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Saturday, 12 January 2013

Exhibition on Charles I's execution

An interesting announcement on an exhibition about Charles I and his ultimate demise...

Banqueting House commemorates Charles I’s execution with new display
30 January 2013

This January, Historic Royal Palaces, the independent charity that cares for the Banqueting House on Whitehall, invites visitors to view a new permanent display about the execution of Charles I.

The display, which will be installed in time for the anniversary of Charles’s execution, will lead visitors close to the spot where he stepped out on to the specially constructed scaffold and met his untimely death. Through a series of interpretation, the display will tell the story of the events leading up to the King’s execution, which visitors will be able to read as they climb the stairs to the main hall. These events not only led to Charles’s death, but culminated in Civil War, political unrest and, ultimately, the abolition of the British monarchy and the birth of the Commonwealth of England. Underneath the magnificent full-length portrait of Charles I by Daniel Mytens, a dramatic film will show the final few hours of the man who fought tirelessly for the divine right of Kings as he bids farewell to his children and burns his personal papers in preparation for death.

As visitors follow the new display up the grand stairs, watch the emotive film, and gaze up at this opulent ceiling on the anniversary of his death, they are thrust into the past, an age of decadence, royalty and revolution.

Following nine years of Civil War, Charles I eventually surrendered and was put on trial in January 1649. His enemies put him on trial for tyranny and treason, the verdict was guilty, the sentence – death. ‘By the severing of his head from his body’, Charles’s fate was decided. As he stepped out of a window, on the 30 January 1649, and on to the scaffold outside Banqueting House, he announced “I go from a corruptible, to an incorruptible Crown; where no disturbance can be.” As the axe fell, ‘a groan as I never heard before, and desire I may never hear again’ went up from the crowd watching the unimaginable event – the killing of the Lord’s anointed sovereign. This realisation, and the dignity with which the King conducted himself, created a great wave of emotion for the dead monarch. Charles I was recognised as a martyr and 30 January is remembered as Charles the Martyr day.

The Banqueting House is the only remaining complete building of Whitehall Palace, the sovereign’s principal residence until 1698 when it was destroyed by fire. Designed by Indigo Jones for James I, the Banqueting House was originally built for occasions of state, plays and masques. The magnificent ceiling paintings by Sir Peter Paul Rubens were commissioned by Charles to celebrate his father’s life, wise government and the divine right of Kings. Ironic, therefore, that Charles would have walked underneath this ceiling moments before his execution.

Entrance to this new permanent display is included in the palace’s admission price.

For further information, images or interview requests, please contact Emma Gough in the Historic Royal Palaces press office on 020 3166 6309 or email emma.gough@hrp.org.uk

(With thanks to Emma Gough at Historic Royal Palaces)

Chris

Pre-order my new book, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet, through Pen and Sword (30 April 2013), or purchase early at Who Do You Think You Are Live 2013 in London. For my other genealogy books, please visit  http://britishgenes.blogspot.co.uk/p/my-books.html; whilst for my online Scottish based genealogy courses please visit the Pharos Teaching and Tutoring Ltd site.

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