I am sometimes reproached for my support of the monarchy. The standard line, little challenged by the small band of valiant Canadian monarchists, is that the monarchy is an anachronism, or useless, or expensive or undemocratic or foreign or about half a dozen other reasons, usually thrown out in no particular order. What does seem to unite the anti-monarchists - at least in Canada there is no significant movement in favour of a republic - is an emotional repugnancy toward the monarchy which grabs at whatever it can find to remove the crown from Canada. The emotion is by no means strong, really more of a nuisance they want to get rid of. I've met very few ardent republicans / anti-monarchists, it's simply not a grand enough cause to attract much attention either way. The small band of monarchists, unfortunately, often chooses equally questionable ground to defend the crown against its enemies.
The word most often used to uphold the monarchy is tradition. This in and of itself is the best argument that can be offered for the continuance of monarchical institutions in Canada. Without a resort to tradition there is simply no explaining allegiance to an eighty year old woman who, until her accession to the throne, demonstrated no particular qualifications for the position ahead of millions of other young men and women at the time. There is certainly no understanding why Canada, a sovereign nation and one of the world's leading developed nations should have as its head of state the hereditary monarchy of another country some three thousand miles away. Tradition, Canadian tradition in particular, should be the crux of the Canadian monarchists defense of the crown. What St. Paul said about the resurrection, that if it never happened he was preaching in vain, applies to the monarchy and tradition. If the monarchy were not part of Canadian history then there would be no point in having a Canadian monarchy.
Where most monarchists err is in their understanding of tradition, a vital mistake made by many conservatives as well. Tradition is cloaked in a hazy mist of warm emotions, it lacks height, width or depth. This is when the word is understood broadly, sometimes it is also seen strictly as narrow ritual, action repeated for the sake of continuity and nothing else. Others have done this before me and I carry on feeling comfort in the fellowship of those before and, one assumes, those after me. If this is all tradition can and should mean then neither it or the monarchy, to take the current case in point, can long last except as a refuge or hobby horse.
Since the Enlightenment monarchy and tradition have both suffered from two powerful intellectual forces born, or perhaps more accurately reborn and refined, in the eighteenth century; democracy and reason. The two are not necessarily complimentary forces in history or intellectual discourse. The rule of the majority and the principles of induction and deduction often have only a nodding acquaintanceship. There link with one another in the modern world has been from that other great force of the enlightenment, liberty. Liberty does not necessarily require democracy. However one understands liberty the means to maintain it are open to question. The Athenian democracy famously failed to uphold anything that might, either in modern or ancient terms, be called liberty. Britain's constitutional monarchy upheld a degree of liberty, as most English speaking moderns broadly understand it, in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries unprecedented in human history, yet less than one percent of the adult population could vote.
What system of government might best uphold liberty was the great question confronting Western political thinkers in the decades after the French Revolution. The conclusion reached, at least in the English speaking nations, was that a democracy with constitutional limitations, particularly as regards to individual rights and executive, legislative and judicial procedures, would best guarantee liberty. Without some kind of check on the power of the executive, monarchical or otherwise, tyranny was all too possible. Some kind of electoral check on the power of the executive, as expressed by the legislative branches of government could, in conjunction with checks on both branches by the judiciary, with reference to a written or unwritten constitution. The wider the franchise, it was felt, the better the check on the executive. Democracy, unlike in Athens, could uphold liberty if properly controlled. Matched with this was the more pragmatic concern about how to control a rapidly urbanizing population, Until the advent of totalitarian government in the 20th century, and all its tools of control, only some kind of democracy seemed able to achieve social stability in the 19th, if only as a peaceful outlet of discontent.
The linking of democracy with liberty was sanctified, if one will admit the abuse of the language, by reason. Liberty was, until the 20th century at least, derived to some extent from natural law arguments. These were not necessarily atheistical. They might exemplify a Newtonian / Lockean approach; divine conception but rational functioning. One big miracle and all that followed may be derived empirically. Reason explained where liberty came from and why it was important. Reason could argue that democracy worked to sustained liberty, if the nature of both were understood and reason applied in the establishment and maintenance of governments.
Tradition and monarchy have little place in this narrative. Reason asks why certain traditions exist and demands rational explanations for their continuance. Appeals to ritual continuity or divine sanction will go nowhere with the rationally minded. Appeals to faith, trying to uphold both monarchy and tradition are equally doomed on these terms. One can try to revolt against reason and liberty but on what grounds? The material and spiritual well-being that brought about the scientific, industrial and liberal revolutions of the 18th and 19th century was unprecedented. Could one really turn one's back on all that? With nothing more than a hazy appeal to tradition and faith?
Monarchy maintained itself in Britain, and what became the Commonwealth, because it became an instrument of liberty. In much of the world monarchy obstructed both democracy and liberty; in Britain it ensured that liberty was preserved as genuine mass democracy emerged. Given that only a handful of nations achieved this feat, and only one, the United States, was a republic, this might at first have helped the image of the monarchy as co-defender of liberty with limited democracy. Instead as time past the monarchy, which might be praised for its role in ushering in liberal democracy, was now seen as dispensable. Its services rendered to the people, the people were all grown up and could do without. Don't let the palace gates hit you on the way out.
Monarchists cannot, as they could a century ago, argue that freedom requires a monarchy to hold back the worst excesses of oligarchy or democracy. If even the French can run a republican liberal democracy then why would the English, and their commonwealth descendants, need a monarchy? Tradition was the last argument left and it was now in the public understanding as much an anachronism as monarchy itself, a process made worse by the crippling historical amnesia imposed by modern public education on the general populace. The nations of the English speaking world do not know their past or seem to aspire to anything not of the moment. If a society abhorrent of tradition has little time for the past, a society proudly ignorant of the past is far worse.
