King Charles must watch for his publish service

Aug 12, 2023 at 10:59 PM
King Charles must watch for his publish service

King Charles must wait to see his initials emblazoned over the nation’s publish containers, after the Royal Mail revealed it’s nonetheless putting in containers with Queen Elizabeth II’s insignia.

The Royal Mail says it’s persevering with to put in publish containers that had been in manufacturing or already manufactured when the Queen died final 12 months. 

A spokesperson stated: “In line with past practice, following the death of a monarch all existing post boxes will remain unchanged. Post boxes already in production or being prepared for installation, will also retain the insignia of Queen Elizabeth II.

READ MORE: Australia cancelling Commonwealth Games is ‘indirect way’ of rejecting King

The letters “EiiR” are a well-recognized sight throughout the nation as they’re seen on virtually each publish field put in through the late queen’s reign. The letter R stands for regina, Latin for queen, whereas Eii refers to Elizabeth II.

But the insignia on present publish containers stays unchanged when a brand new monarch involves the throne, which implies that tens of 1000’s will proceed to hold her initials – identified formally as a cypher.

Roughly a 3rd of publish containers truly date again to earlier than Elizabeth’s reign started in 1952, and carry the image of earlier monarchs. One in 20 have the initials VR, referring to Queen Victoria who reigned from 1837 to 1901.

The spokesperson added: “Post containers carrying the EiiR cypher (EiR in Scotland) which are at the moment operational will stay in use. We will make an announcement on the applicable time in regards to the set up of postboxes bearing the cypher of King Charles.”

In his case the cypher is anticipated to learn CiiiR, with the R this time standing for rex, Latin for king, although no formal announcement has been made.

According to the Letter Box Study Group, round one in 12 publish containers carry the insignia of the King’s grandfather, George VI. A bigger quantity, 15 p.c, have the insignia of George V.

Around one in 25 have the insignia of Edward VII. And about 150 surviving publish containers carry the insignia of Edward VIII, who reigned for lower than a 12 months in 1936 earlier than abdicating. He was later often known as the Duke of Windsor.

There are 115,000 publish containers throughout the UK. The most typical are standalone containers often known as pillar containers, principally round though a few of the earliest fashions had been hexagonal. Others embody wall containers, which are usually smaller and are put in inside partitions.