Arise, Sir David Beckham: The football star will be knighted
While David Beckham's honour has been widely reported in the British news media, it is not expected to be formally announced until next week. PHOTO: REUTERS
NEW YORK – It was perhaps the biggest moment of David Beckham's decorated football career.
England needed to score against Greece in 2001 to qualify for the World Cup, and he stood over a free kick with little time left.
He duly bent the ball into the net, setting off paroxysms of joy throughout England. Announcer Gary Bloom spoke for the nation when he shouted: 'Give that man a knighthood!'
It took 24 years, but now he is getting one.
How do you get a knighthood?
In the modern age, knighthoods are conferred by the British royal family upon citizens who have achieved great success in their fields and served their country in one way or another.
'Recipients range from actors to scientists, and from school head teachers to industrialists,' the royal family's website says. It might now add 'impossibly handsome and famous ex-football stars'.
Those conferred with a knighthood get the title 'Sir'.
Let's hear the credentials of Beckham, er, Sir David.
Beckham, 50, was a brilliant football player, most memorably for Manchester United and England's national team. His famous right foot had the uncanny ability to curl balls through the air and into the net, inspiring the title of the 2002 film 'Bend it Like Beckham'.
His post-football career has included co-ownership of Inter Miami, a Major League Soccer team. He has been a UNICEF ambassador, and his charisma helped London secure hosting duties for the 2012 Summer Olympics.
In 2003, he was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire, or OBE, a common starter title on the path to knighthood.
Who else bears the exalted title of knight?
A few thousand folks, some of whom you have probably heard of.
A sampling: Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton; tennis player Andy Murray; actors Michael Caine and Anthony Hopkins, singers Elton John and Mick Jagger; and former Prime Ministers Tony Blair and John Major.
What happens at the knighthood ceremony?
Beckham will kneel on his right knee on a knighting-stool before King Charles III, who will lay the blade of a sword on Beckham's right shoulder, followed by his left.
You would hope that the king would then say: 'Arise, Sir Beckham.'
But disappointingly, the royal family says on its website that those words 'are not used' in the ceremony.
While Beckham's honour has been widely reported in the British news media, it is not expected to be formally announced until next week. The ceremony is expected in the following weeks or months.
Isn't Beckham chummy with the royals?
Yes. Princes William and Harry, the sons of the king and both big sports fans, have hung out with Beckham, who attended their weddings. He has done charity work with King Charles as well.
Beckham waited in line with the general public for 12 hours to pay his respects when Queen Elizabeth II's coffin lay in state at Westminster Hall in 2022.
Still, e-mails from 2013 leaked to the British news media showed that Beckham had grown frustrated with his wait for a knighthood.
So I guess he's going to sit at the roundtable with Lancelot now.
Knighthoods, which date to the Roman era in Britain, are most closely associated with the Middle Ages, when knights were trained in battle and protected the sovereign. (The royal family notes that a knighthood currently 'carries no military obligations to the sovereign'.)
The quasi-mythical King Arthur had his famous crew of Bedivere, Galahad and Gawain. But in modern times, knights participate in significantly less questing.
More important: What does this mean for Posh?
Beckham's wife, Victoria, the pop singer and fashion designer perhaps best known as Posh Spice of the Spice Girls, will also get a title and will henceforth be known as Lady Beckham.
She, too, has an OBE, for 'services to the fashion industry'. No word on future titles for Scary, Ginger, Sporty or Baby Spice. NYTIMES
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