The neo-barbarians aside, tradition is necessary, but it must be tradition on rational grounds. This seems like a contradiction in terms. Tradition is historical and the historical is often accidental, not rational. An even superficial examination of the British constitution almost beggars belief. A feudal political superstructure that has over the centuries been rigged - a more polite term might be improvised - to accommodate mercantilism, laissez-faire classical liberalism, the welfare state, full blown democratic socialism and now some kind of Thatcherite-Blairite mixed economy. Only God, or whatever, knows what Gordon Brown has in store for Merry England's queer looking ship of state in the years ahead. Yet it works. Yes, the Minister of Finance is called by the absurd title of Chancellor of the Exchequer, which was originally a relatively minor office responsible for accounting procedures. The very name "exchequer" refers to a "checkered" board used by medieval officials to count tax receipts.
There is an office in the British cabinet called the Lord Privy Seal - who is, as the very old joke frequently attributed to Ted Heath goes, neither a Lord nor a Privy nor a Seal; another member of the current cabinet holds the title of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and another is called Lord President of the Council, which perplexes Americans to no end. "How can someone be a Lord and a President and what Council are you talking about?" When they are told that the Lord President is a mid-ranking member of the Cabinet you might as well end the conversation there. Explaining how the office of Prime Minister has been in existence since about 1721, yet there was no mention of the word Prime Minister on any legal documents until 1905, and that even today the powers of the office are determined more by convention than anything written down in black and white, is simply inexplicable to most.
It all works because the men and women who operate and support the British constitution accept certain core values, values which themselves have been evolved, or discovered, through trial and error guided by certain theoretical principles, which in their turn have also evolved and changed over time. What makes the British constitution work in the form it is in today is tradition. The judges wearing whigs and black robes, allusions to medieval origins of the participant's roles and the common law itself, or the bizarre custom of referring to the Speaker or Lord Chancellor when responding to another parliamentarian's questions, are all tangible symbols of tradition. They are all, however, accidental products of history. One could do away with the form and the substance would probably remain of what was being said or decided. A house stripped of ornamentation or styling is no less structurally sound.
Tradition in form or procedure is akin to ornamentation. Traditional values, beliefs or attitudes are something else. That a belief, a value or an attitude is traditional, i.e historical, gives it no inherent normative value. Most societies have their own conservatives denouncing the evils of modernizers or "liberals" and decrying the decline of "traditional values." With the exception of Anglo-Saxon based societies these conservatives are typically little more than primitive tribalists and medievalists in spirit, decrying the march of individual liberty, the rule of law, rational discourse and liberal democracy. Our conservatives are generally better because the values they are trying to conserve are better. No one, however, is seriously arguing in the debate over the monarchy that Her Majesty be given real decision making power. The debate over the monarchy is a debate over symbols and not directly values. This may seem an odd distinction - aren't symbols meaningless without values? - but in our current cultural climate a separate argument must first be made for the importance of symbols, a necessity unimaginable only two generations ago.
A symbol is a concretization. Every human being, even the most depraved of the moderns, needs something tangible, something to point to and say to themselves and others: "This is what I believe," or "this is what I am." The thing being symbolized, and it must be a thing, an abstract thought does not serve the same function, itself has little intrinsic value or meaning. A flag is a piece of cloth, a crown a golden trinket, we imbued these things with meaning because we need the hard fact before us. The thing itself is almost incidental, it needs to be a thing but what kind is open. We could idolize a rock, many cultures have, but few sophisticated cultures choose to do so. It helps if the symbol chosen tells a story. The symbolic is traditional and the traditional is often accidental, but that does not make either random. It is accidental that you met your wife at Union Station on a Tuesday afternoon as you both reached for a Snickers bar. Your choice of this particular women as your wife is not accidental. The American flag has thirteen strips, alternating red and white, overlain with a blue canton holding fifty white stars in its top left hand corner. Each of those elements has a historical origin. The fact that there are thirteen stripes is purely accidental. Had Benedict Arnold succeeded in his 1775-1776 expeditions to Quebec he might have gone down in history as a hero, and the American flag would have contained fourteen stripes. The detail is accidental, the meaning is anything but. Neither are the emotions.
The need to have symbols relates to man's nature - yes we do have a nature - as emotional beings. As The Monarchist recently pointed out:
Republics are bloodless abstractions. We all know this. We all know they are founded upon conceptual notions such as equality, fraternity and liberty, rather than the more tangible drivers that are the soul of monarchies, like human connection, continuity and experience.
This is rather too harsh. The American Republic was founded on a conceptual notion, which in its first principles was as radical then as now, yet it too acquired traditions and symbols that were not bloodless. For America to become a monarchy would be as much a betrayal of her traditions and her symbols as if we abandoned our monarchy. The common thread is the emotional link with the symbols and the traditions. The great dichotomy of Western thought, the supposed conflict between mind and body, between reason and emotions, has lead many monarchists into the trap that monarchy cannot be defended on rational grounds. Monarchy is traditional and emotional, something hazy, as I described at the beginning of this piece, something soft that is disintegrating in the hardness of the modern world. Yet emotions are not necessarily irrational, they can and should be integrative.
An emotion, as Ayn Rand among others identified, is a sum of thoughts, beliefs and experiences. An emotion tells you something about yourself, about your current situation that it might take hours or years to describe abstractly in words. Emotions are not necessarily antagonistic to reason they should be complimentary, This does not mean we can substitute emotions for reason. If the intellectual history of emotions, how they are perceived by individuals and society, was in the nineteenth century all about repression, since the 1960s it has been all about "liberation." In truth the "liberation" was little more than replacing a weakening repression with near total anarchy. If feels right do it, damn the facts, the precise observe of the previous attitude which was damn your emotions look at the facts, or social convention. Emotions are also facts, not existential ones, but they are real none the less and are providing you information.
In either case there was only fitful attempts to integrate reason with emotion, to understand why and how rather than to pretend. The repression of the past and the anarchy of the present are both forms of pretense, albeit the later allowed for some measure of social cohesion. A better understanding of emotions will help us have a better understanding of tradition, that tradition can be both emotional and rational, that symbols can be both rational and emotional and that allegiance to the crown can be both rational and emotional.
