After national mourning for Elizabeth II, England is back to normal
After 12 days of solemn homage to Elizabeth II, England returns to normal on Tuesday, with the end of national mourning and a return to the realities of countries facing crises and changing monarchies.
It official building flag, half-mast since the queen died on September 8 at the age of 96 at her Scottish residence at Balmoral, They waved high again.
For nearly two weeks, London and the Scottish capital, Edinburgh, served as venues for magnificent ceremonies: from the proclamation of the new King Charles III to the solemn funeral procession that took the king to his final resting place in Windsor, where he was buried beside his parents and husband. Their traditional rituals and colorful medieval uniforms take the country, and the world she watches captivated on television, into an almost surreal time.
But even though The British royal family will remain in mourning for another seven days, the national mourning period set by the government ends this Tuesday.
London launch giant cleaning operation behind “cemetery of the century”held at Westminster Abbey, and which brought together about a million people on the streets, according to police estimates. On the other hand, provisional data is estimated at “more than 250,000” people “passed through Parliament”, Culture Minister Michelle Donelan told Sky News, referring to the burning chapel that was set up for five days at Westminster Hall, which saw expressions of genuine emotion and kilometers of queues to enter.
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