The Queen cherished the Commonwealth – but change lies ahead David Olusoga
The Guardian Weekly|September 16, 2022
Our ancestors were better prepared for moments like this. The corollary of having witnessed the longest reign in British history is that only a tiny fraction of us have any memory of a monarch’s passing – and such memories that do exist are faded, unreliable recollections.
The Queen cherished the Commonwealth – but change lies ahead David Olusoga

The events of the coming days and weeks will be nothing like the royal events we do have experience of – mainly weddings and jubilees. The United Kingdom has entered a period of genuine trauma, one that will be punctuated by a series of unfamiliar rituals that, behind closed doors, have been years in the planning.

Whatever your attitude towards hereditary monarchy as an institution, it is simply not possible to be a disinterested bystander . Britain is instantly changed .

Although profound to us, the changes will be modest in historic terms. At the time of Elizabeth II’s coronation , the Labour leader and former prime minster Clement Attlee expressed his hope that the British people were witnessing “the beginning of a new Elizabethan age no less renowned than the first”. That second Elizabethan age’s conclusion coincides with a terminus moment .

Many of the most profound changes likely to follow the passing of Queen Elizabeth II will take place beyond our shores and, in many ways, are already under way.

This story is from the September 16, 2022 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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This story is from the September 16, 2022 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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