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  2. Stole Royal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stole_Royal

    A depiction of George VI being crowned while wearing the Supertunica, Stole Royal and Robe Royal. The Stole Royal (sometime erroneously called the Armilla) is an item of regalia used during the coronation of a British monarch, similar to the stoles worn as vestments by clergymen.

  3. Supertunica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supertunica

    The gold Supertunica is shown here worn by George VI under his Robe Royal during the crowning ceremony. The Stole Royal is also worn. The monarch enters Westminster Abbey for their coronation wearing the Robe of State. This is removed for the Anointing ceremony in which they wear the Colobium sindonis ("shroud tunic"), an intentionally plain robe.

  4. Robe Royal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robe_Royal

    A depiction of George VI being crowned in Westminster Abbey in 1937, while wearing the Supertunica, Stole Royal and Robe Royal. The Robe Royal (also known as the Pallium Regale, [1] Imperial Mantle [2] or Dalmatic Robe [2]) is a robe worn by the British monarch when he or she is crowned.

  5. Royal Family Orders of the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Family_Orders_of_the...

    George V's was pale blue. George VI's was rose pink. Each contained a portrait of the king in uniform. The reverse of the order contains the royal cypher of the sovereign. Edward VIII, king for less than a year, did not issue a family order. The Royal Family Order of Elizabeth II depicts her in evening dress wearing the ribbon and star of the ...

  6. George VI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_VI

    He was interred initially in the Royal Vault until he was transferred to the King George VI Memorial Chapel inside St George's on 26 March 1969. [118] In 2002, fifty years after his death, the remains of his widow, Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, and the ashes of his younger daughter, Princess Margaret, who both died that year, were interred ...

  7. Norman Hartnell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Hartnell

    For the 1937 Coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, the Queen ordered the maid of honour dresses from Hartnell, remaining loyal to Handley-Seymour for her Coronation gown. Until 1939, Hartnell received most of the Queen's orders, and after 1946, with the exception of some country clothes, she remained a Hartnell client, even after ...

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  9. Imperial Robe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Robe

    Queen Elizabeth II wearing her Imperial Robe. The Imperial Robe (also Robe of Estate [1] or Imperial State Robe [1]) is a robe used in the Coronation of the British monarch.It is donned in the final stages of the ceremony for the procession of the monarch from Westminster Abbey to the waiting Gold State Coach.