of the
Honourable Artillery Company leaving the
Royal Courts of Justice and heading south towards the
River Thames, during the second half of the 2011 Lord Mayor's Show. The office of Lord Mayor dates from 1189, and it was a requirement of the charter establishing it that the mayor travelled to the royal enclave at Westminster to present himself to the monarch's representatives, the senior judges as Barons of the Exchequer, to take an oath of loyalty to the sovereign upon beginning his term. The event is officially listed in the City's Civic Calendar as 'The Procession to the Royal Courts of Justice and Presentation of the Lord Mayor to the Chief Justices'; when the Royal Courts moved from Westminster to the
Strand location in 1882, the route was shortened. Originally, this journey was mostly made by barge on the
River Thames, the usual method of transport for this route in those days. Pageantry and display gradually grew around the trip, comparable to the far less frequent
Royal Entry parades that usually followed a
coronation or royal wedding. In the 16th century the "show" become a major entertainment for Londoners. This rests significantly on the shoulders of the Lord Mayors
Sir Rowland Hill and his friend
Sir John Gresham, in revival of the Marching Watch or Mid Summer Watches in London. In these pageants 15,000 citizens all in bright harness, with coats of white Silk or Cloath, and Chains of Gold, passed through London to Westminster, and round St. James's Park, and on to Holborn. The long daylight of June caused the civic government to fear disorder; the Watch was originally a show of the city's policing force with armed men marching in the streets., but it evolved into an annual festival of street pageantry which reached its spectacular peak in Hill's time and evolved into the Lord Mayor's Show. These developments are recorded in Lady Long's household-book at Hengrave, Suffolk, which notes that Henry VIII watched these marches from Mercers Hall with
Jane Seymour; "the presence of more than 300 demi lunces and light horsemen" were a particular highlight. In London, the show occurred annually on the day after the
feast day of
St Simon and
St Jude, 29 October. In 1751, Great Britain replaced the
Julian calendar with the
Gregorian calendar; the Lord Mayor's Show was then moved to 9 November. In 1959, another change was made: the Lord Mayor's Show is now held on the second Saturday in November. Since 1655 when the event was revived after a break of some fifteen years because of the
English Civil War, the Lord Mayor's Show has regularly been held on the scheduled day, having only been cancelled twice, firstly in 1852, when the show made way for the
state funeral of the Duke of Wellington, and secondly in 2020 when the show was cancelled because of the
COVID-19 pandemic. The modern Lord Mayor's procession is a direct descendant of that first journey to Westminster. The first '''Lady Mayor's Show''' in the event's history was held in 2025, when Dame
Susan Langley was elected as the third female to hold the post, but the first to take the of title of Lady Mayor. ==The Lord Mayor's transport==