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New era for Denmark as Queen Margrethe abdicates

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
New era for Denmark as Queen Margrethe abdicates
Danmark's Queen Margrethe is escorted by the Guard Hussar Regiment's Mounted Squadron in the gold carriage from Amalienborg Castle to Christiansborg Castle , where she will abdicate later on Sunday. Photo: Nikolai Linares/Ritzau Scanpix

Denmark turns a page in its history on Sunday as Queen Margrethe abdicates and her son becomes King Frederik X, with more than 100,000 Danes out for the unprecedented event.

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Thousands of people assembled on Sunday outside Copenhagen's Christiansborg Palace despite the winter chill, many bundled up in warm bonnets and ski pants to ward off the freezing temperatures.

"We're very excited to see this historic event ... it's going to be very big, a very important moment in Danish history," said 35-year-old Renee Jense, decked out with her friends in playful red velvet robes and crowns.

The hugely popular Queen Margrethe II, 83, left her residence atCopenhagen's Amalienborg Palace shortly after 1:30pm for a short carriage ride to Christiansborg Palace, the seat of government and parliament.

There, at a Council of State at 2pm, she will sign a declaration of abdication ending her 52-year reign, only the second time a Danish sovereign has stepped down, the last one Erik III almost nine centuries ago in 1146.

Her 55-year-old son Frederik -- who will also attend the Council of State along with his Australian-born wife Mary and their eldest child, 18-year-old Prince Christian -- automatically becomes king and head of state upon Margrethe's abdication.

Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen will then proclaim him King Frederik X on the balcony of Christiansborg Palace.

There was a heavy police presence in the capital, decked out in red-and-white flags for the occasion. Copenhagen police official Peter Dahl told AFP he expected "more than 100,000 people" in the streets.

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 'Soul of the nation'

Aske Julius, a 27-year-old Copenhagen resident, called Margrethe "the embodiment of Denmark... the soul of the nation." "More than half of the Danish population has never known anything else but the queen," he said.

Portraits and banners around the capital thanked the queen for her years of service, with cheeky signs in the metro declaring "Thanks for the Ride, Margrethe".

Others read "Long Live the King".

Apart from the abdication, the protocol is largely similar to previous royal successions in Denmark.

No foreign dignitaries or royals are invited, and there is no coronation or throne for the new monarch.

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'Different' monarch

Experts say that passing the baton to her son now will give him time to flourish in his role as monarch, after gradually taking on increasing responsibilities.

"She thinks the crown prince is totally ready to take over. And she wants to avoid a situation like in Great Britain where Prince Charles became King Charles after the age of 70," historian Lars Hovbakke Sørensen told AFP.

Like his mother, Frederik, who has been crown prince since the age of three, enjoys the support of more than 80 percent of Danes.

But he is expected to bring his own style to the monarchy, which dates back to the 10th century Viking era.

"Queen Margrethe II is a woman of her time and Frederik also lives in his own era. He understood that he could not copy her and has managed to define
his own image, his own ties to the Danish people," another historian, Bo Lidegaard, told AFP.

"We will have a different type of monarch, much more informal in his way of speaking with people when he travels across the country," his colleague Hovbakke Sørensen added.

In Denmark the monarch's role is largely ceremonial, but he or she does sign legislation, formally presides over the forming of a government and meets with the cabinet regularly.

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