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The present Duke and Duchess of Gloucester |
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Procession through Leicester |
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The King's coffin is strewn with white roses for the House of York |
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The King's Guard |
Here are some phenomenal photos of the funeral of Richard III, the last Plantagenet King of England:
Some threw
Yorkist white roses on the passing coffin. Strange shades of the funeral
procession of Princess Diana in 1997. The atmosphere was, of course,
wholly different. And yet, this was an event which could not fail to
remind us of the unique, mysterious visceral hold which royalty has on
our affections.
At
one point, mounted police had to join in and clear a path through the
streets. It would be hard to imagine greater crowds should Leicester
City ever get round to winning the FA Cup.
Earlier,
around the Bosworth battlefield where Richard came to a violent end in
August 1485, he was greeted with periodic applause from thousands who
had lined the roads, many of them carrying white roses.
Half
a millennium on, the War of the Roses still evokes strong emotions.
There remain many who believe passionately that Richard should have been
buried in York – in the heart of his old northern powerbase – rather
than Leicester.
Leeds
taxi driver Shaun Dixon had not only come to pay his respects yesterday
but had even gone to the trouble of commissioning and unfurling a
banner proclaiming: ‘If the King can’t come to Yorkshire, Yorkshire will
come to the King.’ (
Read more.)
More
HERE.
The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass will be offered for the repose of the King's soul.
According to the Catholic Herald:
A Requiem Mass in the traditional Latin form is to be offered at a
Catholic church in Lancashire to mark the reinterment of King Richard
III, which will take place on the same day at Leicester’s Anglican
cathedral.
The mortal remains of Richard III, who died in the Battle of Bosworth
in 1485, before the Reformation, will be reinterred in the cathedral on
March 26, in the presence of the Archbishop of Canterbury and an
invited congregation.
The Requiem Mass for the repose of Richard III’s soul will be held on
the same day St Catherine’s Church, in Leyland, Lancashire, at 7.30pm.
It will be a Sung High Latin Mass with singers from the Laeta Cantoribus
Choir, “in the style and manner of (Richard III’s) day”.
“The idea is that it will be closer to what he might have experienced
in his own lifetime, as a pre-reformation Catholic,” said parish priest
Fr Simon Henry.
After the service, refreshments will be served, also in keeping with what King Richard might have expected in his lifetime.
“The food afterwards will make at least a nod in the direction of the
15th century, or at least to his Yorkshire connections,” said Fr Henry.
“Though wild boar sausages are a little difficult to come by!”
The skeleton of Richard III was found under a car park in Leicester
in 2012. In the days before the reinterment service at Leicester
Cathedral, the coffin will be taken to Leicester University and Bosworth
Field, where the king was was killed in battle.
Following the Leicester Cathedral service, Richard III’s body will lie “in repose” for three days before being reinterred.
Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster will be part of the week-long run of events to mark the reinterment.
The cardinal will preach at a service of compline on the day the
king’s remains are received into the cathedral and will celebrate a
Requiem Mass the next day at a nearby Catholic parish.
Dominican friars will also sing vespers at the cathedral in the
run-up to the reinterment and Fr David Rocks OP, parish priest, will
preach at a lunchtime Eucharist. (Read more.)
Nancy Bilyeau writes of the history of the Greyfriars. To quote:
There is no record of what
Richard III thought of the Franciscans, Observant or otherwise, but
considering that they braved a ferocious political climate to give him
Christian burial, the relationship could only have been good. His
successor, Henry VII, rather surprisingly, held the friars of Greenwich
in high esteem as well. He arranged for the installment of stained glass
in their church, and left them 200 pounds in his will as he “knew that
they had been many times in peril of ruin for lack of food.”
But
perhaps the greatest sign of Henry VII’s regard for the Observant
Franciscans is that he chose to have his second son, the future Henry
VIII, baptized in their chapel at Greenwich.
For
a time, all was well in the new reign. Henry VIII arranged for the
Observants to say two Masses daily for his father’s soul. In 1513, he
wrote to Pope Leo X saying he could not commend enough the Franciscans’
strict adherence to poverty and sincerity, charity and devotion. His
wife, the Spanish Catherine of Aragon, went even further. She was often
accompanied by her Franciscan confessors and, in middle age, wore a
habit under her robes.
All
the players were in place, then, for one of the greatest clashes of the
King’s Divorce. When Henry VIII sought to have his marriage to Catherine
annulled so that he could father a son with the young Anne Boleyn, the
Observant friars sided with Catherine and opposed him, showing
tremendous—if not suicidal—amounts of courage.
After
Catherine of Aragon had been banished from court, Franciscan Friar
William Peto, in his Easter Sunday sermon in 1532, preached to a full
church, with both Henry and Anne Boleyn in attendance, that if the king
pursued his divorce, he would incur the same fate as Ahab and the dogs
would lick his blood. After the sermon, Peto told the king to his face
that divorce put his throne in jeopardy and that there were mutterings
Henry had slept with both Anne’s sister and mother. There is no known
record of greater defiance in the presence of the king.
Yet
Henry VIII did not strike back. Astonishingly, Friar Peto was not
arrested; he was allowed to go into exile. The following year, Henry
VIII had his daughter with Anne Boleyn, the future Elizabeth I, baptized
in the same Greenwich friary church as he had been.
But
executions of more defiant followed, and a rebellion broke out in the
North. Mercy was harder to come by. Another Observant Franciscan, Friar
John Forest, a former confessor to Catherine of Aragon, bore the full
brunt of Henry VIII’s rage. He refused to swear to the authority of the
king as supreme head of the Church of England. After several years of
imprisonment, Forest, 67 years old, was taken to Smithfield on May 22,
1538, and burned to death. About 200 Franciscans are believed to have
been imprisoned for refusing to swear loyalty to king over pope; perhaps
50 died in captivity. (More here.)
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The service at the Anglican Cathedral |
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