The crown is a living symbol of Canada's peaceful constitutional development. We do not settle our political disputes by violence, we do so through argument in public debate. The mob does not rule in Canada, neither do a few men in dark corners. We are a free nation and the way be became a free nation was by the route of constitutional monarchy. Other nations have other traditions. They are not necessarily better or worse, again, tradition is not normative outside of a philosophical and historical context. Each family has its heirlooms that are usually worthless to outsiders. These trinkets have their history and their emotional context.
An individual's symbol reinforces his or her individuality, a family symbol their unity, a national symbol its unity. In Canada, unlike in America, or France, or Germany or Portugal, freedom wears a crown. Certainly the history of the crown in Britain is complex and occasionally bloody. I would have fought with Cromwell at Naseby, have been steadfast with Shaftesbury during the Exclusion Crisis and cheered the Seven Immortals as they went off to summon William of Orange onto the throne and into British history and tradition. We stand at the endpoint, so far, of a tradition. Its sum makes the Crown a symbol of liberty today. The American colonists too viewed the monarchy as a symbol of liberty, until the monarch of the day, and his government, betrayed them. Our history tells a different story and we derived a different tradition. In that spirit, with wholeness of heart and mind, let me say:
Vivat Regina!
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"Glorious Revolution" (1688)
English Bill of Rights (1689)
Act of Settlement (1701)
Treaty (Acts) of Union (1707)
Decl. of Independence (1776)
U.S. Constitution (1789)
U.S. Bill of Rights (1791)
Act of Union (1800)
Reform Act (1832)
Treaty of Waitangi (1844)
B.N.A. Act (1867)
The English Constitution (1867)
Australian Constitution (1900)
Balfour Declaration (1926)
Statute of Westminster (1931)
Constitution Act (1982)
Charter of Rights (1982)
Const. of New Zealand (1986)
Constitution of the U.K.
What weight of ancient witness can prevail, if private judgement hold the public scale?
- John Dryden.
Charter of Liberties (1100)
Constitution Clarendon (1164)
Assize of Clarendon (1166)
Assize of Arms (1181)
Magna Carta (1215)
Model Parliament (1265)
Right of Common Law (1297)
Acts of Supremacy (1534-59)
Petition of Right (1628)
The Levellers (1642)
Levellers' Manifesto (1649)
Habeas Corpus (1679)
"Glorious Revolution" (1688)
English Bill of Rights (1689)
Act of Settlement (1701)
Treaty (Acts) of Union (1707)
Decl. of Independence (1776)
U.S. Constitution (1789)
U.S. Bill of Rights (1791)
Act of Union (1800)
Reform Act (1832)
Treaty of Waitangi (1844)
B.N.A. Act (1867)
The English Constitution (1867)
Australian Constitution (1900)
Balfour Declaration (1926)
Statute of Westminster (1931)
Constitution Act (1982)
Charter of Rights (1982)
Const. of New Zealand (1986)
Constitution of the U.K.
What weight of ancient witness can prevail, if private judgement hold the public scale?
- John Dryden.
Liberty and Livelihood!
LANDED GENTRY
Fox Hunting
Countryside Alliance
Scottish Countryside Alliance
Countryside Alliance Ireland
Masters of Foxhounds U.K.
Masters of Foxhounds N.A.
Masters of Harriers and Beagles
The Montreal Hunt Club (*)
Hunting and Conservation
Guards Polo Club
Calcutta Polo Club
The Hurlingham Club
Hurlingham Polo Association
Prince of Wales Stakes
Queen's Plate
ROYAL ASCOT
Henley Royal Regatta
THE BOAT RACE
Oxford and Cambridge Cup
Henley Boat Races
The English country gentleman galloping after a fox — the unspeakable in full pursuit of the uneatable. - Oscar Wilde
Fox Hunting
Countryside Alliance
Scottish Countryside Alliance
Countryside Alliance Ireland
Masters of Foxhounds U.K.
Masters of Foxhounds N.A.
Masters of Harriers and Beagles
The Montreal Hunt Club (*)
Hunting and Conservation
Guards Polo Club
Calcutta Polo Club
The Hurlingham Club
Hurlingham Polo Association
Prince of Wales Stakes
Queen's Plate
ROYAL ASCOT
Henley Royal Regatta
THE BOAT RACE
Oxford and Cambridge Cup
Henley Boat Races
The English country gentleman galloping after a fox — the unspeakable in full pursuit of the uneatable. - Oscar Wilde
English Pubs
THE PUBLIC HOUSE (1) (2)
The Royal Standard
The Queen Victoria
Old King's Head
The King's Arms
The Rose and Crown
The George and Dragon
James Joyce Pub
THE RED LION
O'Neills Irish Pub
The Marquis of Granby
The Duke of Cambridge
The Duke of Richmond
The Duke of Wellington
The Brunswick Inn
The Earl of Derby
The Elephant and Castle
The Bull and Bush
Dew Drop Inn ("do drop in")
The Goat and Compass
The Cat and Fiddle
The Cock and Bull
The Bag o'Nails
The Anglesea Arms
The Fox and Hounds
The Innholders' Company
The Moon Under Water
Up and down the King's Highway, In and out the Eagle, That’s the way the money goes, Pop! goes the weasel.
The Royal Standard
The Queen Victoria
Old King's Head
The King's Arms
The Rose and Crown
The George and Dragon
James Joyce Pub
THE RED LION
O'Neills Irish Pub
The Marquis of Granby
The Duke of Cambridge
The Duke of Richmond
The Duke of Wellington
The Brunswick Inn
The Earl of Derby
The Elephant and Castle
The Bull and Bush
Dew Drop Inn ("do drop in")
The Goat and Compass
The Cat and Fiddle
The Cock and Bull
The Bag o'Nails
The Anglesea Arms
The Fox and Hounds
The Innholders' Company
The Moon Under Water
Up and down the King's Highway, In and out the Eagle, That’s the way the money goes, Pop! goes the weasel.
