The Monarchist 1.0
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[+] HONOURING OUR PATRON, SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL, VICTOR OF THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING PEOPLES

[+] HONOURING OUR QUEEN, ELIZABETH THE SECOND, ON THE 80TH YEAR OF HER BIRTH (1926 - 2006)

[+] HONOURING OUR KING, SAINT EDWARD THE CONFESSOR, ON THE 1000TH YEAR OF HIS BIRTH (1005 - 2005)

[+] HONOURING OUR HERO, LORD NELSON, ON THE BICENTENNIAL OF THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR (1805 - 2005)

[+] HONOURING OUR SONS, THE QUEEN'S COMMONWEALTH SOLDIERS KILLED IN THE 'WAR ON TERROR'

[+] HONOURING OUR VETS ON THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE VICTORIA CROSS (1856 - 2006)

Tuesday, October 04, 2005
Edward the Confessor turns 1,000

Any monarchist worth his salt celebrates the birth of kings. That's what monarchists do. Especially when the birth of this king -- the king who became a saint -- took place a thousand years ago, marking the halfway point between our own lives and the birth of another king -- Jesus Christ.

St. Edward the Confessor was born a thousand years ago this year (or thereabouts), and Westminster Abbey is commemorating the occasion. And for good reason, since it was Edward, last of the Anglo-Saxon kings, who founded the “west minster” to distinguish it from St Paul’s Cathedral (the east minster) in the then medieval town of London. Unfortunately, when the new church was consecrated on 28 December 1065 the King was too ill to attend and died a few days later. His mortal remains were entombed in front of the High Altar.

Westminster Abbey, the "House of God, House of Kings", has been the site of every coronation since 1066, when William the Conqueror defeated King Harold at the Battle of Hastings. For legitimacy reasons, William wanted to be coronated there, since unlike Harold, William I was at least related to Edward and was eager to press this point as occupier of England. Today, the principle royal crown is still referred to as St. Edward's crown and the Coronation Chair is still sometimes referred to as St Edward's Chair.

King Edward, we are told, was in many respects a pathetically weak, powerless and indecisive monarch, but his creation is the bedrock of the English throne and institution we revere even today, a thousand years later.

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