What will happen when Prince Charles and Camilla Parker become kings of England
After the details of what will happen when Queen Elizabeth dies have been released, is the UK ready to have Charles as king?
Last week, a detailed report revealed exactly what will happen when the queen dies, The Guardian reported, including the use of a secret code to prevent news from leaking before officials have been notified.
From there a plan will be launched to alert the world that the longest serving head of state has died.
But when the time comes, is the world ready for Prince Charles to take the throne, and for Camilla to stand by her side as queen consort?
Contrary to popular opinion, Carlos - the world's most patient apprentice with the toughest responsibility on the planet - will be king.
Just as Queen Elizabeth became the new monarch upon the death of her father, King George VI - on February 6, 1952, while on tour in Kenya - Charles will be king from the moment the queen passes away.
Australian Monarchical League succession expert James Ellis told news.com.au that any romantic notion about Charles abdicating to grant the throne to his popular son, Prince William, would be fantastic, but it won't happen.
"It is not a popularity contest," Ellis said. "The heir to the throne does not renounce his right to succession. Carlos will be king !?, he said.
Ellis said Charles's idea of giving up his right to the throne may have its roots in the abdication of the queen's uncle Edward VIII, who left his brother - the queen's father - to be king.
The event took place in 1936, and it was a "constitutional crisis" for the monarchy.
But Ellis said that Edward VIII was a "reluctant" unoccupied with his rightful inheritance and that times had changed since an English king had to abdicate before marrying a twice divorced woman, like Wallis Simpson.
"It was a problem then because the king is also the head of the Church of England," he said.
Majesty magazine editor-in-chief Ingrid Seward admitted that assumptions that the crown will jump Carlos to land on William are wrong.
"Being the heir to the throne is not a job. It is a thing of inheritance and whether you like it or not, you are next in line, that is, Carlos and then William?" Ingrid expressed.
"Of course, Carlos will become king ... unless he dies before his mother," he said.
When the queen passes the succession, it will be done quickly and following a very specific plan.
"The day after the death of the queen, the flags will rise again, around 11 in the morning. From that moment Carlos will be proclaimed king," said The Guardian in its widely read article London Bridge is down ?, the plan secret for the days after the queen's death.
Inside St James's Palace before the Council of Accession of Great Britain, Richard Tillbrook, secretary of the Privy Council of Great Britain, will read the proclamation of the new king.
Carlos will then introduce his wife as Queen Camilla.
The trumpeters will blow their horns from the palace balcony, the ritual proclamations will begin and then King Charles II and Queen Camilla will step out onto the balcony to greet the British people.
Charles's coronation ceremony may be held the year after his appointment, but Professor Flint said the "holy" moment will be so unusual and special that it may even captivate the most incredulous.
"It is the last true coronation in the world, a mystical and religious ceremony that prevails to this day," he said.
The queen is still alive, but there is understandable speculation about what will happen next, especially considering a couple of recent episodes of her poor health. Despite them, the monarch boasts an improvement, so her death seems to be distant.
Carlos's time as monarch - even if he lives like his parents at the age of 90 - can only be 25 years from now.
"Because of his age, when he comes to the throne, Carlos will be seen as a transitory monarch, compared to the queen," Ellis said.
"Next in line is William, and then George, and there will be a series of titles awarded to William and Harry after Charles is king. We will see three generations of kings, which is what society was used to seeing within. the English monarchy before Elizabeth II ?, he stressed.
As for Camilla, she will be by her husband's side as queen consort, but she will have no ruling power.
COMMONWEALTH'S PUBLIC OPINION ON THE NEW SOVEREIGN?
Ellis stressed that people will remember the queen as "a stabilizing force in a rapidly changing world" and this is what Carlos would have to adapt to as her successor.
"When you think of the queen's reign, barely seven years after the end of World War II, there is not a single global event in recent history that she has not witnessed. She has been an anchor point and is will lose, but Carlos will know what to do ?, he confessed.
"One of the first things Carlos will do is tour the Commonwealth and I think it will be well received," Ellis wrote.
"There is an opinion poll that says his son is the most popular, but I think Carlos will be accepted. He may upset some people with his personal views on architecture and global warming, but I think he will not continue to express those views as king. ? said Flint.
Across the Commonwealth, there are various questions about the ability of the next monarch to rule.
? Are you fit for work? ? Is he a shameful old man who talks to plants and who married the woman with whom he cheated on poor Diana ???
There will also be some reflection on how different it would have been with Queen Diana, even 20 years after his death.
But Ellis said that as time has passed and Carlos's image has "calmed down," Camilla has also been accepted, as has her genuine work been recognized by a list of worthy causes.
The Duchess has been raising awareness of rape and sexual abuse, speaking to victims in the UK and around the world. She is also an advocate for literacy, once saying, "I strongly believe in the importance of igniting a passion for reading in the next generation."
Its other causes include animal welfare, poverty and homelessness.
James Ellis says the new king's early days will include Prince William inheriting his father's titles such as the Duke of Cornwall and the Duke of Rothesey.
"Harry will probably get a dukedom too," Ellis said.
"If William becomes Prince of Wales, Charles' current title, it has to be awarded. This is expected to happen in the first year or two," he added.
King Charles III and Queen Camilla would have to visit the Commonwealth within the first year of their reign to help put their stamp on the sovereign community.
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