1689 - HM Queen Mary II and her husband HM King William III were crowned co-monarchs by the Bishop of London at Westminster Abbey. Normally, the Archbishop of Canterbury performs coronations, but the incumbent Archbishop, William Sancroft, although an Anglican, refused to recognize the validity of James II's removal. On the same day, the Convention of the Estates of Scotland, which was much more divided than the English Parliament, finally declared that James was no longer King of Scotland, that "no Papist can be King or Queen of this Realm", that William and Mary would be joint sovereigns, and that William would exercise sole and full power.