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  • Three young women tourists admire The Coronation of Napoleon (Le Sacre de Napoléon), a painting of almost 10 x 6 metres completed in 1807 by Jacques-Louis David, the official painter of Napoleon. The crowning and the coronation took place at Notre-Dame de Paris, a way for Napoleon to make it clear that he was a son of the Revolution.
    louvre_paris15-17-08-2012.jpg
  • Photograph of film director Alfred Hitchcock on the Coronation Street TV soap set alongside the modern Starbucks logo.
    hitchcock_starbucks04-07-10-2015.jpg
  • Photograph of film director Alfred Hitchcock on the Coronation Street TV soap set alongside the modern Starbucks logo.
    hitchcock_starbucks03-07-10-2015.jpg
  • Photograph of film director Alfred Hitchcock on the Coronation Street TV soap set alongside the modern Starbucks logo.
    hitchcock_starbucks01-07-10-2015.jpg
  • Photograph of film director Alfred Hitchcock on the Coronation Street TV soap set alongside the modern Starbucks logo.
    hitchcock_starbucks02-07-10-2015.jpg
  • Photograph of film director Alfred Hitchcock on the Coronation Street TV soap set outside the IPC Media offices in south London.
    hitchcock_starbucks05-07-10-2015.jpg
  • Ironwork celebrating Queen Elizabeth's coronation in 1953, around an oak tree at a remote lane near Irstead in rural Norfolk.
    ER_195301-01-08-2013.jpg
  • A detail of a City of London Goldsmith's street sign on the corner of Suffolk Lane and Lombard Street in the heart of the capital's financial district. A golden crown sits above the head of an eminent 18th century financier. Such hanging signs were banned by Charles II, but replicas were erected for the coronation of Edward VII in 1902.
    city_architecture11-04-03-2013.jpg
  • High up on the buttresses of Westminster Abbey in central London during the mid-90s, new white Portland and Caen stone replaces the blackened materials of old - discoloured after a hundred years of pollution from the capital's industrial revolution and traffic fumes. Portland stone is a limestone from the Tithonian stage of the Jurassic period quarried on the Isle of Portland, Dorset. Westminster Abbey, is a large, mainly Gothic church, in the City of Westminster, London, United Kingdom, located just to the west of the Palace of Westminster. It is the traditional place of coronation and burial site for English, later British and later still (and currently) monarchs of the Commonwealth realms. The abbey is a Royal Peculiar and briefly held the status of a cathedral from 1540 to 1550.
    new_stonework01-12-06-1985.jpg
  • A detail of a City of London Goldsmith's street sign on the corner of Suffolk Lane and Lombard Street in the heart of the capital's financial district. A cat and fiddle with and UBS and for Goldsmith's are with the background of more modern architecture. Such hanging signs were banned by Charles II, but replicas were erected for the coronation of Edward VII in 1902.
    city_architecture15-04-03-2013.jpg
  • Banking institutions' street signs - incl TSB, left - on Lombard Street in the heart of the capital's financial district. A cat and fiddle with an ornate clock are with the background of more modern architecture. Such hanging signs were banned by Charles II, but replicas were erected for the coronation of Edward VII in 1902.
    city_architecture13-04-03-2013.jpg
  • A detail of a City of London Goldsmith's street sign on the corner of Suffolk Lane and Lombard Street in the heart of the capital's financial district. A golden crown sits above the head of an eminent 18th century financier. Such hanging signs were banned by Charles II, but replicas were erected for the coronation of Edward VII in 1902.
    city_architecture10-04-03-2013.jpg
  • Memorial folly in cemetery of Church of the Holy Rude in Stirling. It is one of the town's most historically important buildings. It was rebuilt in the 1400s after Stirling suffered a catastrophic fire in 1405, and is the only surviving church in the United Kingdom apart from Westminster Abbey, to have held a coronation. On 29 July 1567 the infant son of Mary, Queen of Scots, was crowned James VI of Scotland here. Musket shot marks from Cromwell's troops during the War of the Three Kingdoms are clearly visible on the tower and apse. Another important historical religious site in the area is Cambuskenneth Abbey.
    stirling_cemetery04-30-07-2010-1.jpg
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