Tag: Edinburgh

  • Queen Elizabeth’s coffin to be flown to London

    Queen Elizabeth’s coffin to be flown to London

    Queen Elizabeth’s coffin will be flown to London at the end of 24 hours of lying at rest in Edinburgh’s historic cathedral, where her son King Charles and his three siblings held a silent vigil.

    Charles was joined by his sister Anne and brothers Andrew and Edward for the 10-minute vigil on Monday at St Giles’ Cathedral, where they stood, heads bowed, at the four sides of the coffin while members of the public filed past to pay their respects.

    While a bagpipe lament had been the only sound as kilted soldiers bore the casket earlier in the day, the four royals left the vigil in darkness to the sound of applause from mourners lining the street.

    Frances Thain, 63, said she had been surprised to see the queen’s four children as she entered the cathedral.

    “I was just overwhelmed because there were so much to take in,” she said.

    People queued overnight to pay their respects, with some arriving with sleeping children and many wearing winter jackets, scarves and woollen hats to keep out the cold.

    “We were desperate to be here to show our respects.” said Will Brehme, an engineer from Edinburgh, who arrived in the early hours of the morning with his partner and 20-month-old daughter sleeping in a baby carrier.

    “It is a moment that will live with us forever. When you think that she worked all of her life for us it is the least we could do.”

    Elizabeth died on Thursday in her holiday home at Balmoral Castle, in the Scottish Highlands, at the age of 96 after a 70-year reign, plunging the nation into mourning. Her funeral will be held on Sept. 19.

    Charles, 73, who automatically became king of the United Kingdom and 14 other realms including Australia, Canada and Jamaica, is travelling to the four parts of the United Kingdom before the funeral, and will visit Northern Ireland on Tuesday.

    In Belfast, he will meet senior politicians and faith leaders and attend a service at the city’s St Anne’s Cathedral before returning to London.

    Tens of thousands of mourners have turned out in Scotland, with deep crowds gathering from the early hours to observe the processions along the historic Royal Mile. In London, huge numbers of people have left flowers and messages in the grounds of royal parks.

    The queen’s coffin will leave Scotland for the first time since her death when it is flown to London in the early evening and then driven to Buckingham Palace.

    On Wednesday, it will be taken on a gun carriage as part of a grand military procession to Westminster Hall where a period of lying in state will begin until Sept. 19.

    Members of the public will be allowed to process past the coffin, which will be covered by the Royal Standard flag with the sovereign’s Orb and Sceptre placed on top, for 24 hours a day until the morning of the funeral.

    The death of Britain’s longest-reigning monarch has drawn tears and warm tributes, not just from the queen’s own close family and across Britain, but also from around the globe – a reflection of her presence on the world stage for seven decades.

  • In solemn procession, Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin taken through Edinburgh

    In solemn procession, Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin taken through Edinburgh

    The coffin of the late Queen Elizabeth was taken along the Royal Mile in the Scottish capital Edinburgh on Monday in a solemn procession watched by thousands of people lining the street to pay their respects to Britain’s longest reigning monarch.

    The skirl of bagpipes was the only sound as kilted soldiers from the Royal Regiment of Scotland bore the coffin from the Palace of Holyrood House and placed it in the hearse.

    King Charles and his siblings – Anne, Andrew and Edward – then walked behind the hearse up the historic street.

    The coffin will lie in St Giles’ Cathedral for an overnight vigil before being flown to London on Tuesday. A gun salute crashed out from a battery on Edinburgh Castle as the hearse began its journey. Then there was just silence.

    Elizabeth died on Thursday morning in her holiday home at Balmoral, in the Scottish Highlands, at the age of 96 after a 70-year reign, plunging the nation into mourning.

    Charles became king on her death and was formally proclaimed as monarch on Saturday.

    Tina Richardson, 63, a retiree from Dunbar, was among those standing on the centuries-old Royal Mile beside the Cathedral. She said her middle name was Elizabeth after the late queen.

    “She’s like a member of my own family. There’ll never be anyone like her,” she told Reuters. She was such a beautiful lady who gave us all so much. She dedicated her whole life to the country.

    “In good times and bad she was there, especially during COVID. She united everybody,” Richardson added.