The Chairperson of the Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Borjana Krišto, as the official representative of Bosnia and Herzegovina, will attend the coronation of the British King Charles III in London on May 6.
The ceremony will be attended by numerous leaders from around the world.
Camilla will be named Queen first, and then Charles will be crowned with the Crown of St. Edward.
Britain’s King Charles and Camilla, the queen consort, will arrive at Westminster Abbey for the coronation on May 6 in the sovereign’s newest state carriage and depart in the oldest. The procession will be much shorter than when Queen Elizabeth II was crowned in 1953.
They will ride in the Diamond Jubilee state coach, which was first used in 2014. However, he will return to the palace in the traditional, but uncomfortable, Gold State Coach, a carriage that has been used at every coronation since the 1830s.
In keeping with the king’s desire for a smaller-scale ceremony, the 2.1km procession will be much shorter than the one organized for his mother’s coronation, who traveled in a golden state carriage on both journeys. Her outward route to the Abbey was 1.6 miles (2.6 km) long and the return was approximately 5 miles (8 km), passing through the Haymarket, Piccadilly, Hyde Park Corner, Oxford Street and East Carriage Drive in Hyde Park.
The King and Queen will instead travel to the Abbey in a royal procession along the Mall, through Admiralty Arch and along the south side of Trafalgar Square, down Whitehall and Parliament Street. The procession will then travel around the east and south sides of Parliament Square to the Broad Sanctuary to arrive at Westminster Abbey, where the coronation ceremony will begin at 11am.
After the coronation, the couple will return to Buckingham Palace by the same route. The second procession will be far larger in scale and will consist of thousands of members of the UK, Commonwealth and British Overseas Territories armed forces marching and lining the route.
After the coronation, the new king and queen will travel from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace in a golden state carriage. The carriage was commissioned in 1760, and was first used by King George III, for a trip to the State Opening of Parliament in 1762.
On their return to Buckingham Palace, the King and Queen will receive a royal salute from the British and Commonwealth Armed Forces on parade for the day.