Remastered: Accession Proclamation of King George V (1910)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 30 кві 2022
- The Proclamation of Accession of King George V, as read at St James’s Palace, 1910, remastered from ‘The Proclamation of King George’, Ariel Grand Record.
#Britain #Royal #PlatinumJubilee
---
Hello there! I welcome you to the Marvin Clarence UA-cam channel.
This channel focuses on history and historical preservation, but you will also find lots of British Empire/Monarchy-related videos. Ultimately, this UA-cam channel exists as a passion project for myself, while hopefully publishing content which audiences like you are interested in.
If you would like to check my other social media, you can find me on Instagram (@wittyalbus).
If you do decide to subscribe to this channel, I earnestly hope that you enjoy watching my videos, and do inform me if you have any specific video requests!
RARE British Silver Jubilee Song ‘God Bless Our King’ (Silver Jubilee of King George V): ua-cam.com/video/nHj9ovOYTjA/v-deo.html
It's perhaps quite fitting that George V's proclamation of accession to the Royal Throne would take place at St. James' Palace since this is where the Royal Philatelic (Stamp) Collection is held and George V was an avid stamp collector. :) :) :) :) :)
I like that ye olde English has survived to 2022 and was used when King Charles III was being proclaimed - a nice tradition. If you read the texts of the proclamations they sometimes refer to the new monarch as the Prince/Princess (rather than King/Queen), in the line about "bless the royal....with long and happy years to reign over us". 👑
Quite so. That line has unfortunately been changed, however, to ‘bless His Majesty…’
Prince/princess is used in its older meaning. All sovereign rulers regardless of their actual title can be called a "prince".
God save the king George 5 The 1910 King Proclamation was amazing.
That recording came from a telephone was invented from 1876 from Alexander Graham bell
Is this a "Studio" recording or perhaps recorded especially within Saint James' Palace after the formal Proclamation? It might have been intended to be distributed throughout the realm in the days before radio. It was not possible in 1910 to make a recording like this "live" since microphones for recording purposes did not exist.
I suspect that your hypothesis is correct, especially because the line ‘Given at St. James’s Palace, this Twelfth day of December in the year of our Lord One thousand nine hundred and thirty-six’ was not read.
@@MarvinClarence You are confusing George V with George VI. George VI's proclamation was held on Dec 12, 1936 following the abdication of his older brother Edward VIII.
George V's proclamation would have been held on May 7, 1910 after Edward VII"s death the previous day.
@@davidhamilton1881 You’re right. The line I had intended to refer to was ‘Given at the Court at St James’s, this seventh day of May, in this year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and ten.’
The first microphones were in 1876 but i doubt it would have been advanced enough to be used in a record
God save the king
Rest in Peace Queen Elizabeth II God save the King 👑! Go HUG someone today IF they're been vaccinated! Blessings and Hugs 💖💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕!