Queen Elizabeth II's reign Queen Elizabeth II, who first attended Royal Maundy as Princess Elizabeth of York in 1935, was absent from the service only five times during her long reign. She was absent twice following childbirth, and twice because she was visiting other parts of
the Commonwealth, and, at age 95, did not attend the 2022 service at
St George's Chapel in Windsor, with
Charles, Prince of Wales and
Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall standing in her place. (centre, in blue) and
Prince Philip hold
nosegays as they leave
Wakefield Cathedral in West Yorkshire after the 2005 Royal Maundy . All male participants from 1936 to 1979 received (from left) a white purse with green strings in the first distribution, containing the clothing allowance, and in the second distribution a red purse with white strings containing the allowances in lieu of provisions and the monarch's gown, and a white purse with red strings containing the Maundy money. Elizabeth II viewed the service as an important part of her devotional life. It was the only occasion on which she visited others to make awards, as recipients of honours usually came to her. According to
Ronald Allison and Sarah Riddell in their
Royal Encyclopedia, the service "has become the occasion of a royal pilgrimage to different parts of the country". Elizabeth directed that the service not be held in London more often than once in ten years. Westminster Abbey was the site of the 2001 Royal Maundy, and again in 2011. The 2011 service was billed as the first ever televised, but in fact the 1979, 1982 and 1986 services were televised on
BBC1. The ceremony has only been held outside England twice: in 1982, at
St Davids Cathedral in Wales, and 2008, at
St Patrick's Cathedral in Northern Ireland. With the 2017 service at
Leicester Cathedral, every Anglican cathedral in England has hosted the Royal Maundy, and all did so with Elizabeth in attendance. The 2020 and 2021 services were cancelled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic; the gifts to the chosen recipients were sent by post, after the coins were blessed at the Chapel Royal.
King Charles III's reign Charles III's first Maundy service as king took place at
York Minster on 6 April 2023, accompanied by Queen Camilla. After the announcement in February 2024 that the King was stepping back from royal duties following a diagnosis of cancer, Queen Camilla deputised for her husband at the 2024 service at
Worcester Cathedral, with the King sending an audio message to the Maundy recipients expressing his "great sadness" at his absence. Venues under Charles III: • 2023:
York Minster • 2024:
Worcester Cathedral (represented by Queen Camilla) • 2026:
St Asaph Cathedral Recipients and ceremony The recipients are pensioners, chosen on an interdenominational basis from various Christian churches for their service to their churches and communities. In most years, recipients are nominated by Christian clergy of various denominations in the diocese where the service is held. In 2011, however, as well as recipients representing Westminster Abbey, forty recipients came from the Anglican
Diocese of Gibraltar in Europe, which covers continental Europe, and forty from the
Diocese of Sodor and Man, which consists of the
Isle of Man. Robert Patterson,
Bishop of Sodor and Man, while at a conference of Anglican bishops, had invited Elizabeth to
his cathedral for Maundy services; he received word that this would be too difficult, but that his diocese could nominate recipients. For 2012, in honour of
her Diamond Jubilee, recipients were selected from all 44 dioceses in the United Kingdom for the service at York Minster. The
Yeomen of the Guard are present at the ceremony and serve as "Indoor Guard"; the
choir of the Chapel Royal is also present. Six wandsmen, whose original function is uncertain, guide the recipients to their places and render any other help which is needed. Present at the ceremony are four Maundy Children (formally "Children of the Royal Almonry"), two boys and two girls. The original Maundy Children were four old men, charity recipients, whose sole duty was to attend at the Royal Maundy service wearing linen scarves. As their fees for the service amounted to over twenty pounds per year, this was deemed an abuse of charity, and in 1808 the old men were pensioned off and replaced by actual children. The first children appointed from 1808 did not personally attend the service, but their parents received five
guineas per year to aid in their education until the age of fourteen, and four other children from schools in the
City of Westminster represented them at the service. Today, the Maundy Children are chosen from religious and state schools, and receive a set of Maundy coins for their participation. Officials in the Maundy service wear towels over their clothing, worn over the shoulder and tied at the waist. The linen towels were once retained by their wearers, but since 1883, the same towels, laundered each year, have been used. In 1968, a
royal warrant was granted to
Barrow Hepburn and Gale to produce the traditional white and red leather purses, which continues to today. Until 1979, Queen Elizabeth II made two distributions of money in leather purses to each recipient. The first distribution, given to women in green purses and to men in white, was of an allowance in lieu of the clothing formerly given. The white purses used for the clothing allowance may be distinguished from the white purses which contained Maundy money, as the former was tied with a short green string; the latter bears a long red string. The clothing allowance purses had been introduced in 1936; prior to that, the clothing allowance was distributed in a paper packet. In the second distribution two purses were given by the monarch; the red one contained £1.50 for provisions, once given in kind, and the additional sum of £1 mandated by Elizabeth I. The white purses contained the Maundy money. After 1979, the separate distribution of the clothing allowance was discontinued—the gifts have now been consolidated, and recipients thereafter received two purses in a single distribution, one white containing the Maundy coins, and one red containing the other money. The distributions were consolidated so as to reduce the physical strain of the ceremony on Elizabeth as she aged. The red purse contains £1 representing the money for redemption of the monarch's gown, £3 in lieu of the clothing once given, and £1.50 in place of the food once presented, totalling £5.50. In 2024, for the ceremony at Worcester Cathedral, the £5.50 not given in Maundy money took the form of a £5 coin with the image of a Tudor dragon and a 50p recognising the
Royal National Lifeboat Institution's 200th anniversary. which describes the
Last Judgment. The monarch makes half of the presentations after the first lesson, and half after the second. Anthems, led by the Chapel Royal choir and the local choir, are sung while the distribution is going on, concluding with
George Frideric Handel's coronation anthem "
Zadok the Priest". The Royal Maundy service concludes with prayers, "
God Save the King" and the blessing. Two hymns are sung; there is no address. Six silver dishes are used to hold the gifts; one, the traditional Maundy Dish, forms part of the Royal Regalia and is held at the
Tower of London when not in use. All six dishes date from the reign of Charles II; five of the six have been added to the service since 1971. They are held by the Yeomen as the monarch walks about, greeting recipients and giving them their gifts. The Lord High Almoner receives his only recompense for his position if he attends the Royal Maundy service—a small fee, though payable in Maundy money. The Pope still performs the , as does the
Archbishop of Canterbury. In recent years, the has become more popular across Christian denominations, and even as a gesture of humility among those serving the poor. Today, the Royal Maundy ceremony involves a considerable security operation, with drains in the area checked. Two 17-year-old boys were arrested in
Wakefield in 2005 for popping balloons in the area of the service, as the sound could have been mistaken for gunfire. The monarch interacts informally with the Maundy recipients, it is said, some of whom have given gifts in return—one participant handed Queen Elizabeth II a jar of
marmalade. Mercia Tapsell, a 71-year-old Maundy recipient who participated in the 1992 ceremony at
Chester for her work with the
Salvation Army, spoke of the ceremony before her death in July of that year: It surpassed anything that I ever thought. I didn't ever think that I should be in the cathedral with the Queen and all the dignitaries that were there. And the singing, the organ, the Queen, just everything and everybody. It's really been out of this world. Just to hear
Zadok the Priest, I think, has lifted me to Cloud Nine, because it's something that I love. And to hear that and to have the Queen pass so close to me. And yes, she smiled. She smiled at me. == Maundy coinage ==