How can you attend the Queen’s lying-in-state ahead of her funeral?
Doors of Westminster Hall are open 24 hours a day as thousands file past coffin
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Westminster Hall is remaining open 24 hours a day to allow thousands of members of the public to pay their respects to Queen Elizabeth II as she lies in state for four and a half days before her funeral.
Queues of those wishing to file past the coffin have been up to 24 hours long, as some have had to queue overnight for their opportunity to pass through the hall - a process that only takes a matter of minutes.
The oak coffin bearing the late monarch’s body arrived at the 900-year-old hall – the oldest part of the Palace of Westminster – on Wednesday afternoon, following a ceremonial procession bringing it from Buckingham Palace.
Doors opened for the lying-in-state at 5pm on Wednesday and viewing will continue until 6.30am on the day of the funeral, Monday 19 September.
The closed coffin rests on a raised platform, called a catafalque, and will be draped in the Royal Standard with the orb and sceptre placed on top.
Each corner of the platform is guarded around the clock by a vigil of units from the Sovereign’s Bodyguard, the Household Division, or Yeoman Warders of the Tower of London.
The first British monarch to lie in state in Westminster Hall was Edward VII in 1910, and he was followed by George V and the Queen’s father George VI, as well as the Queen’s grandmother Mary and mother Elizabeth.
When the Queen Mother lay in state in 2002, the guard was mounted by her four grandsons, the Prince of Wales – now King Charles III – Prince Andrew, Prince Edward and Viscount Linley.
Commoners are rarely permitted to lie in state in Westminster Hall, but the honour was granted to former prime ministers William Gladstone in 1898 and Winston Churchill in 1965.
Flowers, candles and soft toys cannot be taken into the Hall and photography will not be permitted.
Visitors are required to remain silent inside the Hall and stewards and police patrol queues round the clock, removing anyone responsible for anti-social behaviour such as queue-jumping or drunkenness. Queuers are given wristbands to prevent individuals queuing on behalf of someone else.
Members of the public are urged to plan their visit carefully, dress suitably, bring snacks and drinks and phone chargers for the queue and carry no more than one small bag. Airport-style security will be in place.
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