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How is Sweden celebrating the 50th anniversary of King Carl XVI Gustaf?

A gala banquet, street parties and a royal procession through central Stockholm are all on the agenda when Sweden celebrates the 50th anniversary of King Carl XVI Gustaf's reign.

How is Sweden celebrating the 50th anniversary of King Carl XVI Gustaf?
King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia. Photo: Fredrik Sandberg/TT

The 77-year-old king was the world’s youngest monarch when he came to the throne aged 27 in 1973 after the death of his grandfather Gustaf VI Adolf.

The two days of festivities will be attended by foreign dignitaries as well as hundreds of thousands of people who are expected to line the capital’s streets to catch a glimpse of the king and Queen Silvia in a cortege on Saturday.

Several of the festivities will be broadcast live on television to Sweden’s 10 million inhabitants.

“It’s an intense week,” palace spokeswoman Margareta Thorgren told AFP, adding that preparations have been under way for several years.

On Friday, a Te Deum church service will be held at the Royal Chapel attended by the royal family, other Nordic royals and heads of state, as well as Swedish political leaders, followed by a gala banquet hosted by the king at the palace.

The highlight of the celebrations will be Saturday’s afternoon cortege, when the royal couple will wave to the public from a horse-drawn carriage escorted by 3,000 troops from the army, navy and air force and military bands.

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The final leg of the procession will see the royal couple being rowed across the water in the royal barge to the steps below the palace in the Old Town.

That will be followed by an outdoor concert nearby featuring several popular Swedish acts.

Dancing in the streets

As afternoon heads into evening, the city centre will transform into a giant public dance floor, with DJs playing everything from boogie woogie to Cuban salsa, rock’n’roll, disco and Swedish hits, and food trucks serving food and drinks.

Several hundred thousand people are expected to turn out for Saturday’s festivities, police spokeswoman Rebecca Landberg told AFP, comparing the event to the massive crowds that lined the streets for Crown Princess Victoria’s 2010 wedding.

“It feels really exciting,” said Jenny Schannong, a 53-year-old medical secretary who plans to be in place early Saturday to get a good viewing spot for the cortege.

“It’ll be cool to experience this in my lifetime… I was just a little baby when he became king, I was three years old so I don’t really remember that,” she said.

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However, the celebrations are taking place under heightened security, after Sweden last month raised its terror alert level following a spate of Quran burnings that have angered the Muslim world.

Carl Gustaf XVI is the longest reigning monarch in Sweden’s history.

Born on April 30th, 1946, Carl Gustaf Folke Hubertus Bernadotte was only nine months old when his father, Prince Gustaf Adolf, died in a plane crash in Denmark.

He grew up with four older sisters and an often-absent mother – Princess Sibylla of Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha – before becoming king in 1973.

He is the European monarch with the second-longest reign, behind his cousin Queen Margrethe of Denmark who took the throne in 1972.

Popular despite sex scandals

Despite occasional scandals – the biggest when a 2010 book alleged he frequented sex clubs and had numerous affairs – the king still enjoys broad support.

A poll this month in Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter said 62 percent of Swedes were in favour of the monarchy, a level that has remained stable over two decades.

The king’s role has been purely ceremonial since constitutional reform in 1974.

The palace has remained tightlipped on the cost of the weekend festivities.

“It’s a public celebration and the costs will be detailed in a report to be published in April,” Thorgren said.

This year also marks the 500th anniversary of the reign of Gustav Vasa, Sweden’s first king elected in 1523, ending the Kalmar Union that joined the three Scandinavian kingdoms under a single monarchy from 1397.

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IN PICTURES: Swedes throng capital for royal jubilee

Tens of thousands of Swedes thronged central Stockholm on Saturday to mark 50 years since King Carl XVI Gustaf ascended the throne.

IN PICTURES: Swedes throng capital for royal jubilee

To the sound of military bands and under a sunny sky, the 77-year-old monarch, clad in a sober suit and tie, enjoyed the public acclaim along with Queen Silvia, 79, wearing a canary yellow ensemble, as six horses led the royal procession.

The crowd broke into applause as they passed and waved Swedish flags to mark the milestone for Carl Gustaf, who was the world’s youngest monarch when he was crowned aged 27 in September 1973 after the death of his grandfather Gustaf VI Adolf.

King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden (3rd L) and Queen Silvia of Sweden (C) arrive at the Royal Palace during festivities to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustaf’s accession to the throne. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP)

The king is the longest reigning monarch in Sweden’s history and also the European monarch with the second-longest reign, behind his cousin Queen Margrethe of Denmark who took the throne in 1972.

King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden (L) and Queen Silvia of Sweden stand on a royal boat during the festivities. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP)
 

Born on April 30, 1946, Carl Gustaf Folke Hubertus Bernadotte was only nine months old when his father, Prince Gustaf Adolf, died in a plane crash in Denmark.

Central Stockholm was closed to traffic with police expecting crowds across the day to top several hundred thousand — though celebrations went ahead amid tight security given that Sweden last month raised its terror alert level following a spate of Koran burnings that have angered the Muslim world.

Spectators crowd to watch Sweden’s King and Queen. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP)

Christina Flodin, an administrator aged 59, was among admirers of the king, who Friday oversaw the changing of the guard at the palace ahead of a gala banquet for business and religious leaders and other Scandinavian royals. 

 ‘Continuity, stability’

“I am there to celebrate his 50 years with him — I want to show my gratitude for all he has done,” she told AFP, saying he represents in her view “continuity, stability, a good model leader.”

King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden (C-R) and Queen Silvia of Sweden (C-L) arrive in a carriage. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP)

“I came for my brother who is in the navy and participating in the parade,” said Wendela Seppi, a machine operator aged 23. “It’s a bit unreal — I find it’s cool something’s happening” in Stockholm.

READ ALSO: QUIZ: How much do you know about King Carl XVI Gustaf?

The afternoon procession through the capital was the highlight of the celebrations, their horse-drawn carriage escorted by 3,000 troops from the army, navy and air force and military bands.

Royal guards parade during the festivities. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP)

The final leg of the procession was to see them being rowed across the water in the royal barge to the steps below the palace in the Old Town, with an outdoor concert nearby featuring several popular Swedish acts to top off the day, from Cuban salsa to disco and classic Swedish sounds.

The city centre was transformed into a giant public dance floor to allow residents to let their hair down.

Despite occasional scandals — the biggest when a 2010 book alleged he frequented sex clubs and had numerous affairs — the king enjoys broad support in his homeland.

Spectators watch jet fighters flying in formation above the Royal Palace. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP)

A poll this month in Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter said 62 percent of Swedes were in favour of the monarchy, a level that has remained stable over two decades.

READ ALSO: LISTEN: King’s 50th jubilee, and must Swedish citizenship be ‘protected’?

The king’s role has been purely ceremonial since constitutional reform in 1974.

“We must not abolish the monarchy,” said Martin Persson, a 60-year-old bus driver. “I think it’s good — and I’m hoping to see him today,” said Persson, from the western coastal town of Vastra Gotaland. 

(On the balcony, L-R) Prince Carl Philip of Sweden, Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden, Prince Daniel of Sweden, Princess Sofia of Sweden, Princess Madeleine of Sweden and Christopher O’Neill stand on the Palace balcony. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP)

The palace has remained tight-lipped about the cost of the festivities.

As far as presents for his majesty are concerned, Swedish furniture retailer Ikea is gifting the man who already has a throne a special armchair to mark the occasion.

The retro design comes from the “1970s when the king met Silvia at the Olympic Games in Munich,” Ikea executive Johan Ejdemo told AFP.

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