Monarch lays wreath at the Cenotaph under November sunshine as thousands honour fallen servicemen and women
King Charles III led the United Kingdom’s annual Remembrance Sunday ceremony in central London on Sunday, gathering alongside veterans, military personnel and dignitaries to honour the country’s war dead.
As Westminster’s Big Ben bell tolled eleven o’clock, thousands fell silent for two minutes, only the sound of an artillery blast and Royal Marines buglers breaking the stillness.
Dressed in the uniform of an army field-marshal, the seventy-six-year-old monarch laid a wreath of red paper poppies on a black background at the foot of the Cenotaph memorial on Whitehall, the stone tribute erected a century ago to honour those who died in the First World War.
The wreath-laying was followed by the heir to the throne,
Prince William, and other senior royals.
Also in attendance were Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, senior political leaders and Commonwealth diplomats, all paying homage in the nation's central act of remembrance.
Queen Camilla and the Princess of Wales observed proceedings from the standard balcony of the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office.
The ceremony carried added weight this year against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine and the wider context of defence readiness in Britain, which plans to allocate 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product to defence by 2035. March-past after the service featured around ten thousand veterans, including small numbers of Second World War veterans, the youngest of whom was ninety-eight years old.
Absent from the royal party was the King’s younger brother, Prince Andrew, stripped of his titles last month and relieved of his royal residence over his relationship with the late Jeffrey Epstein.
The event remains one of Britain’s most closely observed national ceremonies, held every year on the Sunday closest to 11 November, the anniversary of Armistice in 1918. Whitehall fell into respectful quiet as thousands honoured “the glorious dead” in the heart of the capital.