I respect Queen Elizabeth II for many things, and one of them was her unyielding faith, even knowing that it didn't 'play well' with an increasingly faithless flock. But there you go. I myself do not place much stock in how 'sacrosanct' something is. Naturally, there cannot be theistic monarchy without religion. Yet I am inclined to not care so much about it anymore, in a neutral way. For instance, I would defend vociferously the right of British Christians, whether Anglican or otherwise, to continue to believe what they believe and practice what they like. I was raised Roman Catholic.
I respect the values of Christianity and Christian teaching. But not for myself, in all things. I believe mostly in their historical and socio-cultural value to the British people, and yet nuance and temper that with the understanding that Christianity was brought here by invaders and that many, many sectarian conflicts have raged, costing the lives of millions all told, within our shores. Without it's legacy, the galvanising, outwardly pioneering and free enterprising, god-fearing Britons of the Victorian Era, would not have been as they were. I do not ignore the past. It isn't quite sufficient, when describing my views on the place of Christianity, for me to say that I merely tolerate it.
I place it on a higher pedestal in terms of the cultural and historical significance of culture. We are a 'multicultural society' (as the anti-monarchists will also shout as they fall over themselves to install a Republic; and as those fifth columnists with no interest in _anything_ British still decide to live here at our collective expense, and do not care for our customs and traditions, only the benefits they can reap) Simply because I value the historical place of Christianity in British history, some progressive would probably say it is favouritism.
I consider myself Agnostic for a start, in the original and simplistic meaning of the word coined by naturalist Thomas Henry Huxley. I proudly sit on that fence because I would not deign to know otherwise. I accept the cognitive limitations of mankind and do not pretend to know more than anyone else about the great mysteries of why we are here. I have my ideas and theories, natural philosophies and thoughts. But I am not too proud to admit there is no shame in not knowing such things. Never been an atheist, never will be.
Agnosticism is fine by me. I have plenty of reasons in my own life and observations, not to believe in a God. But I do not say there is not one or more. It is not for me to stay. And I make my peace with that. I tolerate theism in general more than organised religion, but it's all relative. I still tolerate religion. However, even just for _acknowledging_ how Christianity is factually, categorically and magnanimously more important to British history than any other religion, that in itself would be deemed, 'unfair' and 'wrongminded' in multi-culti 21st century Britain.
Britain has culturally, fallen very far in some ways, while arising in others. I see it as good that Britain is tolerant of many faiths and viewpoints, as a democratic and advanced realm. Yet I do not think we should so lightly allow Christianity to fade away. I say that as a neutral, and a British patriot. My patriotism does not require religiosity or particular piety. It is well-founded in other ways, such as the pride in Britain's place in science, technology and the very fabric of the history itself.
The monarchy is a part of our glorious history and our present reality. I believe Constitutional Monarchy should remain, as a wise alternative to many options opted for on the continental mainland of Europe. Intemperate, reactionary and unstable paths, trodden by the idealistic and the tyrannical, leading from one bad situation to another. The British did not have an easy path themselves but due to our maritime power and liberal (as in English Classic Liberal) disposition, and cultural character, so to speak the English Pragmatism of the Age of Enlightenment and beyond, spread out globally to eventually produce the Anglosphere.
Of course, the British monarchy was integral to all of that story, as much as British Parliament ever was in tandem. The dichotomy between Crown and Commons, most of all, making for a better Britain. For this reason, and many others, I respect the institution, and cannot see a reasonable alternative in the short-term. Many would clamour for abolition of the monarchy. I see that as a _disastrous_ path to take, even as a relative neutral on the monarchy. I see it as too valuable to British society, too prominent and intertwined with the style of government, to be so lightly and carelessly cast aside. And yet, for all that, many have worried about the future of the British monarchy in Charles III's hands. I think it'll be fine.
People like the squawk and worry about things that are mostly far too complicated to make reductive claims over. There is a strong support network around Charles III and he won't just squander everything for climate agendas and activism. However, I do think he is being manipulated by pressure groups into well-meaning but biased perspectives. In terms of his views on conservationism I wholly agree with his charity work around that as Prince. But it should not always be the case that some other activists get to steer the ship from the stern, so to speak (it would be the tail wagging the dog)
The point here, is that I understand why yourself and others are concerned about Charles III. I too fear that he will water things down to the point where the monarchy is scaled back enough to become irrelevant. I think that would be a bad thing, for Britain. Even though I do not agree with the theocratic principles inherent in the monarchy, and some of the more silly traditions and quirks, I do ultimately want it to be preserved for what it is; a symbol of British cultural iconography, heritage and achievement. I do not think the great unwashed anti-Monarchists could actually replace it with anything approaching civilised or anywhere near as powerful.
