King Charles III to speak today – The formal coronation will take place on Saturday

The period of Royal mourning will last up to seven days after Queen Elizabeth’s funeral

Tomorrow Saturday the new king of the UK will be officially declared monarch of the country by the Accession Council so he will be officially called Charles III, while his wife Camilla Parker Bowles will bear the title of “Queen Consort”.

The Accession Council is made up of members of the Privy Council – a group of senior MPs, past and present, and peers – as well as some senior civil servants, Commonwealth high commissioners, and the Lord Mayor of London.

The period of Royal mourning will last up to seven days after Queen Elizabeth’s funeral, it has been announced. The coronation ceremony for King Charles will take place at St James’s Palace in London.

More than 700 people are entitled in theory to attend, but given the short notice, the actual number is likely to be far fewer. At the last Accession Council in 1952, about 200 attended.

At the meeting, the death of Queen Elizabeth will be announced by the Lord President of the Privy Council (currently Penny Mordaunt MP), and a proclamation will be read aloud.

The wording of the proclamation can change, but it has traditionally been a series of prayers and pledges, commending the previous monarch and pledging support for the new one.

This proclamation is then signed by a number of senior figures including the prime minister, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Lord Chancellor.

As with all these ceremonies, there will be attention paid to what might have been altered, added or updated, as a sign of a new era.

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