King Charles’ III coronation was largely well received in Britain. Though there was some controversy on the streets of London, where heavy handed policing saw the arrest of a small group of anti-monarchy protestors, the British public appeared mostly to welcome the new king.
Over 18 million watched the ceremony at Westminster Abbey on television, while many subsequently took part in community street parties in honour of the occasion.
God Save The King • King Charles III Coronation at Westminster Abbey •pic.twitter.com/o7FDq0fntf
— Proud British Subject (@BritishHonour) May 10, 2023
Abroad, meanwhile, the international press was filled with the usual mixture of interest and bemusement when it comes to the British monarchy.
While American broadcasters ran live streams and basked in the pomp and pageantry, the New York Times more critically called the event, “a cringing discomfort.”
Yet the most curious international engagement came from within Britain’s own ‘family’: the Commonwealth. Seventy years ago, Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation was replete with representation from Britain’s vast, if shrinking, empire.
Muted involvement
Yet her son’s investiture was notably light on nods to its successor, the Commonwealth, save for a few troops carrying members’ flags and live streamed performances and images beamed into the coronation concert that followed in the evening.
This muted involvement is unsurprising.
Many Commonwealth countries have taken the change of monarch as an opportunity to reconsider their relationship with Britain, with Caribbean nations especially eager to break from an imperial past characterised by slavery and subjugation.
VIDEO: "From the darkest days of our past, and the appalling atrocity of slavery, which forever stains our history, the people of this island forged their path with extraordinary fortitude."
Prince Charles speaks at ceremony marking Barbados becoming a republic pic.twitter.com/cSixduSFxl
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) November 30, 2021
While Republicans in Britain may be an isolated minority, in the Commonwealth they are an increasingly prominent force. It would be unsurprising if Charles’ reign ends with the British monarch nominally ruling over far fewer countries than at its start.
From empire to Commonwealth
The Commonwealth first developed at the height of Britain’s empire in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a mechanism to bind the UK’s ‘dominions’ to London as their independence grew.
During the 1926 Imperial Conference the term Commonwealth was adopted for the first time, joining Britain, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland and India together in a community of nations that would enjoy equal status as, “autonomous communities within the British Empire.”
Ironically, of course, at this point India remained ruled directly by British officials, while Ireland had not been permitted to become a republic when it gained independence.
After the Second World War, Britain was financially and militarily exhausted and no longer able to maintain its empire. Gradually the remaining colonies gained independence, with many joining the Commonwealth.
This club of countries, once dominated by primarily white settler colonies, now included an array of different states and nations.
Evolution far from smooth
But the story was not the smooth evolution from empire to Commonwealth London liked to portray. Some newly independent states resented London for its decades of subjugation and refused involvement.
The many Arab states once occupied by Britain, such as Egypt, South Yemen, and Jordan, declined to join the commonwealth, as did Myanmar.