Although it is a morally vapid argument, devoid of heart and feeling, the financial argument is clear; the monarchy more than pays for itself (I tire of seeing random prigs crying about 'the cost to the tax payer' etc etc for ceremonial events; the lack of insight and lateral, holistic thinking on this matter is, atrocious; obviously they are bringing in billions through tourism alone and have justified themselves financially many, many times over. That is not the concern. The concern is how every gobsh!te with a social media profile can just pretend as though this isn't true. There is a complete cognitive dissonance.
I've argued with people who literally just deny it's truth, and deny it is a thing, when clearly a lot of tourism money generated in the UK is squarely due to the intrigue in the Royal Family. Not all of it is, yet even just based on the amount of visitors to the palaces and the other royal buildings, it is quite obvious massive quantities are being generated by them. They are financially justifiable. They've spent nearly 200 years getting their public image right (with many detractors but plenty of success nonetheless) Yet on a purely monetary basis, they are of course, a net positive to Britain. It's not even close. They cost each taxpayer a few pennies but bring in literal billions and give Britain a more respected soft-power aura. Geopolitically and symbolically, it makes absolute sense to keep them around.
To hear Emperor of India, that too just two monarchs before... its indescribable
Perfect to heard these voices from recent time ❤ thank for sharing 😮
Amazing video the audio is so rare amazing job at finding these old and good audios
God Save The King!👑🤴👑
Also Not Really Considering Myself A Monarchist, But Huge Respect For The Institution.
God save the Queen!
@@ryderli1053 she died bro
All the way jumping from the classic black and white newsreel of 1952 to HD broadcast of 2022, what a change.
It took 7 decades for that!
God save our gracious king long live our noble king God save the King SEND HIM VICTORIOUS HAPPY AND GLOURIOUS LONG TO REIGN OVER US GOD SAVE THE KING!
Long Live The King.
God Save The King.
From USA.
🇬🇧🇺🇸
Seeing the Proclamation of British Monarch in Colour, HD and Clear Audio is truly remarkable and a gem of history.
¡Viva el Rey!
VIVA!
As well as iPhones held by viewers on scene.
@@myslink hahaha
Viva el rey pero no el de España.
@@SenyorCapitàCollons por?
2:22 Probably the worst moment to get a voice crack lol
His voice cracked throughout his speech.
If you listen to the full recording you’ll catch more of this - for example, ‘our only awful and right- liegeful- liege- rightful liege Lord Edward the Egg-’
Edward the Egg. HAHAHA!!
@@paolocabling And he really became like an egg, easily broken by a widow
God Save The King. Long Live The King.
2:24 the voice crack got me laughing💀
Edward the EGG! (BOOM!)
Three cheers for His Majesty King Charles the III.
Hip hip hooray!
Hip hip hooray!
Hip hip hooray!
Insert schlatt here
Thanks.
It's Charles III or Charles the third. Not Charles the III.
Hip hip Hurray
Hip hip Hurray
Hip hip Hurray
✝️❤👑🇬🇧🇦🇺🇨🇦🇳🇿
GOD SAVE THE KING!!!
The herald for Edward VIII choked HARD
An omen perhaps?
Lol
King George V
King Edward VIII
King George VI
Queen Elizabeth II
King Charles III
@Laurence O'Connor my granny was born during George V's reign, still going strong!
I wonder how many people brought that phonograph recording and how many would have seen the newsreel in cinemas of the next three proclamations. My late parents would have seen those newsreels, having been children then, having been part of the same generation as the late Queen Elizabeth the second.
So historic! What a wonderful thing to witness the proclamation of all these great monarchs. As an American, I still appreciate the culture and lasting traditions of the UK.
God Save The King!
Proud of our traditions . Long live the KING!
Magnificent!
I expected the footage from 1952 to be better quality than the footage from 1936. I was wrong.
This is the best that I could find including the playing of the anthem.
@@paolocabling I don't fault you. Archival footage is hard to find.