- LORD OF THE BLOG -
Peers of the Realm
Duke of York (1986)
Duke of Edinburgh (1947)
Duke of Kent (1934)
Duke of Gloucester (1928)
Duke of Fife (1900)
Duke of Argyll (1892)
Duke of Gordon (1876)
Duke of Westminster (1874)
Duke of Abercorn (1868)
Duke of Sutherland (1833)
Duke of Wellington (1814)
Duke of Leinster (1766)
Duke of Northumberland (1766)
Duke of Manchester (1719)
Duke of Brandon (1711)
Duke of Montrose (1707)
Duke of Roxburghe (1707)
Duke of Atholl (1703)
Duke of Rutland (1703)
Duke of Marlborough (1702)
Duke of Argyll (1701)
Duke of Bedford (1694)
Duke of Devonshire (1694)
Duke of St Albans (1684)
Duke of Queensberry (1684)
Duke of Beaufort (1682)
Duke of Richmond (1675)
Duke of Grafton (1675)
Duke of Buccleuch (1663)
Duke of Hamilton (1643)
Duke of Lennox (1581)
Duke of Somerset (1547)
Duke of Norfolk (1483)
Duke of Rothesay (1398)
Duke of Cornwall (1337)
Nobility is a graceful ornament to the civil order. It is the Corinthian capital of polished society. - Edmund Burke
Duke of Edinburgh (1947)
Duke of Kent (1934)
Duke of Gloucester (1928)
Duke of Fife (1900)
Duke of Argyll (1892)
Duke of Gordon (1876)
Duke of Westminster (1874)
Duke of Abercorn (1868)
Duke of Sutherland (1833)
Duke of Wellington (1814)
Duke of Leinster (1766)
Duke of Northumberland (1766)
Duke of Manchester (1719)
Duke of Brandon (1711)
Duke of Montrose (1707)
Duke of Roxburghe (1707)
Duke of Atholl (1703)
Duke of Rutland (1703)
Duke of Marlborough (1702)
Duke of Argyll (1701)
Duke of Bedford (1694)
Duke of Devonshire (1694)
Duke of St Albans (1684)
Duke of Queensberry (1684)
Duke of Beaufort (1682)
Duke of Richmond (1675)
Duke of Grafton (1675)
Duke of Buccleuch (1663)
Duke of Hamilton (1643)
Duke of Lennox (1581)
Duke of Somerset (1547)
Duke of Norfolk (1483)
Duke of Rothesay (1398)
Duke of Cornwall (1337)
Nobility is a graceful ornament to the civil order. It is the Corinthian capital of polished society. - Edmund Burke
Barons of the Press
ROYAL INSIGHT
Majesty Magazine
The Salisbury Review
The New Criterion
The Scotsman
The Times
The Australian
The Telegraph...Blogs
National Review...Corner
The Spectator...CoffeeHouse
The Chap Magazine NEW!
Savile Row Style
Arts & Letters Daily
Burke's Peerage and Gentry
The American Conservative
New English Review
Kingston Whig-Standard
Victoria Times Colonist
Chronicles Magazine
Punch
Baronage
The Herald
Marlborough Express
Western Standard RIP
Taki's Magazine
The Brussels Journal
VDARE.COM
Globe and Mail
STUFF.CO.NZ
New York Sun RIP
Dominion Post
National Post
Quadrant Magazine
Macleans Magazine
Nelson Mail
Defence News
Gilbert Magazine
The subject who is truly loyal to the Chief Magistrate will neither advise nor submit to arbitrary measures. - Junius
(motto of the Globe and Mail)
Majesty Magazine
The Salisbury Review
The New Criterion
The Scotsman
The Times
The Australian
The Telegraph...Blogs
National Review...Corner
The Spectator...CoffeeHouse
The Chap Magazine NEW!
Savile Row Style
Arts & Letters Daily
Burke's Peerage and Gentry
The American Conservative
New English Review
Kingston Whig-Standard
Victoria Times Colonist
Chronicles Magazine
Punch
Baronage
The Herald
Marlborough Express
Western Standard RIP
Taki's Magazine
The Brussels Journal
VDARE.COM
Globe and Mail
STUFF.CO.NZ
New York Sun RIP
Dominion Post
National Post
Quadrant Magazine
Macleans Magazine
Nelson Mail
Defence News
Gilbert Magazine
The subject who is truly loyal to the Chief Magistrate will neither advise nor submit to arbitrary measures. - Junius
(motto of the Globe and Mail)
Blogs of the Order
LORDS OF THE BLOG
An Englishman's Castle
Albion's Seedlings
The Blogging Tories
Tory Diary
Kiwi Blog
A Pint of Unionist Lite
Irish Elk
Tory Heaven
Bring Back The British Empire
The Daily Bayonet
The Dominion Institute Blog
Adam Smith Institute Blog
The Witanagemot Club
Very British Subjects
Occam's Carbuncle
The Liberty Papers
The Commonwealth Realm
The Prince of Darkness
Kiwi Examiner
Our Kingdom
England Expects
Captain's Quarters
Tory Historian
Lord Kitchener's Own
The English Crusade
The British North America Blog
In the name of God, go!
100 Years Ago Today
The Anglo Saxon Chronicle
Wilson Revolution Unplugged
The Salisbury Pages
The Lord Protector
Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer Hath a Blog
Sir Robert Bond Papers
Kiwi Pundit
My Flanders Fields
Veritas
Brit Blog
The Crusader
Burkean Canuck
Arthur's Seat
Chesterton and Friends
Lord Feverstone
Freedom and Whisky
Old Whig's Brain Dump
The Torch
Officer's Club
Guy Fawkes' Blog
Armavirumque
Mild Colonial Boy
Tommy English
Kingdom of Chaos
Alfred the OK
Postmodern Conservative
This royal throne of kings, this sceptr'd isle/This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars/This other Eden, demi-paradise...This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England... - William Shakespeare
An Englishman's Castle
Albion's Seedlings
The Blogging Tories
Tory Diary
Kiwi Blog
A Pint of Unionist Lite
Irish Elk
Tory Heaven
Bring Back The British Empire
The Daily Bayonet
The Dominion Institute Blog
Adam Smith Institute Blog
The Witanagemot Club
Very British Subjects
Occam's Carbuncle
The Liberty Papers
The Commonwealth Realm
The Prince of Darkness
Kiwi Examiner
Our Kingdom
England Expects
Captain's Quarters
Tory Historian
Lord Kitchener's Own
The English Crusade
The British North America Blog
In the name of God, go!
