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Daily Record
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Stephanie Wareham & Lucy Farrell

The Queen's state funeral explained - including who pays for the event

The Queen's state funeral is to take place on Monday September 19, in a grand procession that will honour the nation's longest serving monarch.

Since the news of her passing on Thursday September 8, detailed plans have been put into action leading up to the ceremony.

Her Majesty's coffin is currently laying at St Giles's Cathedral in Edinburgh and will be transported to London on Tuesday evening. Following her return to the capital city, the Queen will lie in state at Westminster hall until the morning of her funeral.

But how does a state funeral differ from a private ceremony? What does it entail and who pays for it? Here's what you should know, as reported by Wales Online.

What is a state funeral?

Camilla, Queen Consort and Sophie, Countess of Wessex watch on as the Queen's coffin is carried in to St Giles Cathedral on Monday. (UK PRess Via Getty Images)

A state funeral is a rare honour and is mostly reserved for the sovereign. The only monarch not to be given a state funeral in the last 295 years was Edward VIII, who abdicated.

State funerals have, on rare occasions, been held for distinguished figures including Sir Isaac Newton, Lord Nelson, the Duke of Wellington and wartime prime minister Sir Winston Churchill.

The last state funeral in the UK was Churchill’s in 1965. The last state funeral for a sovereign was for the Queen’s father, George VI, in 1952.

Who pays?

State funerals are publicly funded and are the responsibility of the Earl Marshal and the College of Arms. These large-scale events observe strict rules of protocol, held to honour people of national significance.

What is a ceremonial funeral?

Ceremonial royal funerals are held for members of the royal family who hold high military rank, for the consort of the sovereign and the heir to the throne. The Duke of Edinburgh was given a ceremonial royal funeral in 2021, as was the Queen Mother in 2002 and Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997.

Baroness Thatcher’s funeral in April 2013 was a ceremonial funeral with full military honours. To the outsider, there is little difference between a state funeral and a ceremonial one – both can include lying in state and a military procession.

But a state funeral may require a motion in Parliament for a non-sovereign, and the gun carriage bearing the coffin is pulled by Royal Navy ratings – sailors – using ropes, rather than horses.

Do the royals have private funerals?

Yes. These types of funerals are usually undertaken for all other members of the royal family, their children and spouses.

The Duke of Windsor, who abdicated as Edward VIII, was given a private royal funeral in 1972, although the Garter King of Arms proclaimed words during the service usually reserved for a state funeral and declared him “sometime the most high, most mighty and most excellent monarch Edward VIII”.

He was the only sovereign not to have a royal state funeral since 1727, when George I died and was buried abroad.

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