On June 2, 1953, cameras caught Elizabeth II walking out of Buckingham Palace before boarding her golden carriage.
Carlos III has left this Saturday, May 6, directly in his carriage, which is a much more modern one than the one used by his mother.
That first difference has given rise to many others throughout the coronation of the new king of England.
In the video that accompanies this news we summarize some of the most outstanding contrasts with the collaboration of Jimmy Burns, president of the British Spanish Society, and Gerardo Correas, president of the International Organization of Ceremonial and Protocol.
Both explain how the most different elements were in the coronation of Elizabeth II.
The narration of the journalists Carlos Córdoba and Martín Bianchi in the special program broadcast by EL PAÍS serves to contrast them with the ceremony of her son Carlos, who on that occasion was only four years old.
Precisely, her role then is one of the big differences with respect to the one played by her heir, Prince William.
What Philip of Edinburgh did in 1953 in the role of Camila, who has been crowned queen, has also been very different.
And even at the end of the day, in the greeting from the Buckingham balcony, there have been important variations.