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King Charles ‘to knight archbishop of Canterbury’ in new year honours for ‘personal service’ to crown

Justin Welby expected to be admitted to the Royal Victorian Order

Josh Payne
Saturday 23 December 2023 20:12 GMT
King Charles being crowned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, during his coronation ceremony
King Charles being crowned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, during his coronation ceremony (Getty)

The King is set to knight the Archbishop of Canterbury in the upcoming new year honours list, according to reports.

Justin Welby will be admitted to the Royal Victorian Order (RVO) for his “personal service” to the crown, the Daily Mail said.

Awards under the RVO are in the King’s gift, and are bestowed independently of Downing Street to people who have served the monarch or the royal family in a personal way.

The archbishop was tasked with conducting the service for the King’s coronation, and had the duty of anointing and crowning Charles and Camilla.

King Charles with Archbishop Welby during a visit to Lambeth Palace’s new library in November (PA)

In behind-the-scenes footage for a new BBC documentary, the King can be seen laughing and shaking his head when Archbishop Welby forgets the words to part of the liturgy – the prayers and actions of the coronation service – in a second rehearsal clip filmed at Westminster Abbey.

The archbishop confesses to the camera in an interview: “I have a memory that is probably about as good as our spaniel’s – in other words, zero.”

Mr Welby previously went head to head with the government after condemning its plans to tackle the small boats crisis as “morally unacceptable and politically impractical”. He recently said he was in “profound mourning” after an air strike on al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza.

The archbishop of Canterbury is expected to be knighted by the King (PA Wire)

The Mail said Mr Welby will receive the honour after being the first archbishop of Canterbury to conduct a coronation since Geoffrey Fisher, who received the same honour following the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.

Lambeth Palace declined to comment. Buckingham Palace has been contacted for comment.

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