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Charles III’s challenge: Keep Britain’s monarchy relevant

Last weekend’s coronation of King Charles III was an affair steeped in history. But it carried a very contemporary political message, not just for Britain but also for other democracies, like the United States, strained by increasingly angry political, economic, and social divisions.

The coronation was a reminder of the importance of institutions that are able to stand above that fray, standing instead for a shared understanding of history that provides ballast and stability, to offer a focal point not for what is pulling people apart, but for what they have in common.

Why We Wrote This

The apparently anachronistic pomp and pageantry of King Charles III’s coronation carried a contemporary message: the importance of an institution that can stand above the political fray.

But it is in defining the nature of the monarch’s political role – embodying an overarching unity of purpose, especially at a time of partisanship and waning trust in government institutions – that Charles may find his greatest difficulty.

As heir to the throne, he was never shy of voicing his opinions. But to continue to do so would risk tension with Britain’s elected leaders.

It could also court disaster. The king’s new crown has raised the stakes considerably, demanding that Charles III stand above the rancor and division of day-to-day politics. For if he were to allow the monarchy to become just another political institution, its glitter would be reduced to glitz.

Britain’s Royal Collection catalog calls them, simply, “The Spurs.”

Yet nothing about last weekend’s coronation of King Charles III could be described as simple.

These particular spurs – gold, with velvet-cloaked leather – were the first of the regalia presented to the king just before he was crowned under the majestic medieval roof of Westminster Abbey. And like the crown itself, they dated from the coronation of the last English king to be named Charles: Charles II, over three-and-a-half centuries ago, in 1661.

Why We Wrote This

The apparently anachronistic pomp and pageantry of King Charles III’s coronation carried a contemporary message: the importance of an institution that can stand above the political fray.

They formed a small, yet indispensable part of a meticulously choreographed celebration embracing its roots in England’s history and established church, and bookmarked by public spectacle complete with gilded carriages and serried ranks of lock-stepped soldiery.

But the coronation, and the thousands of community events organized around it nationwide, also carried a very contemporary political message, not just for Britain but also for other democracies, like the United States, strained by increasingly angry political, economic, and social divisions.

Vadim Ghirda/AP

Britain’s King Charles III and Queen Camilla travel back to Buckingham Palace after his coronation ceremony in London, May 6, 2023.

It was a reminder of the importance of institutions that are able to stand above that fray, standing instead for a shared understanding of history that provides ballast and stability, to offer a focal point not for what is pulling people apart, but for what they have in common.

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