100 Years Ago Today
The Anglo Saxon Chronicle
Wilson Revolution Unplugged
The Salisbury Pages
The Lord Protector
Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer Hath a Blog
Sir Robert Bond Papers
Kiwi Pundit
My Flanders Fields
Veritas
Brit Blog
The Crusader
Burkean Canuck
Arthur's Seat
Chesterton and Friends
Lord Feverstone
Freedom and Whisky
Old Whig's Brain Dump
The Torch
Officer's Club
Guy Fawkes' Blog
Armavirumque
Mild Colonial Boy
Tommy English
Kingdom of Chaos
Alfred the OK
Postmodern Conservative
This royal throne of kings, this sceptr'd isle/This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars/This other Eden, demi-paradise...This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England... - William Shakespeare
Lords of the Manor
BUCKINGHAM PALACE
England's Windsor Castle
Canada's Rideau Hall
Australia's Yarralumla
Scotland's Holyroodhouse
Sandringham House
Frogmore House
Kensington Palace
Clarence House
St. James's Palace
Balmoral Castle
COUNTRY HOUSE
Guild of Professional Butlers
The National Trust
The National Trust for Scotland
Arundel Castle (Norfolk)
Edinburgh Castle
Hatley Castle (Dunsmuir)
Harewood House
Inveraray Castle (Argyll)
Castle Howard
CASA LOMA
Chatsworth House (Devonshire)
Glamis Castle (Strathmore)
Blenheim Palace (Marlborough)
Leeds Castle (Tudor)
Spencer House
Dundurn Castle
Longleat House (Bath)
Wollaton Hall
Hardwick Hall (Devonshire)
Hatfield House (Salisbury)
Burghley House
Craigdarroch Castle
Woburn Abbey
Warwick Castle
Wilton House
Beaulieu Abbey
Bowood House
Chiswick House
Holkham Hall
Lost Heritage
A man's home is his castle.
- Sir Edward Coke, 1581
England's Windsor Castle
Canada's Rideau Hall
Australia's Yarralumla
Scotland's Holyroodhouse
Sandringham House
Frogmore House
Kensington Palace
Clarence House
St. James's Palace
Balmoral Castle
COUNTRY HOUSE
Guild of Professional Butlers
The National Trust
The National Trust for Scotland
Arundel Castle (Norfolk)
Edinburgh Castle
Hatley Castle (Dunsmuir)
Harewood House
Inveraray Castle (Argyll)
Castle Howard
CASA LOMA
Chatsworth House (Devonshire)
Glamis Castle (Strathmore)
Blenheim Palace (Marlborough)
Leeds Castle (Tudor)
Spencer House
Dundurn Castle
Longleat House (Bath)
Wollaton Hall
Hardwick Hall (Devonshire)
Hatfield House (Salisbury)
Burghley House
Craigdarroch Castle
Woburn Abbey
Warwick Castle
Wilton House
Beaulieu Abbey
Bowood House
Chiswick House
Holkham Hall
Lost Heritage
A man's home is his castle.
- Sir Edward Coke, 1581
Gentlemen Tailors
LONDON SAVILE ROW
Gieves & Hawkes ...Military
Companions of Savile Row
Ede & Ravenscroft ...Robes
Savile Row Style Magazine
J. Barbour & Sons ...Tweeds
Beau Brummell
James Lock ...Hatters
Dandyism.Net
Fulton Umbrellas ...Umbrellas
Swaine Adeney Brigg ...Canes
Lord Whimsy
Anello & Davide ...Shoes
IL DANDY
SPINK (est. 1666) ...Collectors
The Dandy
Dege & Skinner ...Tailors
The Walpole ...Luxury
Henry Poole ...Livery
The Burgon Society
Kinloch Anderson ...Hosiery
Anderson & Sheppard
Savile Row Bespoke
Fashion fades, style is forever.
- Yves St. Laurent
Gieves & Hawkes ...Military
Companions of Savile Row
Ede & Ravenscroft ...Robes
Savile Row Style Magazine
J. Barbour & Sons ...Tweeds
Beau Brummell
James Lock ...Hatters
Dandyism.Net
Fulton Umbrellas ...Umbrellas
Swaine Adeney Brigg ...Canes
Lord Whimsy
Anello & Davide ...Shoes
IL DANDY
SPINK (est. 1666) ...Collectors
The Dandy
Dege & Skinner ...Tailors
The Walpole ...Luxury
Henry Poole ...Livery
The Burgon Society
Kinloch Anderson ...Hosiery
Anderson & Sheppard
Savile Row Bespoke
Fashion fades, style is forever.
