Notes 23 t/m 25/Lord and King

[23]

Two versions of coronation services, known as ordines (from the Latin ordo meaning “order”) or recensions, survive from before the Norman Conquest. It is not known if the first recension was ever used in England, and it was the second recension which was used by Edgar in 973 and by subsequent Anglo-Saxon and early Norman kings.[1]

A third recension was probably compiled during the reign of Henry I and was used at the coronation of his successor, Stephen, in 1135. While retaining the most important elements of the Anglo-Saxon rite, it may have borrowed from the consecration of the Holy Roman Emperor from the Pontificale Romano-Germanicum, a book of German liturgy compiled in Mainz in 961, thus bringing the English tradition into line with continental practice.[2] It remained in use until the coronation of Edward II in 1308 when the fourth recension was first used, having been compiled over several preceding decades. Although influenced by its French counterpart, the new ordo focussed on the balance between the monarch and his nobles and on the oath, neither of which concerned the absolutist French kings.[3] One manuscript of this recension is the Liber Regalis at Westminster Abbey which has come to be regarded as the definitive version.

WIKIPEDIA

CORONATION OF THE BRITISH MONARCH/HISTORY/ENGLISH CORONATIONS

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronation_of_the_British_monarch#History

ORIGINAL SOURCE

WIKIPEDIA

CORONATION OF THE BRITISH MONARCH

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronation_of_the_British_monarch

[24]

Two versions of coronation services, known as ordines (from the Latin ordo meaning “order”) or recensions, survive from before the Norman Conquest. It is not known if the first recension was ever used in England, and it was the second recension which was used by Edgar in 973 and by subsequent Anglo-Saxon and early Norman kings.[1]

A third recension was probably compiled during the reign of Henry I and was used at the coronation of his successor, Stephen, in 1135. While retaining the most important elements of the Anglo-Saxon rite, it may have borrowed from the consecration of the Holy Roman Emperor from the Pontificale Romano-Germanicum, a book of German liturgy compiled in Mainz in 961, thus bringing the English tradition into line with continental practice.[2] It remained in use until the coronation of Edward II in 1308 when the fourth recension was first used, having been compiled over several preceding decades. Although influenced by its French counterpart, the new ordo focussed on the balance between the monarch and his nobles and on the oath, neither of which concerned the absolutist French kings.[3] One manuscript of this recension is the Liber Regalis at Westminster Abbey which has come to be regarded as the definitive version.

WIKIPEDIA

CORONATION OF THE BRITISH MONARCH/HISTORY/ENGLISH CORONATIONS

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronation_of_the_British_monarch#History

ORIGINAL SOURCE

WIKIPEDIA

CORONATION OF THE BRITISH MONARCH

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronation_of_the_British_monarch

[25]

”Following the start of the Reformation in England, the boy king Edward VI had been crowned in the first Protestant coronation in 1547, during which Archbishop Thomas Cranmer preached a sermon against idolatry and “the tyranny of the bishops of Rome”. However, six years later, he was succeeded by his half-sister Mary I, who restored the Catholic rite.[5] In 1559, Elizabeth I underwent the last English coronation under the auspices of the Catholic Church; however, Elizabeth’s insistence on changes to reflect her Protestant beliefs resulted in several bishops refusing to officiate at the service, and it was conducted by the low-ranking bishop of CarlisleOwen Oglethorpe

WIKIPEDIA

CORONATION OF THE BRITISH MONARCH/HISTORY/ENGLISH CORONATIONS

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronation_of_the_British_monarch#History

ORIGINAL SOURCE

WIKIPEDIA

CORONATION OF THE BRITISH MONARCH

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coronation_of_the_British_monarch

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