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King Charles III Biography, Coronation, Net Worth, Age, Controversy

King Charles III Biography, Coronation, Net Worth, Age, and King Charles III  controversy can be accessed below.

Truetells Nigeria reports that King Charles, the oldest son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, is the heir apparent to the British throne.
Charles succeeded as England’s King immediately, following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-serving monarch of the UK. Queen Elizabeth II died at the age of 96 at Balmoral castle, Scotland on Thursday, the Royal Family announced.
“The Queen died peacefully at Balmoral this afternoon… The King and The Queen Consort will remain at Balmoral this evening and will return to London tomorrow,” Buckingham Palace said in a statement.
“The death of my beloved mother, The Queen is a moment of the greatest sadness for me and all members of my family,” a statement from the King at the time of the death of Queen Elizabeth II read.
According to the BBC, Charles, the eldest son of the Queen and the former Prince of Wales will lead the country in mourning as the new King and head of state for 14 Commonwealth realms. BBC reported that one of his first acts would be to decide whether he would be called King Charles III or by any other name. Charles’ wife will be called Queen Consort, a title used for the wife of the monarch.

King Charles III Coronation

Truetells Nigeria reports that all Roads, Airports, Others lead to London As King Charles assumes the British Throne on Saturday as the 40th Monarch.

 

History will be made on Saturday, May, 6 as the coronation of King Charles III will take place 70 years after his Mother, Queen Elizabeth II went through the same ritual.

Although Charles became head of State of the United Kingdom as Queen Elizabeth II died last year October, this is a formal celebration to mark his Kingship.

 

The coronation which will be both religious and symbolic will see King Charles III who was born 14th November 1948, crowned alongside his wife, Camilla, the Queen Consort, as the 40th Monarch of the United Kingdom since 1066.

 

Though the main celebration service will begin at 11 A.M, procession from Buckingham palace to the celebration ground at Westminster Abbey will begin by 6 A.M.

 

During the celebration service which will be within two hours and in different stages, King Charles III and Camilla, the Queen Consort will be presented with different symbols of the British Royalty.

 

King Charles will be presented with the Sovereign’s Orb, the Sovereign’s Sceptre with Cross and the Sovereign’s Sceptre with Dove and the coronation Ring. While the Queen Consort will be presented with the Queen Consort’s Rod with Dove and the Queen Consort’s Sceptre with Cross.

The Sovereign’s Orb represents the Christian World, The Sceptre with Cross represents Kingly power and Justice while the Sceptre with Dove represents the King’s spiritual role.

 

According to the BBC, the different stages in the celebration which would be officiated by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, include:

The first stage is recognition. This is when the King will stand and be presented to “the people” as he faces the four sides of Westminster Abbey as he is proclaimed the “undoubted King.” The congregation will also shout “God Save the King.”

 

Stage 2 is when the King will take the oath. He will take the coronation oath and the accession declaration oath. In the coronation oath, the Archbishop will ask King Charles to accept that he will uphold the law of the land and the Church of England during his reign and the king will pledge to keep the promises.

 

While in the accession oath, the King will confirm that he is a “faithful Protestant.”

Stage three is the anointing of the King. This is considered as the most sacred part of the service. Oil from the Ampulla (gold flask) will be poured into the coronation spoon and be used on the head, breast and hand of the King as a sign of the Cross. This will be administered by the Archbishop.

 

The next stage is the crowning of the King also called the Investiture. This is when the King will wear the crown of ST. Edward for the only time in his life.

 

According to the BBC “First the King will be given a shimmering golden coat to wear called the Supertunic, and be presented with items including the Sovereign’s Orb, the Coronation Ring, the Sovereign’s Sceptre with Cross and the Sovereign’s Sceptre with Dove.

 

Then the archbishop will place St Edward’s Crown on the King’s head and the abbey bells will ring for two minutes, trumpets will sound and gun salutes will be fired across the UK.

A 62-round salute will be fired at the Tower of London, with a six-gun salvo at Horse Guards Parade. Twenty-one rounds will be fired at a further 11 locations around the UK, including Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast, and on deployed Royal Navy ships.”

The last stage is when the King will take the throne and the crowd will swear allegiance to the King.