- Yves St. Laurent
Gentlemen Clubs
GENTLEMEN'S CLUB (*)
White's/Brooks's/Boodle's
Royal Air Force Club
The Caledonian Club
Naval and Military Club
Naval and Military Club
Cavalry and Guards Club
Metropolitan Club
The Rideau Club
The Travellers Club
Oxford and Cambridge Club
Leander Rowing Club
Yale Club of New York
Harvard Club of New York
Princeton Club of New York
The Garrick Club
The Australian Club
Athenaeum Club
The National Club
The Carlton Club
The Commonwealth Club
The Bullingdon Club
Conservative Monday Club
The Albany Club
Union Jack Club
Victory Services Club
The Union Club
The Commonwealth Club
The Savage Club
The California Club
The Weld Club
The Reform Club
Royal Military Colleges Club
The Handlebar Club
The Pipe Club of London
Boisdale Jazz & Cigar Club
It would be better that ten unobjectionable men be excluded than one terrible bore be admitted. - Garrick Club's motto
White's/Brooks's/Boodle's
Royal Air Force Club
The Caledonian Club
Naval and Military Club
Naval and Military Club
Cavalry and Guards Club
Metropolitan Club
The Rideau Club
The Travellers Club
Oxford and Cambridge Club
Leander Rowing Club
Yale Club of New York
Harvard Club of New York
Princeton Club of New York
The Garrick Club
The Australian Club
Athenaeum Club
The National Club
The Carlton Club
The Commonwealth Club
The Bullingdon Club
Conservative Monday Club
The Albany Club
Union Jack Club
Victory Services Club
The Union Club
The Commonwealth Club
The Savage Club
The California Club
The Weld Club
The Reform Club
Royal Military Colleges Club
The Handlebar Club
The Pipe Club of London
Boisdale Jazz & Cigar Club
It would be better that ten unobjectionable men be excluded than one terrible bore be admitted. - Garrick Club's motto
Gentlemen Spirits
BRANDY AND PORT:
French Cognac
Thomas Hine Cognac
Hennessy Cognac
Jerez Sherry Xeres
Porto Port Oporto
Grand Marnier
Drambuie Scotch Liqueur
Armagnac
Anyone for Pimm's?
CHAMPAGNE:
Dom Pérignon
Moët et Chandon
Pol Roger Champagne
Lanson Pére et Fils
Armand de Brignac
Laurent Perrier
Korbel California
Louis Roederer
Sovetskoye Shampanskoye
Krug Champagne
LONDON DRY GIN:
Gin & Tonic
Ready to Tanqueray?
Bombay Sapphire
Boodle's British Gin
Gordon's Dry Gin
New Amsterdam Straight Gin
Hendrick's Gin
Broker's Gin
Juniper Green Organic Gin
London Beefeater Gin
Bulldog
SCOTCH & WHISKY:
Johnnie Walker
Crown Royal
"Gentleman Jack"
The Famous Grouse
Glenfiddich Single Malt
Canadian Club ...Queen Vicky's
Balvenie Single Malt
Wiser's Canadian Whisky
Chivas Regal Blended
Jim Beam Kentucky Bourbon
Cutty Sark Blended
Jack Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey
Drambuie Scotch Liqueur
John Dewar & Sons
I have taken more out of alcohol than alcohol has taken out of me. - Winston Churchill
French Cognac
Thomas Hine Cognac
Hennessy Cognac
Jerez Sherry Xeres
Porto Port Oporto
Grand Marnier
Drambuie Scotch Liqueur
Armagnac
Anyone for Pimm's?
CHAMPAGNE:
Dom Pérignon
Moët et Chandon
Pol Roger Champagne
Lanson Pére et Fils
Armand de Brignac
Laurent Perrier
Korbel California
Louis Roederer
Sovetskoye Shampanskoye
Krug Champagne
LONDON DRY GIN:
Gin & Tonic
Ready to Tanqueray?
Bombay Sapphire
Boodle's British Gin
Gordon's Dry Gin
New Amsterdam Straight Gin
Hendrick's Gin
Broker's Gin
Juniper Green Organic Gin
London Beefeater Gin
Bulldog
SCOTCH & WHISKY:
Johnnie Walker
Crown Royal
"Gentleman Jack"
The Famous Grouse
Glenfiddich Single Malt
Canadian Club ...Queen Vicky's
Balvenie Single Malt
Wiser's Canadian Whisky
Chivas Regal Blended
Jim Beam Kentucky Bourbon
Cutty Sark Blended
Jack Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey
Drambuie Scotch Liqueur
John Dewar & Sons
I have taken more out of alcohol than alcohol has taken out of me. - Winston Churchill
Gentlemen-at-Arms
GENTLEMAN
Gerald Warner
Roger Scruton
Mark Steyn
Daniel Larison
Simon Heffer
Andrew Bolt
Andrew Roberts
Kevin Myers
Daniel Hannan, M.E.P.
Lew Rockwell
John Derbyshire
John Fox
Peter Brimelow
Andrew Cusack
Kathy Shaidle
Peggy Noonan
John O'Sullivan
David Flint
Theodore Dalrymple
David Warren
Boris Johnson, Lord Mayor
Taki Theodoracopulos
Michael Gove, M.P.
Tim Blair
Nigel Farage, M.E.P.
Rex Murphy
George Will
Jim Hopkins
Peter Hitchens
Andrew Coyne
Tim Worstall
George Jonas
William Rees-Mogg
Tom Utley son of Peter Utley
William Gairdner
Keith Windschuttle
Roger Kimball
Iain Dale
James Bowman
Colby Cosh
John Redwood, M.P.
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and talents.
- Thomas Jefferson
Gerald Warner
Roger Scruton
Mark Steyn
Daniel Larison
Simon Heffer
Andrew Bolt
Andrew Roberts
Kevin Myers
Daniel Hannan, M.E.P.
Lew Rockwell
John Derbyshire
John Fox
Peter Brimelow
Andrew Cusack
Kathy Shaidle
Peggy Noonan
John O'Sullivan
David Flint
Theodore Dalrymple
David Warren
Boris Johnson, Lord Mayor
Taki Theodoracopulos
Michael Gove, M.P.
Tim Blair
Nigel Farage, M.E.P.
Rex Murphy
George Will
Jim Hopkins
Peter Hitchens
Andrew Coyne
Tim Worstall
George Jonas
William Rees-Mogg
Tom Utley son of Peter Utley
William Gairdner
Keith Windschuttle
Roger Kimball
Iain Dale
James Bowman
Colby Cosh
John Redwood, M.P.
There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and talents.
