Originally composed by Benjamin Britten for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, Gloriana was revived by ENO in concert form to celebrate the life of the monarch. But what are the origins of this rarely staged and yet superbly compelling work and and what is the meaning of ‘Gloriana’?

Gloriana in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene (1590)

When deciding on the content and title for his opera, Britten took inspiration from another great figure of English culture, Edmund Spenser.

Gloriana is the alternative name for the eponymous but never seen Faerie Queene in Spenser’s epic poem, whose castle represents the end destination for many of the work’s characters. **Spenser created the name from an elaborated form of the Latin word ‘gloria’, meaning glory.**