 

Apart from the religious celebration, there will be colourful events across the UK from the weekend up until Monday which is a holiday in the Kingdom.

Other members to undergo a change of titles

The Queen’s death means that other members of Britain’s Royal family will also undergo chage of titles. Prince William will inherit Charles’ title and become Duke of Cornwall, while his wife Catherine will become the Dutches of Cornwall.
Over the next 24 hours following the Queen’s death, Charles will be officially declared the King of England. The ceremony, according to the BBC, will take place at St James’ Palace in London in front of the Accession Council, a ceremonial body that consists of senior MPs, the Lord Mayor of London, commonwealth high commissioners and civil servants.
In 1952, when the last accession took place, about 200 people attended the ceremony. While Charles’ accession ceremony is likely to be attended by about 700 people, the actual number may be lesser due to the sudden death of the Queen.

Who Is King Charles?

 

As the oldest son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Prince Charles is the longstanding heir apparent to the British throne. Under public scrutiny his entire life, Charles graduated from Trinity College before embarking on a military career which culminated with him commanding the HMS Bronington. He married Diana Spencer in the summer of 1981 to huge media fanfare, though the couple would eventually divorce in 1996 after years of gossip and scandal. Charles later wed longtime love Camilla Parker Bowles some time after Princess Diana’s death. He is the father of Princes William and Harry and is also a grandfather. Among his many philanthropic and environmental endeavors are the Prince’s Trust and the Prince’s Rainforest Project.

Early Life, Siblings and Education

 

King Charles was born Charles Philip Arthur George on November 14, 1948, in London, England. The son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Charles ascended the royal hierarchy at an early age. His mother became queen when he was only three after the death of his grandfather King George VI in 1952. As Elizabeth’s oldest child, Charles became the heir apparent to the British throne and received the title of Duke of Cornwall. Charles was also destined to become Great Britain’s oldest heir apparent, with his mother remaining queen for more than six and a half decades. His younger siblings are Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward.

In 1956, Charles went to the Hill House School in London before heading off to boarding school at the Cheam School the following year. In addition to his education, he had increased responsibilities as he was made the Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester at the age of nine. Beginning in 1962, Charles changed schools again to go to Gordonstoun in Scotland. Later in the decade he also studied in Melbourne, Australia as an exchange student.

 

Charles then studied archaeology, anthropology and history at Trinity College, part of the University of Cambridge, from 1967 to 1970. In addition to his studies, he was active in campus life, involving himself in several activities such as polo. After receiving his degree in 1970 (the first royal heir apparent to do so), Charles embarked on a career in the military.

Military Service

After six months of aviation training with the Royal Air Force, Charles joined the Royal Navy in 1971, going on to serve on the HMS Norfolk and receiving a promotion in 1973 to acting lieutenant.

During the mid-1970s, Charles joined the Royal Naval Air Station to receive helicopter training, and later served as a helicopter pilot for the 845 Naval Air Squadron, based on the HMS Hermes. His time with the Hermes included a tour of Caribbean and Canadian waters before he took up additional course work at the Royal Naval College in Greenwich. In 1976, Charles ended his military service as commander of the HMS Bronington, the same year that he established the Prince’s Trust, a charitable organization dedicated to helping improve the lives of disadvantaged youth.

Towards the close of the decade, Charles further expanded his military skill set with parachute training, having already taken the reins at times as the pilot for the Queen’s Flight, the monarchy’s official aircraft. The prince was eventually promoted to Group Captain for the Royal Air Force in 1995, and in the new millennium was again promoted to the rank of Air Chief Marshal.

Marriage to Diana

 

As a public figure, Charles came off to many as intelligent, aloof and a bit awkward. He was used to having every move he made scrutinized by the press, but even he could not have been imagined what a sensation his relationship with Lady Diana Spencer would cause. The two had known each other when they were young but were reintroduced in the late 1970s. Despite a 13-year age difference as well as divergent interests, the couple became engaged in February 1981. The public took a strong liking to his shy, former kindergarten teacher fiancée, finding her more accessible than the reserved prince. They were married on July 29, 1981, in a lavish ceremony that was broadcast around the world and watched by millions of people.

