The Use of Magic and Ritual in the Coronation of King Charles III
Introduction
The coronation of King Charles III was steeped in the tradition of magic and ritual that has characterised English, and later British, coronations. The very idea of a coronation leverages belief in divinity; however, the coronation of Charles III occurred in a very different social environment than those of monarchs a millennium ago. Today, belief in the divine right of Kings is dramatically reduced. In this context, magic can also be thought of as a stage performance that relies on a tacit understanding between audience and actor, where disbelief is suspended in order to achieve the effect. This paper will examine the use of ritual and magic in the coronation ceremony. It will discuss how the British royal family has positioned its image in relation to the concept of magic and how social changes have brought the very idea of monarchy into question.
One way to think about magic, according to Leddington (253), is that it has โlong had an uneasy relationship with two thoroughly disreputable worlds: the world of the supposedly supernatural โ the world of psychics, mediums and other charlatans โ and the world of the con โ the world of cheats, hustlers and swindlersโ. While it may be that a magician aims to fool the audience, the act also requires audiences to willingly suspend disbelief. Once the audience suspends disbelief in the theatrical event, they enter the realm of fantasy. The โwillingness of the audience to play along and indulge in the fantasyโ means magic is not just about performances of fiction, but it is about illusion (Leddington 256).
Magic is also grounded in its social practices: the occult, sorcery, and witchcraft, particularly when linked to the Medieval Euro-American witch-hunts of the fifteenth to seventeenth century (Ginzburg). Religion scorned magic as a threat to the idea that only God had โsovereignty over the unseenโ (Benussi). By the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, intellectuals like Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, and Max Weber argued that โincreases in literacy, better living conditions, and growing acquaintance with modern science, would make people gradually forget their consolatory but false beliefs in spirits, gods, witches, and magical forcesโ (Casanova). Recent booms in Wicca and neopaganism show that modernity has not dismissed supernatural inquiry. Today, โoccultureโ โ โan eclectic milieu mixing esotericism, pop culture, and urban mysticismโ โ is treated as a โvaluable resource to address existential predicaments, foster resilience in the face of the negative, expand their cognitive resources, work on their spiritual selves, explore fantasy and creativity, and generally improve their relationship with the worldโ (Benussi). Indeed, Durkheimโs judgement of magic as a quintessentially personal spiritual endeavour has some resonance. It also helps to explain why societies are still able to suspend belief and accept the โillusionโ that King Charles III is appointed by God. And this is what happened on 6 May 2023 when
millions of people looked on, and as with all magic mirrors, saw what they wanted to see. Some saw a โฆ victory for the visibility of older women, as if we did not recently bury a 96-year-old queen, and happiness at last. Others saw a victory for diversity, as people of colour and non-Christian faiths, and women, were allowed to perform homage โ and near the front, too, close to the god. (Gold 2023)
โWe mustย not let in daylight upon magicโ
In 1867, English essayist Walter Bagehot (1826-1877) wrote โabove all things our royalty is to be reverenced, and if you begin to poke about it, you cannot reverence it โฆ . Its mystery is its life. We must not let in daylight upon magicโ (cited in Ratcliffe). Perhaps, one may argue sardonically, somebody forgot to tell Prince Harry. In the 2022 six-part Netflix special Harry and Meghan, it was reported that Prince Harry and his wife Meghan have โshone not just daylight but a blinding floodlight on the private affairs of the royal familyโ (Holden). Queen Elizabeth II had already learnt the lesson of not letting the light in. In June 1969, BBC1 and ITV in Britain aired a documentary titled Royal Family, which was watched by 38 million viewers in the UK and an estimated 350 million globally. The documentary was developed by William Heseltine, the Queenโs press secretary, and John Brabourne, who was the son-in-law of Lord Mountbatten, to show the daily life of the royal family. The recent show The Crown also shows the role of Prince Phillip in its development. The 110-minute documentary covered one year of the royalโs private lives. Queen Elizabeth was shown the documentary before it aired. The following dialogue amongst the royals in The Crown (episode 3, season 4 โBubbikinsโ) posits one reason for its production.
Itโs a documentary film โฆ . It means, um … no acting. No artifice. Just the real thing. Like one of those wildlife films. Yes, except this time, we are the endangered species. Yes, exactly. It will follow all of us in our daily lives to prove to everyone out there what we in here already know. Whatโs that? Well, how hard we all work. And what good value we represent. How much we deserve the taxpayerโs money. So, weโll all have to get used to cameras being here all the time? Not all the time. They will follow us on and off over the next few months. So, all of you are on your best behaviour.
As filming begins, Queen Elizabeth says of the camera lights, โitโs jolly powerful that light, isnโt it?โ In 1977 Queen Elizabeth banned the documentary from being shown in Britain. The full-length version is currently available on YouTube. Released at a time of social change in Britain, the film focusses on tradition, duty, and family life, revealing a very conservative royal family largely out of step with modern Britain. Perhaps Queen Elizabeth II realised too much โlightโ had been let in.
Historian David Cannadine argues that, during most of the nineteenth century, the British monarchy was struggling to maintain its image and status, and
as the population was becoming better educated, royal ritual would soon be exposed as nothing more than primitive magic, a hollow sham … the pageantry centred on the monarchy was conspicuous for its ineptitude rather than for its grandeur. (Cannadine, “Context” 102)
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