To fund the coronation, the King was able to secure £100,000 from government funds and the rest came from the huge
war reparations of 100 million
French francs which had been forced on France by the
Treaty of Paris in 1815. Preparation and furnishing Westminster Abbey and Westminster Hall cost £16,819, £111,810 was spent on jewels and plate, £44,939 on uniforms, robes and costumes, and £25,184 on the banquet. The total cost of the coronation was £238,000, the most expensive ever and more than twenty times the cost of the previous event in 1761. The organisation of the ceremonial was the responsibility of two of the
Great Officers of State; the
Lord Great Chamberlain, or in 1821, the Deputy,
Lord Gwydyr, was responsible for events in Westminster Hall, while the
Earl Marshal was in charge of the non-ecclesiastical proceedings in the abbey. However, since the holder of that hereditary post, the
Duke of Norfolk was a
Catholic and therefore excluded, he was obliged to appoint a Deputy, his
Anglican brother,
Lord Henry Howard-Molyneux-Howard, to fulfil his role. Scaffolding was erected in the abbey to seat 4,656 guests, more than three times the number at the previous coronation. Because of the limited space in the
old Palace of Westminster, the interior of Westminster Hall had been subdivided by wooden partitions to serve as courtrooms and these all had to be demolished to create the large space required for the coronation banquet, which required galleries for 2,934 spectators and 1,268 diners seated at 47 tables, some of which had to be sited in other parts of the palace. A temporary
triumphal arch was erected at the north end of the hall in the style of a medieval castle. In accordance with the vogue for
Romanticism and with his own taste for flamboyant clothes, George insisted that the participants should dress in
Tudor and
Stuart period costumes.
Peers were expected to provide their own clothing and a display of the required styles was staged at the
College of Arms in June 1820 for the benefit of their lordships' tailors. The resulting outfits on the day, according to one report, "produced much amusement among the ladies"; but Sir
Walter Scott enthused over the "gay and gorgeous and antique dress which floated before the eye". George's personal coronation outfit cost more than £24,000; his red
velvet robe was afterwards sold to
Madame Tussaud for display in her
wax museum. Although many of the
Crown Jewels had been inherited from George's ancestors, he spared no expense in enhancing their magnificence.
St Edward's Crown, dating from 1661, was actually only a frame, and most of the jewels had to be hired to be set in it; this cost £375,000 in 1821. The new
Coronation Crown of George IV was commissioned at an estimated cost of over £50,000. A crown-like hatband for George's plumed hat, now known as the
George IV State Diadem, cost £8,000, while coronets for the
royal dukes cost £4,000 and for the princesses, £2,000 each. In contrast, coronets for the extended royal family were produced for £40 each at the next coronation. ==Exclusion of Caroline==