- Thomas Jefferson
Richard III Societies
Richard III Society
The Wars of the Roses
Richard III Foundation
Richard III Society Canada
Richard III New Zealand
Richard III New South Wales
Richard III Yorkshire
Richard III Western Australia
Richard III Worcestershire
Richard III America
Richard III Society of Friends
Richard III Queensland
RICHARDIII.ORG
England's Medieval Festival
The Wars of the Roses
Richard III Foundation
Richard III Society Canada
Richard III New Zealand
Richard III New South Wales
Richard III Yorkshire
Richard III Western Australia
Richard III Worcestershire
Richard III America
Richard III Society of Friends
Richard III Queensland
RICHARDIII.ORG
England's Medieval Festival
Honourary Patron of the English-Speaking Peoples
Gentlemen-at-Arms
BLOG PATRON
Sir Winston Churchill
Churchill Online
Churchill Great Republic
THE CHURCHILL CENTRE
Churchill for Democracy
The Churchill Society, London
English-Speaking Peoples
International Churchill Society
International Churchill Society
Battle of Britain Society
Last Romantic Zionist Gentile
USS Winston S. Churchill
Their Finest Hour
The Last of the Few
Sunlit Uplands
Churchill Books
Society of British Columbia
Chartwell House
Chartwell and Churchill
Romeo Y Julieta
Blenheim Palace
The Duke of Marlborough
Cuvée Sir Winston Churchill
Churchill College, Cambridge
Churchill Archives Centre
Churchill Memorial Trust
Buried in Bladon
He mobilised the English language, and sent it into battle. - John F. Kennedy
Sir Winston Churchill
Churchill Online
Churchill Great Republic
THE CHURCHILL CENTRE
Churchill for Democracy
The Churchill Society, London
English-Speaking Peoples
International Churchill Society
International Churchill Society
Battle of Britain Society
Last Romantic Zionist Gentile
USS Winston S. Churchill
Their Finest Hour
The Last of the Few
Sunlit Uplands
Churchill Books
Society of British Columbia
Chartwell House
Chartwell and Churchill
Romeo Y Julieta
Blenheim Palace
The Duke of Marlborough
Cuvée Sir Winston Churchill
Churchill College, Cambridge
Churchill Archives Centre
Churchill Memorial Trust
Buried in Bladon
He mobilised the English language, and sent it into battle. - John F. Kennedy
Burke: The Father of Anglo-American Conservatism
Anglos of the Sphere
CONSERVATISM
Conservative Home
Conservative Central
Conservative Union
Edmund Burke Society
Samuel Johnson Society
Johnson Society of London
Sir Walter Scott Club
Sir Robert Peel
Baldwin and Lafontaine
MacDonald and Cartier
Benjamin Disraeli
Christopher Dawson Archives
The Salisbury Review
Marquess of Salisbury
Taki's Magazine
The Freedom Association
Sir Robert Menzies
The Churchill Society
T.S. Eliot Society
George Grant
Russell Kirk Center
Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
William F. Buckley, RIP
Roger Scruton Page
Right Reason
CIVITAS
Samuel Francis Index
Malcolm Muggeridge Society
Michael Oakshott Association
G.K. Chesterton Society
Why I became a conservative
The Conservative Mind
The Meaning of Conservatism
Liberty or Equality
Reflections on French Revolution
Good order is the foundation of all things.
- Edmund Burke, 1790
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
- Edmund Burke
Conservative Home
Conservative Central
Conservative Union
Edmund Burke Society
Samuel Johnson Society
Johnson Society of London
Sir Walter Scott Club
Sir Robert Peel
Baldwin and Lafontaine
MacDonald and Cartier
Benjamin Disraeli
Christopher Dawson Archives
The Salisbury Review
Marquess of Salisbury
Taki's Magazine
The Freedom Association
Sir Robert Menzies
The Churchill Society
T.S. Eliot Society
George Grant
Russell Kirk Center
Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
William F. Buckley, RIP
Roger Scruton Page
Right Reason
CIVITAS
Samuel Francis Index
Malcolm Muggeridge Society
Michael Oakshott Association
G.K. Chesterton Society
Why I became a conservative
The Conservative Mind
The Meaning of Conservatism
Liberty or Equality
Reflections on French Revolution
Good order is the foundation of all things.
- Edmund Burke, 1790
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
- Edmund Burke
Anglos of the Sphere
Anglos of the Sphere
ENGLISH-SPEAKING UNION
The Rhodes Trust
The Oxford Union
English Heritage
The Anglosphere
An Anglosphere Primer
The 3rd Anglosphere Century
Anglo-Australian
The Churchill Centre
Splendid Isolation
English-Speaking Peoples
The Anglosphere Institute
Adam Smith Institute
The Manhattan Institute
The Dominion Institute
The Maxim Institute
The Acton Institute
The Claremont Institute
Ludwig von Mises Institute
The Round Table
Arts & Letters Daily
MOTHER ENGLAND
Anthem 4 England
Albion's Seedlings
Kingdom of England
Britain and America
Margaret Thatcher Foundation
Free Dominion
Silent Running
The Anglosphere Challenge
What England Means to Me
The Atlantic Bridge
Anglosphere Union Now!
England Your England
There is a forgotten, nay almost forbidden word, which means more to me than any other. That word is ENGLAND.
- Sir Winston Churchill
The Rhodes Trust
The Oxford Union
English Heritage
The Anglosphere
An Anglosphere Primer
The 3rd Anglosphere Century
Anglo-Australian
The Churchill Centre
Splendid Isolation
English-Speaking Peoples
The Anglosphere Institute
Adam Smith Institute
The Manhattan Institute
The Dominion Institute
The Maxim Institute
The Acton Institute
The Claremont Institute
Ludwig von Mises Institute
The Round Table
Arts & Letters Daily
MOTHER ENGLAND
Anthem 4 England
Albion's Seedlings
Kingdom of England
Britain and America
Margaret Thatcher Foundation
Free Dominion
Silent Running
The Anglosphere Challenge
What England Means to Me
The Atlantic Bridge
Anglosphere Union Now!
