Queen’s coffin travels from Balmoral to Edinburgh as thousands line route

The Queen’s coffin will travel over 100 miles on Sunday through the Scottish Highlands towards Edinburgh, with thousands of people packing the streets to watch it pass before it goes on public view.

The late monarch will lie in state at St Giles Cathedral on Edinburgh’s High Street for 24 hours from 5pm on Monday.

Members of the royal family, including King Charles, will stand beside the coffin from 7.20pm in a tradition known as the Vigil of the Princes.

JOURNEY BEGINS AT 10AM SUNDAY

The hearse set off from Balmoral Castle at 10am in a convoy of cars before slowly making its way through the small villages of Ballater and Aboyne. Many in Ballater, a Victorian village in the heart of Deeside, will know the royal family from their summers spent at Balmoral.

The Queen was known to meet walkers in the Cairngorms and local Ballater tradesmen were invited to the annual Ghillies Ball, held at the castle, for a night of Scottish dancing.

The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh after unveiling a plaque on the Royal Bridge, Ballater (PA)
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh after unveiling a plaque on the Royal Bridge, Ballater (PA)
The coffin will pass by the Loch of Aboyne (The Independent)
The coffin will pass by the Loch of Aboyne (The Independent)

MAIN POINTS ON SCOTTISH ROUTE

From Ballater, the coffin headed to Aboyne, a village with a population of only a few thousand, which sits on the River Dee. The convoy drove along a picturesque road, with heather moors on one side and the freshwater Loch Kinord on the other before arriving at Aboyne.

From there, the procession continued on the A93, a road which follows the River Dee as it headed east to Aberdeen.

The convoy also headed to Banchory, another Aberdeenshire town, where the River Feugh meets the River Dee.

The Queen’s coffin will be moved from Balmoral castle to Edinburgh (PA)
The Queen’s coffin will be moved from Balmoral castle to Edinburgh (PA)

Aberdeen, a port city and home to almost 200,000 people, saw further crowds when the cortege passed on Sunday morning at around 11am.

From there, the Queen’s coffin was driven south through Stonehaven, a pretty harbour town on the north-east coast, and on to Dundee, Scotland’s fourth-largest city at around 2pm.

EDINBURGH IS FINAL DESTINATION ON SUNDAY

It is then thought the coffin will be driven to Perth before it arrives finally in Edinburgh.

The coffin is expected to finish its journey on Sunday when it arrives in the capital at around 4pm.

The Palace of Holyroodhouse, where the Queen will lie in rest for one day (PA)
The Palace of Holyroodhouse, where the Queen will lie in rest for one day (PA)

A spokesperson for Buckingham Palace said: “The Queen’s coffin currently rests in the ballroom at Balmoral castle. Her Majesty’s coffin will travel to Edinburgh tomorrow, Sunday 11th September, by road, to arrive at the Palace of Holyroodhouse, where it will rest in the Throne room until the afternoon of Monday 12th September.”

COFFIN HEADS TO LONDON

On Monday afternoon, the coffin will be taken from the Palace of Holyroodhouse to St Giles’ Cathedral, on the Royal Mile, where the Queen will lie at rest for a day to allow the people of Scotland to pay their respects. On Tuesday, it will be flown to London, accompanied by Princess Anne.

Finally, it will be transported from Buckingham Palace to the Palace of Westminster on September 14, where it will lie in state until the morning of the funeral.