A profound respect for history and tradition, with modern touches, was the message conveyed by the garments King Charles and Queen Camilla wore on 6 May. A few days before the ceremony, it was confirmed that The King would wear the traditional ceremonial robes for the most central and sacred part of the ritual.
For the investiture, the gold supertunica, originally worn by his great-grandfather, George V, was put on over the colobium sindonis (‘shroud tunic’), a simple white shift. Then, prior to being crowned, he was assisted into the magnificent Imperial Mantle, made for the coronation of George IV in 1821, and embellished with fleurs-de-lis, imperial eagles and national flower emblems.