Divorce and Diana’s Death

 

Charles and Diana had two children together. Their first son, Prince William Arthur Philip Louis, was born on June 21, 1982, and their second son, Prince Henry “Harry” Charles Albert David, was born on September 15, 1984. Unfortunately, their common love for their children was not enough to hold what was billed as a fairy tale marriage together. The union became strained over the years with royal responsibilities, personal conflicts, media pressures and infidelities. Charles reportedly reignited a relationship with his former flame, Camilla Parker Bowles, while married to Diana. The couple officially separated in 1992 and divorced in 1996.

Diana, Princess of Wales, died in a car crash in Paris in August 1997. Despite their differences, Charles traveled with her sisters to France to accompany her body back to England. During her funeral procession, he walked with their sons — William, 15, and Harry, 12 — and Diana’s brother, Earl Spencer. Charles took his role as father to his grieving sons seriously, asking the media for privacy for his family.

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Marriage to Camilla and Philanthropy

 

After years of quietly maintaining their relationship, Charles married Parker Bowles on April 9, 2005. She then became the Duchess of Cornwall and now often accompanies her husband on many of his official visits. Besides his royal duties, Charles has become a leading philanthropist. In addition to the Prince’s Trust, he has backed a huge array of charitable organizations, supporting efforts to improve educational services, fund arts initiatives, support sustainable business endeavors, provide employment opportunities to older citizens and help the environment.

In 2007, Charles launched the Prince’s Rainforest Project, a global initiative with corporate and celebrity backing to curtail tropical deforestation and thus aid the quest to stanch climate change. And in a nod to religious diversity and the multicultural nature of modern England, Charles has also promised to have a multi-faith coronation if or when he takes the throne.

In addition to his philanthropic work, Charles is also an avid watercolorist and has published several books, including the 1980 children’s story The Old Man of Lochnagar, 2010’s Harmony: A New Way of Looking at Our World and 2012’s The Prince’s Speech: On the Future of Food.

In spring 2019, Charles announced that he had opened a new bed and breakfast in Caithness, Scotland, called The Granary Lodge. The B&B is located on the grounds of The Castle of Mey, the former retreat of Charles’ grandmother, Queen Elizabeth.

Grandchildren

In 2013, Charles took on a new role: He became a grandfather with the arrival of George Alexander Louis — known as “His Royal Highness Prince George of Cambridge,” the son of Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton — on July 22. Soon after his grandson’s birth, Charles released a statement: “Both my wife and I are overjoyed at the arrival of my first grandchild. It is an incredibly special moment for William and Catherine, and we are so thrilled for them on the birth of their baby boy.”

 

Charles soon had a granddaughter as well, Princess Charlotte (with a name honoring both her grandfather and maternal aunt), born on May 2, 2015. On April 23, 2018, Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge welcomed Charles’ second grandson, Prince Louis. The following year, on May 6, 2019, Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan Markle, gave Charles another grandson with the birth of their son, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor.

Controversy Over the ‘Paradise Papers

 

In November 2017 a leak of 13.4 million electronic files known as the Paradise Papers revealed that Charles was among many world figures and celebrities, who possessed off-shore investments, in his case specifically, a Bermuda-run business. Reports indicate that in 2007 Charles had campaigned on amending climate change policy without disclosing that he would financially benefit from those amendments through his foreign business.

 

Since the papers have come out, Charles has claimed he has no direct involvement in the off-shore account. His spokesman also added that the Prince voluntarily pays taxes and his foreign investments “do not derive any tax advantage whatsoever based on their location or any other aspect of their structure and there is no loss of revenue to HMRC as a result.”

Commonwealth Leadership

During an April 2018 summit of the Commonwealth, Queen Elizabeth nominated Prince Charles to succeed her as head of the 53-nation association of Britain and its former colonies. “It is my sincere wish that the Commonwealth will continue to offer stability and continuity for future generations and will decide that one day the Prince of Wales should carry on the important work started by my father in 1949,” she said.

 

Shortly afterward, Commonwealth leaders announced that they were adhering to the Queen’s wish. “We recognize the role of the Queen in championing the Commonwealth and its peoples. The next head of the Commonwealth shall be his Royal Highness Prince Charles, the Prince of Wales,” they said in a statement.

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