See vintage photos of historic coronations straight from the Nat Geo archives
King Charles’ coronation will be the newest in over a century of Nat Geo coronation coverage.
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By Allie Yang
Dancers, dignitaries, a brass band fanfare, a velvet robe trimmed in rare furs—and a crown heavy with dazzling jewels. On display is more than the new king: a coronation is an exercise of a country’s power and wealth, as well as a show of the state’s stability.
For the first time in 70 years, the United Kingdom will crown a new monarch, King Charles III. Though today the royal family’s power is predominantly ceremonial, the ceremony has remained largely unchanged in the past thousand years.
From Africa to Polynesia, National Geographic has been there to witness the ascension of many rulers dating back to the early 20th century. Here are some of the most memorable photos from our archive.
1. November to December 1911: A new king of Siam (modern day Thailand)
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
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2. November 1930: The Atse (emperor of Ethiopia) and his empress
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Before the coronation, warriors wearing colorful robes wait on the steps of St. George’s Cathedral, in Ethiopia’s capital city of Addis Ababa.
3. May 1956: Coronation in Kathmandu
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4. October 1967: The last Shah of Iran
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5. July 1967: King of Tonga
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6. June 1974: Druk Gyalpo (Dragon King) of Bhutan
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15 iconic images from the National Geographic archive
Over 115 years ago, National Geographic published its first picture essay and never looked back. These recent images are pulled from the National Geographic archive and celebrate the power of photography today.
Today, the words “National Geographic” are practically synonymous with photography.
But the inaugural issue of the magazine had not a single photograph. The first issue was published in 1888, but the first picture essay wouldn’t appear until 1905, when editor Gilbert H. Grosvenor took a risk and filled 11 pages with photographs of Tibet. Two board members resigned, appalled that the magazine was becoming “a picture book,” but reaction to the new medium was enthusiastic—and membership increased sixfold.
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Grosvenor never looked back. In 1906, he dedicated an entire issue to wildlife photography taken at night, thanks to the technological advances of photographer George Shiras III, a pioneer of flash photography. And innovation emerged alongside photography as an equally critical force in our history.
In the 1940s, Harold “Doc” Edgerton’s invention of the stroboscope electronic flash made it possible to see motion on film, and later, he collaborated with National Geographic Explorer Jacques Cousteau to develop new techniques in underwater photography—one of many firsts attributed to our photographers and engineers.
Innovation is still critical to how we tell stories today. Anand Varma combines biology and technology to make the invisible visible in his California lab. On the other side of the planet, we move from the microscopic to the epic, as Renan Ozturk utilizes cutting-edge drone technology on the north side of Mount Everest to create an image of the peak that few of us could ever see on our own. And Reuben Wu helps us see Stonehenge—a historic site that first graced our pages in 1922 and has been photographed millions of times—in new ways.
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(How the spirit of ancient Stonehenge was captured with a 21st-century drone.)
Edgerton was quoted as saying, “Don’t make me out to be an artist. I am an engineer. I am after the facts. Only the facts.” And that’s just it. To this day, our visual storytellers embrace technology in service of the story.
But it’s not just how stories are presented that has evolved. Our aperture on who is a photographer has opened, with visual storytellers from diverse lived experiences sharing the stories that matter most to their communities. It isn’t said enough: Diversity fuels creativity.
Just as storytelling at National Geographic has changed radically since its publication launched in 1888, it will change radically again in the next 135 years. Although science fiction only foreshadows where technology will take us and how information will be shared, I firmly believe we must seize all that technology has to offer to propel our visual storytelling forward. Our future audiences will thank us.
But I hope one thing will remain constant for National Geographic editors of the future—the thing, perhaps, that drove Grosvenor to publish that first picture story in 1905 and pushed us more than a century later to take viewers kayaking with scientists in Antarctica through virtual reality: Aim for a story worth telling with innovative approaches and unmatched storytellers.
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Whitney Latorre is Nat Geo’s director of visual and immersive experiences.
Portions of this work have previously appeared in 100 Best Photos: Iconic Images From This Century by Elizabeth Krist. Copyright © 2022 National Geographic Partners, LLC.
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