Prince Harry to attend king’s coronation but
Meghan to stay in California
Buckingham Palace announces Duchess of Sussex to
remain with Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet
Caroline
Davies
Wed 12 Apr
2023 16.20 BST
The Duke of
Sussex is to attend his father’s coronation, but without the Duchess of Sussex
or their two children.
Buckingham
Palace said in a statement: “Buckingham Palace is pleased to confirm that the
Duke of Sussex will attend the coronation service at Westminster Abbey on 6
May. The Duchess of Sussex will remain in California with Prince Archie and
Princess Lilibet.”
The
announcement ends weeks of speculation about whether Harry and Meghan would
accept an invitation to attend. Sources indicated that the fact the coronation
is on Prince Archie’s fourth birthday played a part in the duchess’s decision
to remain.
Harry will
join more than 2,000 guests at Westminster Abbey. It will be the first time he
will have been seen in public with other royals, including his brother, the
Prince of Wales, since publication of his book.
While Harry
is expected to play no formal role, William will play a prominent part in the
coronation, with Prince George, aged nine, also confirmed as one of the king’s
pages of honour for the ceremony.
It is not
known if Harry will attend any other coronation-related events over the long
weekend, including concerts, which the royal family are expected to attend.
Relations
between the Sussexes and the palace are strained after the publication of
Harry’s memoir Spare in January, in which he was critical of members of the
royal family and the institution.
Sources had
indicated that King Charles’s invitation to attend was for the duke and
duchess. The fact that Meghan has chosen to stay away may be interpreted by
some as an indication of continuing tensions between the couple and the palace.
As the
Sussexes are no longer working royals, it is understood they would not have any
formal role to play in the coronation. Their children, Prince Archie, three,
and Princess Lilibet, one, would be thought too young to attend.
Charles has
met his granddaughter, Lilibet, once, when the couple briefly returned to the
UK to attend a service of thanksgiving for the late Queen Elizabeth II’s
platinum jubilee in June.
Those
expected to join the king and queen in the carriage procession from Westminster
Abbey to Buckingham Palace after the crowning and enthronement include the
Prince and Princess of Wales, with their children, the Princess Royal and V-Adm
Sir Timothy Laurence, the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, the Duke and Duchess
of Gloucester, the Duke of Kent and Princess Alexandra of Kent.
Analysis
Harry yes, Meghan no: coronation plan fuels more
speculation about royal rift
Caroline
Davies
Is the Duchess of Sussex staying home because of
Archie’s birthday? Some say it points to a failure in negotiations
Wed 12 Apr
2023 18.41 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/apr/12/prince-harry-meghan-coronation-royal-analysis
The “Will
they? Won’t they?” question of whether the Duke and Duchess of Sussex would
attend has hung over King Charles’s coronation for months.
Even after
the couple was formally invited by email one month ago, reply there came none,
with the deadline reportedly passing last week and organisers said to be
increasingly impatient.
But
Wednesday’s announcement that Harry will attend, without Meghan and their
children, Prince Archie, three, and Princess Lilibet, one, will probably fuel
the narrative that difficulties between the couple and the palace remain very
real, with some undoubtedly interpreting Meghan’s decision to stay away as a
snub.
There was
speculation that the fact that Archie’s fourth birthday falls on 6 May, the
same day his grandfather is crowned and enthroned, played a part in the
duchess’s decision to stay in California, with her son’s celebrations trumping
his grandfather’s.
The royal
commentator and author Omid Scobie, who is said to be close to the couple and
co-authored their biography Finding Freedom, tweeted: “I understand that
Archie’s fourth birthday (also on May 6) played a factor in the couple’s
decision. Expect it to be a fairly quick trip to the UK for Prince Harry, who
will only be attending the coronation ceremony at Westminster Abbey.”
Others
believe the decision for Harry to attend alone could be to be down to a failure
in negotiations, with the Sussexes not being able to get what they want. With
the invitation going out a month ago, “it seems the result of the best part of
a month’s discussions and negotiations have not worked,” said the royal
historian and author Robert Lacey.
The
invitation had been on the table for a month, so negotiations were likely, said
Lacey, “because it was possible for the Sussexes to reply a month ago”.
As
non-working royals, it has been reported that the Sussexes were not expected to
play any formal part in the Westminster Abbey ceremony, including any
appearance on the palace balcony, though the palace has not confirmed this.
Meanwhile,
the Prince of Wales will play a prominent role as heir, and his son Prince
George, nine, has a substantial role as one of the pages of honour to the king.
Negotiations
might have faltered on where the Sussexes could expect to be seated, or whether
they should be included in the carriage procession from Westminster Abbey to
Buckingham Palace after the ceremony.
The
Waleses, the newly titled Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, the Princess Royal and
her husband, the Gloucesters and the Duke of Kent and his sister Princess Alexandra
are understood to be part of that procession.
Harry was
reportedly not happy over his seating at the Queen’s platinum jubilee service,
said Lacey. “It’s all about negotiating over the Abbey equivalent of Siberia as
to where Harry was going to be seated,” he added.
It’s all about negotiating over the Abbey equivalent
of Siberia as to where Harry was going to be seated
Royal historian Robert Lacey
“There are
invitations. And there are invitations,” said Lacey, adding that the seating
plan “may have been the substance of what has not been resolved to their [the
Sussexes’] satisfaction”.
For Harry,
this will be the first time he will have appeared in a public setting with the
king, Camilla and William since he attacked them in his bestselling memoir, Spare.
In it he criticised Charles’s parenting, accused William of physically
attacking him, called Camilla “dangerous” and accused her of sacrificing him on
her “personal PR altar”, and alleged William and Kate encouraged him to dress
up as a Nazi at a fancy dress party.
His
inflammatory claims were seen as damaging his fragile relationship with his
brother beyond repair, and as further troubling his dealings with the king and
the rest of the family.
After the
book’s publication, the king had “acted with a combination of firmness and
conciliation”, said Lacey. Firmness in ending the couple’s lease arrangement of
Frogmore Cottage, and conciliation “in that he made clear early on that they
were both welcome at his coronation”.
“In view of
what has happened, it is hardly surprising; the book, the Oprah interviews, the
Netflix documentaries, they were sustained attacks on the family itself and on
the monarchy. And, especially, an attack on the new queen.
“For the
king to offer an invitation in those circumstances was good-hearted and
forgiving. But the Sussexes clearly weren’t offered enough,” he said.
On the
other hand, he said, it could be seen in a positive light. “The fact Harry is
coming could be said to be a fruitful compromise. It actually says quite a lot
of hopeful things, considering what Harry has said about his father, and his
apparent condemnation of his father, and his being willing to put that aside. So,
it could be a step forward.”
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