In blazing sunshine on the Centre Court, Polish great Swiatek made a nonsense of all her previous struggles on grass-courts as she swept to a majestic victory for a sixth grand slam triumph on Saturday in less than an hour.
The 'double-bagel' triumph, which lasted just 57 minutes, had never happened in a Wimbledon final in the Open era. The last time it happened was 114 years ago in 1911, when Dorothea Lambert Chambers beat Dora Boothby in an all-British final.
It ensured that at 24 Swiatek becomes the youngest woman since Serena Williams to win majors on all three surfaces after her four French Open titles on clay and her 2022 US Open win.
In front of Kate, the Princess of Wales, Swiatek produced a right royal performance, exhibiting machine-like quality with her groundstrokes as Anisimova, the American 13th seed, never recovered from getting broken to 15 in the opening service game.
"I think everyone's in a state of shock at what's expired," said three-time Wimbledon champ John McEnroe. "Swiatek played someone who absolutely froze. And it was so hard to watch."
Swiatek is the eighth consecutive first-time Wimbledon champion, but her's is a name that belongs in the event's hall of fame.
Swiatek spent 125 weeks as the world No.1 between 2022 and 2024 but has slumped to a No.8 seeding at Wimbledon after going more than a year without claiming a title since the 2024 French Open win.
She also served a one-month doping ban last year after failing an out-of-competition drug test, with an investigation determining she was inadvertently exposed to a contaminated medical product used to help her sleep and avoid jet lag.