The sartorial stakes were predictably high for guests lucky enough to receive an invitation to King Charles III’s Coronation. And, fortunately for royal fans, attendees didn’t disappoint.
From Kate Middleton’s Alexander McQueen ivory dress and silver bullion, crystal and silver thread-work, wreath-shape headpiece, and Prince Charlotte’s simplified version of her mother’s dress, to Prince Harry’s Dior dark grey morning suit, there was much to admire. But one surprising fashion icon to emerge from Westminster Abbey was Penny Mordaunt.
Mordaunt, the leader of the House of Commons, was required to carry the 17th-Century Sword of State – which weighed a staggering 3.6kg – during the ceremony. To ‘train’ for the role, Mordaunt told the Times Red Box podcast last week: ‘I’m doing a number of things. One of them will be carrying the sword of state, which is the heaviest sword, so I’ve been doing some press-ups to train for that. That represents his authority. It was one of two swords made for Charles II and only one survives.
‘It has to be carried at right angles to the body, hence the need to do press-ups – pointing upwards, out in front of you, for some time. We practised with some replicas that were weighted, and it’s a huge honour to do it.’
She became the first woman to assume the role, and took the opportunity to break with tradition with her choice of clothing. Laura Round, Mordaunt’s former special adviser until 2019, said of the look to the Times: ‘No ceremonial uniform for a state occasion had ever been made for a female lord president, so Mordaunt paid for an outfit to be made.’
The i reports that Mordaunt declined to wear the black and gold privy councillor court outfit, worn by her male predecessors such as the Marquess of Salisbury at the late Queen’s Coronation in 1953, and created her own ‘feminised’ look for the ceremony.
She commissioned a teal-coloured dress from the London-based label…
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