Part of the traditional content of British
coronations, the texts for all four anthems were picked by Handel—a personal selection from the most accessible account of an earlier coronation, the
Coronation of James II and VII and Mary in 1685. The text is a translation of the traditional
antiphon,
Unxerunt Salomonem, itself derived from the
biblical account of the anointing of
Solomon by the priest
Zadok (
1 Kings 1:38-40). These words have been used in every English, and later British, coronation since that of King
Edgar at
Bath Abbey in 973. An earlier
setting is thought to have been written by
Thomas Tomkins for the coronation of King
Charles I in 1626, the text of which has survived but not the music.
Henry Lawes wrote another for the coronation of King
Charles II in 1661. This was also sung at James II's in 1685, although the music may have been amended to accommodate changes to the text made by Archbishop
William Sancroft. At the coronation itself on 11 October 1727, the choir of
Westminster Abbey sang
Zadok the Priest in the wrong part of the service; they had earlier entirely forgotten to sing one anthem and another ended "in confusion".
Lyrics The lyrics of the piece are
biblical, being a distillation of
1 Kings 1:34-45: ==Structure==