As Britain prepares to celebrate the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, a 260-year-old ostentatiously costly and luxurious gilded carriage is hitting the streets again for the first time in about twenty years. The Gold State Coach, which first transported a young Queen Elizabeth II from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey on her coronation day in 1953, will lead a spectacular procession on the streets of London as part of the Platinum Jubilee pageant on Sunday.
Adorned with ornate sculptures of cherubs and tritons, as a show of national unity and strength, and featuring panel paintings, the eye-catching coach is a moving work of art. Inside, it’s equally detailed and upholstered with velvet and satin.
But the Queen herself will not be on board during the pageant, according to the British monarchy’s website as Elizabeth II wasn’t entirely impressed when she road the coach during her coronation, recalling it was “not very comfortable,” and that it was “not meant for travelling in at all,” in a 2018 BBC documentary. Since then, the Queen has only appeared in it twice — for her Silver Jubilee in 1977 and the Golden Jubilee of 2002. The coach is normally on public display at the Royal Mews. However, archival footage of her waving from the carriage on the day she was crowned will be projected onto its windows.
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The Gold State Coach was built for about two years and completed in 1762, it is the third-oldest surviving coach in the United Kingdom. Four restorations over the centuries have left at least seven layers of gilding and retouching on its body. It was designed by Sir William Chambers, the architectural adviser to King George III, and built by coachmaker Samuel Butler, the vehicle is around 23 feet in length,12 tall and made of gilded wood. Weighing over four tons, it is only ever drawn by eight horses at a walking pace.
Every artistic detail of the coach pays tribute to the history of Britain. A massive triton figure is sculpted onto each wheel as a show of imperial power, according to The Royal Collection Trust. Its body is adorned with palm trees and lion heads alongside other motifs celebrating British naval victories. And one of its front panels features the figure of the helmeted warrior Britannia.
“Everywhere you look, in the golden sculptures and painted panels, in the uniforms of the postillions, grooms, footmen, attendants and mounted guards, there is rich tradition and history,” Adrian Evans, the Jubilee’s pageant master, is quoted as saying of the coach’s design on the Royal Family’s website.
The famous carriage made its first grand outing for the State Opening of Parliament in 1762 under George III and then was used at coronations and other major royal ceremonies until Prince Albert’s death in 1861. King Edward VII revived its use at his coronation in 1902.
The Platinum Jubilee pageant will mark the finale of the four-day weekend honouring Britain’s longest-reigning monarch. The celebration is bringing with it a wealth of street parties, special exhibitions and showstopping parades, with more than 10,000 performers set to take part.
“It will be a unique spectacle,” Evans said of the coach’s role in the pageant, adding that it “will set the tone for the very many spectacular sights to come.”
We definitely look forward to seeing this amazing coach who is older than every living person in the world today.
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