04:00 that was the start of the reign of one of if not the greatest monarchs of the United Kingdom.
I know a lot of people mention how wild it is to be listening to something on a cell phone or a computer but just think for a moment we're listening to a recording of something that for most of us happened thousands of miles away from where we are now, during a time nearly a century before most of us were born as of 2023 this was 113 years ago.
And yet here I am holding a battery powered wireless device in my hand sitting in my hot tub
Haha at Edward VIII’s proclamation the guy talking’s voice cracked so much
And those damned guns cutting him off…😂
King Edward VII, King George V, King Edward VIII, King George VI and King Charles III
God Save our gracious King
Long live our noble king
God save the king
Send him victouris
Happy and glourious
Long to reign over us
God save the king
Queen Elizabeth II
God save our gracious queen
Long live our noble queen
God save the queen
Send her victouris
Happy and glourious
Long to reign over us
God save the queen
Little did George V and George VI know what was lurking around the corner.
Oh they know it well.
The contrast of 6:46 to 6:48 😱
For Queen Elizabeth II’s proclamation, God save the King is played for the first six bars to commemorate the King’s devotion during the Second Wold War, then God save the Queen after. And for now King Charles III, the entirety was God save the Queen to commemorate the service of Her late Majesty the Queen, a service unlike previous monarchs.
Technology has come a long way.
From no film to hd quality vid.
Who is that guy off to the side in all 3 black-and-white proclamations? I was going to comment on how the same guy read out Edward VIII and George VI but now I'm obsessed with the dude standing next to him who was still around doing the same job (silently doffing his hat)
That's Bernard Fitzalan-Howard, the 16th Duke of Norfolk who is the Earl Marshal, the master of royal ceremonies such as royal funerals and coronations.
Did the same lord chamberlain announce Edward VIII and George VI's accession?
Yes.
His name was Sir Gerald Wollaston.
It's kind of interesting how they stepped up the fanciness of it when George VI was proclaimed
For the first time in my entire life even though I'm not a UK person, I've now seen the proclamation monarch in my generation
My mum was born under the latter years of the reign of H. M. George V & my Papa was born while H. M. Edward VIII was King. I only have known, H. M. Queen Elizabeth II & my heart is still broken. 💔😢 My parent's hearts as well are broken. 💔 😢
We like H. M. King Charles III!! God Save The King!! ✝️ 🇬🇧 👏
I noticed the accents have also evolved.
Why there are no officers with maces in the proclamation of Charles III?
I wonder why they took out the “high and mighty” from the King’s proclamation
I am also irked by that! Also irking me is the removal of ‘gentlemen of quality’. If they wanted to be more ‘inclusive’, they could have changed it to ‘ladies and gentlemen of quality’ or ‘personages of quality’ instead of ‘and others’.
Technology Has Evolved From No Camera Just Audio To Every Hand Holding A Camera!
RIP Queen Elizabeth ii
1926 - 2022
At The Age Of 96 Years Old.
Anyone know why the Garter King of Arms (or whichever official read out the proclamation) for George VI wore a different type of hat from all the others in the other proclamations?
Seems a bit unlikely but was it anything to do with the time of day as it was dusk for George VI?
I don't know about the headgear that he wore. Sorry cannot answer that.
But you're right. That's the Garter King of Arms!
Tradition, I suppose. Garter King of Arms is the highest-ranking herald.
@@gidzmobug2323 Sorry: I expressed myself ambiguously!
I wasn't comparing the Garter King of Arms with the other heralds and pursuivants at the same (George VI) proclamation.
I was comparing the headdress of the Garter King of Arms at the George VI proclamation with what the Garter King of Arms wore for Edward VIII's (earlier in the year) and Elizabeth II's proclamations - a different type of hat for George VI so perhaps not following tradition?
Is there a video of George V’s coronation
More of a film. There's a full film of that on RUclips. Just search it. A rendition of "God Save the King" is also there.
Why at 4.36 in King George VI proclamation the announcer doesnt mention Defender of the Faith and Emperor of India? As India was still ruled by Britain at that time in 1936.
George V, King and Emperor of India dated 1926 the year Princess Elizabeth was borned of this Straits Settlement 'squarish' 1 cent coin.
Why are you mentioning this coin?
