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  1. The Peacock dress of Lady Curzon is a gown made of gold and silver thread embroidered by the Workshop of Kishan Chand (India), and designed by Jean-Philippe Worth for Mary Curzon, Baroness Curzon of Kedleston to celebrate the 1902 Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra at the second Delhi Durbar in 1903. [1]

  2. 39 John Fortescue, Narrative of the visit to India of Their Majesties King George V, and Queen Mary and of the coronation durbar held at Delhi 12th December 1911 (London, 1912), p. 137. 40 40 ‘King George's reply to the mutiny veterans’, His Majesty King George's speeches (Madras, 1932), p. xxxii.

  3. 13 de ene. de 2023 · The first coronation made Queen Victoria as Qaisar-i-Hind or the Empress of India and is the base on which future public processions, including Republic Day, are based. But the second Delhi Durbar which announced George V as the King Emperor of India was done at a scale that was ‘never before attempted’. And Stephen Wheeler complied the ...

  4. 21 de nov. de 2011 · The Coronation Durbar of King George V and Queen Mary was held in the purpose-built Coronation Park in Delhi in December 1911. The purpose of the durbar was to honour George V as the ‘king-emperor’ of India; but it was also at the durbar that he announced the transfer of the Capital of British India from Calcutta to Delhi.

  5. "The Great Coronation Durbar - Delhi 1911". www.britishpathe.com. British Pathé Delhi, India. Pan across huge dais in the midst of a massive arena. Thousands of troops form up and hundreds of civil and military dignitaries arrive. King George V and Queen Mary arrive and take the place on the dais where they receive homage.

  6. 5 de feb. de 2022 · The grandest of them all is of King George V, who held the Delhi Durbar in 1911, along with Queen Mary. The 52-acre park is the resting place of statues of British monarchs and viceroys.

  7. The celebrations in India, known as the Delhi Durbar or the Imperial Durbar, took place from 29 December 1902 to 10 January 1903, and were attended by the Duke of Connaught, King Edward’s brother. The programme of events lasted a fortnight and were on a scale never before attempted. The Viceroy’s own camp included nearly 3,000 people, and ...