KING Charles III last night became the oldest person in British history to be named monarch. The 73-year-old former Prince of Wales was three when he became heir to the throne. King Charles III last night became the oldest person in British history to be named monarch Proud mother, the Queen, with a young Charles PAThe Queen and Charlesā investiture as heir in 1969[/caption] His 70-year career spent in his motherās shadow also made him the oldest heir in-waiting. Last night Prime Minister Liz Truss revealed the Kingāās new title ā or āregnalā name ā minutes before Clarence House officially confirmed it. There had been speculation that Charles ā born Charles Philip Arthur George ā might shun his given name. Some royal watchers said he might adopt the title of King George VII, in tribute to his grandfather, George VI. READ MORE ON THE QUEEN’S DEATH FAREWELL MA’AM Latest tributes as Queen Elizabeth II passes peacefully at Balmoral aged 96 SAYING GOODBYE What happens to the Queen now she’s died and where can mourners pay respects Others suggested he might avoid the inevitable link to Charles I, who was beheaded in 1649 after the English Civil War. But as the Queen yesterday passed away, Charles seamlessly succeeded her as the new King ā mere months after he stood in for her at the State Opening of Parliament. Little more than an hour later, his regnal name was formally confirmed. Today King Charles IIIās reign will begin, with a nation deep in mourning for his motherās golden era. Most read in The Sun CLASS ACTION Will schools close today? Major update as nation mourns the Queen HARRY’S PAIN Harry holds his head as he travels to Balmoral after learning of Queen’s death END OF AN ERA Will there be a bank holiday on the day of the Queen’s funeral? GOODNIGHT MAāAM Queen dies aged 96 after 70 years of service leaving the UK in mourning BY HER SIDE King Charles & Prince William rush to Balmoral as Queen dies aged 96 HELPING HAND Hope for millions on fixed energy deals as households may get bill DISCOUNT Experts say he must quickly learn to balance his new rule against the wave of sadness prompted by his motherās death. Royal historian Hugo Vickers said: āDespite all the pomp and ceremony, and the fact that Charles is now King, we have to remember that this is a family who have lost a beloved mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. āI think we can all relate to that sadness. āCharles brings with him an awful lot of experience and heāll be a very sensible King. āBut I think heāll be extremely upset at the loss of his mother.ā AFPCharles stands in for The Queen at the opening of Parliament[/caption] AFPWaving farewell, the final photo together with Charles in June[/caption] Ā At the age of 73, Charles beats the previous record-holder William IV, who was 64 years, ten months and five days when he became King in 1830. And, although he automatically became King on the death of his mother, he will not be crowned until his coronation. āBest-prepared heirā The date of that has to be fixed, but Elizabeth had to wait almost 18 months. The Privy Council ā around 600 senior politicians from the Commons and Lords, as well as VIPs including Camilla and Prince William ā will meet today to form the Accession Council at St Jamesās Palace. Charles will then have to take his oath as our new monarch. At this point, the Garter King of Arms will stand on the balcony at St Jamesās Palace for his official proclamation. Charles will then hold his first Privy Council meeting, and flags around the UK will be raised for 24 hours as he is declared King. An hour later, heralds will travel to the Royal Exchange where the City of London Proclamation takes place. Ā Aides have indicated that Charles and Camilla will then meet crowds, and accept condolences and flowers outside Buckingham Palace. The PM, the Cabinet, the leader of the Opposition and senior MPs will then hold a meeting there with Charles. In keeping with his deep interest in religion and new position as the Head of the Church of England, the King will meet the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dean of Westminster and other heads of faith. Aides have said that the new King and Queen will live at Buckingham Palace. But as it is still having a Ā£370million revamp, due to finish in 2027, they may stay at Clarence House for now. Charlesās age has led to past speculation that he could step aside for Prince William. But aides always made it clear he had no intention of giving up the role he regards as his duty, and his birthright. Over the coming weeks, he is likely to carry out a series of visits to meet as many people as possible.Ā Royal biographer Penny Junor said: āI think Charles will be a very good King. Heās the best-prepared heir to the throne the country has ever had. āHeās wise, humorous, well-read and terribly engaged on so many different subjects. āAnd now he has Camilla by his side to combat the loneliness, I think theyāll make a formidable double act.ā Ā Since Charles and Camilla married in 2005, there was always speculation over whether she would be called Queen. At the time, Charlesās aides said she would be titled āPrincess Consortā to his King. Ā Charles has always wanted her to be Queen and his mother announced it was her āsincere wishā that Camilla would be called āQueen Consortā. Mr Vickers said: āOn the death of Elizabeth, Camilla automatically became Queen as she is married to Charles. āI suspect most people donāt really care what sheās called. She certainly doesnāt. āItās always been Charles who cares. He is so proud of her and everything sheās achieved, so to him any other title would be second best.ā Ā Charles has spent a lifetime doing good works and pursuing pet projects. His work helping young people through The Princeās Trust has been inspired and hugely successful. But commentators have routinely criticised him for airing his views. His opinions on climate change, alternative medicine and modern architecture are well-known. When he was Prince of Wales, columnist Stephen Glover commented: āHe canāt seem to rid himself of his potentially fatal devotion to stirring up trouble by saying things a nearly-monarch should not say. We know next to nothing about the Queenās political views.āĀ Charles himself has said he was a āmeddling princeā. But the monarchy is meant to be politically neutral so he will need to stop saying what he thinks. Mr Vickers added: āPeople think Charles will be too interfering and political but I think he knows perfectly well he will now have to be more circumspect. āHeāll move into a different sort of gear and I think weāll hear no more of his views.ā Read More on The Sun FINAL FAREWELL Final photo shows Queen smiling two days before death Ā As King, Charles will also need to consider the thorny issue of Prince Harry and Meghanās life in California. Last year Harry branded him ātrappedā in the monarchy in his Oprah Winfrey interview.
King Charles III becomes the oldest person in British history to be named monarch
Advertisment