Historical values of the British Colony in Malaya and Singapore with The East India Company. The Straits Settlements comprised of Penang, Malacca & Singapore. Gone were the days when a big 'ice-ball' costs only 5 cents. Well, now 75 years i begun to think of the "good old days'' with the winking of an eye passed me by. Once in a lifetime!
Born not borned
The great tradition
God bless the UK 🇫🇮🇬🇧🇫🇮🇬🇧
This is my first ever viewed proclamation..
It's quite strange that @3:56 the title of King isn't complete.
Contemporary standards?
@@paolocabling the title of george VI doesn't mention *Emperor of India* while all the previous proclamations did which is Quite strange .
@@Shkk That's because at the old times, some footage needed to be cut and as the mystery of why didn't mentioned *emperor of India*, We can't have evidence.
But i think that George VI is one of the most bravest British monarchs. GOD SAVE THE KING- EMPEROR OF INDIA
5:16 6. George's photo.
the queens one sounds like a dalek
It's the glitch and quality of either the recording or of the microphone.
Look at the difference in video and audio quality
The audio in '52 was worse than in '36.
That's the best source I could find.
GOD SAVE THE KING
We're literally witnessing a history
3:58 This guy sounds better on his second time😂
2:24 the guy had a voice crack
the guy at the speaker's left (2:30) is the same on the left (4:25), and 16 years later, again but older, on the right (5:41)
CORRECTION: The speaker in 2:30 and 4:25 is not the same as the one in 5:41. And their role was Garter King of Arms.
@@paolocabling is that prince Albert Frederick Arthur George (Future George VI) in the left in 4:25?
2:23bro had a voice crack
Anyone knows where I can find the song from 0-.18 at ?
The title of this fanfare is simply "Fanfare Royale". It exists on RUclips.
Thank you so much Paola
7 names? Wow
I was 5 and a half when Elizabeth was proclaimed queen. Living in New York I had no idea what it meant. I can also say that president didn't mean much to me at that age. The world around me at that time was strange and frightening. What I knew was what I learned from my family in Brooklyn ,New York. That I considered to be my world. Queen Elizabeth was to me when she was crowned wearing a funny birthday party hat by a man wearing a bathrobe.
Ohh
So you are old?
Now that HM Queen Elizabeth II died it's so weird to hear God save the Queen!!!
I wonder why it isn't said "High & Mighty Prince Charles Philip Arthur George"
Fanfare name?
No idea but I have to find it po. (edited)
Here it is! It's "Fanfare Royale". ruclips.net/video/TGaMqreF-SY/видео.html
They started the fanfare a few seconds too early in 2022 - did not allow time for the crowd to respond ‘God save the King.’
Long live the king.🎉
My fiancé's grandmother has seen 5 monarchs xx
George the fifths anthem sounded like it was taken in a pub
It's the recording. You're talking about the cheers, eh?
king majesty long live
The 1910 one was an in-studio reenactment
Any proof?
GOD SAVE THE KING/QUEEN
Is that 1910 proclamation real or just a reenactment for the gramophone? It doesn't sound very convincing to me.
It's real.
It's a reenactment.
God save the king
We really do this kind of this kind of thing well don’t we
anyone know what the fanfare is called at the start?
It's "Fanfare Royale".
History of legend
God save the queen 👸
God save the king in color.
People: hearing this "God save the queen/king Me: Hearing this "Heil dir im siegerkranz" Note: Im joking don't Take this seriously.
Why? Are you German?
King George V sound really American accent
You forgot Edward VII
None of it exists on RUclips. It's hard to find.
I like the fluffy hat
House of Windsor proclamation
🙏❤️❤️❤️🙏
Paolo cabling i want take clip in this video to my channel to content please i want
For what purpose?
For my content
I want upload now
@@paolocabling to my content please
Tidak.
The queen is dead long live the king 🤴
ghost singing a national anthem
Which part?
Mrrige loved
Lol King George Jumpscare
What do you mean?
@@paolocabling when I saw the photo of King George it made me jump lol
Which George? The V?
@@paolocabling no VI
This is not jumpscare. This is 6 George Photo.
King charles did not died
That is because this is video is about the proclamation of a new monarch. This is not about monarchs who died.
I've rather say "God save the queen*.
Why's that?
I remembered every monarch in British history.
OK but why you want to say "God Save the Queen" rather than "...King"?
Sorry but the original one was "God save great George our king".
I think you don't understand my point.