England Your England
There is a forgotten, nay almost forbidden word, which means more to me than any other. That word is ENGLAND.
- Sir Winston Churchill
- ROYAL STANDARDS -
- ROYAL FAMILY -
FREE MOVEMENT BETWEEN THE REALMS?
COMMONWEALTH FREE MOVEMENT: SIGN THE PETITION!
British Borders Bill: Common Entry For Her Majesty's Realms
ROYAL SUCCESSION: The Succession to the Crown Bill
Gloriana for our times: A Diamond Jubilee Tribute
Queen's Message: The Queen's Diamond Jubilee Message
The Queen's Accession: The Accession Feb 6 - 8, 1952
Monarchy at its Finest: The Queen prospered in her role
Majestic Success: In an age of turmoil
Elizabeth-the-Dutiful: A Vintage Year for the Royal Family
Reign Maker: Restoring the Power of the Monarchy
YES MA'AM How the Queen defined her role
ROYALSALUTE.CA Fall In! The RCN & RCAF have been restored!
Now on Twitter! Defending the Crown one tweet at a time
Fade Britannia: Vichy Tories commit treason in HM's docks
Anglo-Irish Visit?: Will the Queen go to Ireland?
Crown & Country: The Royal Republic of Britain?
Royal Portraits: David Starkey reveals the power of portrait
New Vice-Regal: David Johnston takes reins as GG of Canada
Loyal Opposition: The Marxist brothers take over UK opposition
On Democracy and Kings: Why I am a monarchist.
Queen and Pope: A Glorious Day for Scotland
Kingdom of Bhutan: The Greatest Nation on Earth
British Borders Bill: Common Entry For Her Majesty's Realms
ROYAL SUCCESSION: The Succession to the Crown Bill
Gloriana for our times: A Diamond Jubilee Tribute
Queen's Message: The Queen's Diamond Jubilee Message
The Queen's Accession: The Accession Feb 6 - 8, 1952
Monarchy at its Finest: The Queen prospered in her role
Majestic Success: In an age of turmoil
Elizabeth-the-Dutiful: A Vintage Year for the Royal Family
Reign Maker: Restoring the Power of the Monarchy
YES MA'AM How the Queen defined her role
ROYALSALUTE.CA Fall In! The RCN & RCAF have been restored!
Now on Twitter! Defending the Crown one tweet at a time
Fade Britannia: Vichy Tories commit treason in HM's docks
Anglo-Irish Visit?: Will the Queen go to Ireland?
Crown & Country: The Royal Republic of Britain?
Royal Portraits: David Starkey reveals the power of portrait
New Vice-Regal: David Johnston takes reins as GG of Canada
Loyal Opposition: The Marxist brothers take over UK opposition
On Democracy and Kings: Why I am a monarchist.
Queen and Pope: A Glorious Day for Scotland
Kingdom of Bhutan: The Greatest Nation on Earth
Tuesday, January 16, 2007
Why Monarchy? Why Tradition?
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- Dieu et mon Droit -
DEFENDER OF THE FAITH
[+] The Lord God Almighty
[+] God Save the Queen
[+] The Sacred Crown
[+] Church of England
[+] Saint George
[+] Throne and Altar
[+] The Stone of Destiny
[+] The Divine Right of Kings
Honour all men. Love the brotherhood.
Fear God. Honour the king. - 1 Peter 2:17
[+] The Lord God Almighty
[+] God Save the Queen
[+] The Sacred Crown
[+] Church of England
[+] Saint George
[+] Throne and Altar
[+] The Stone of Destiny
[+] The Divine Right of Kings
Honour all men. Love the brotherhood.
Fear God. Honour the king. - 1 Peter 2:17
KING AND COUNTRY
[+] The Queen's English
[+] Sovereign of the Realms
[+] Fount of Justice
[+] Constitution of Liberty
[+] Crown-in-Parliament
[+] Queen's Prime Ministers
[+] Fountain of Honour
[+] Commander-in-Chief
[+] Her Majesty's Ships
[+] The Queen's Regiments
[+] Patron of the Arts
[+] Philosophy of Loyalty
[+] Head of the Commonwealth
Every subject’s duty is the king’s; but every subject’s soul is his own.
- William Shakespeare
[+] The Queen's English
[+] Sovereign of the Realms
[+] Fount of Justice
[+] Constitution of Liberty
[+] Crown-in-Parliament
[+] Queen's Prime Ministers
[+] Fountain of Honour
[+] Commander-in-Chief
[+] Her Majesty's Ships
[+] The Queen's Regiments
[+] Patron of the Arts
[+] Philosophy of Loyalty
[+] Head of the Commonwealth
Every subject’s duty is the king’s; but every subject’s soul is his own.
- William Shakespeare
LORD OF THE BLOG
[+] Lords of the Blog
[+] Guild of Butlers
[+] Debrett's Online
[+] Burke's Peerage and Gentry
[+] The Duke of Edinburgh
[+] The House of Lords
[+] Peers of the Realm
[+] Barons of the Press
[+] Blogs of the Order
[+] Lord Stanley's Cup
[+] Great Officers of State
[+] Lord of the Manor
[+] Brideshead Revisited
[+] Downton Abbey
Lords are lordliest in their wine.
- John Milton
[+] Lords of the Blog
[+] Guild of Butlers
[+] Debrett's Online
[+] Burke's Peerage and Gentry
[+] The Duke of Edinburgh
[+] The House of Lords
[+] Peers of the Realm
[+] Barons of the Press
[+] Blogs of the Order
[+] Lord Stanley's Cup
[+] Great Officers of State
[+] Lord of the Manor
[+] Brideshead Revisited
[+] Downton Abbey
Lords are lordliest in their wine.
- John Milton
THE WEEPING CAVALIER
[+] Sir Winston Churchill
[+] Most Noble Order of the Garter
[+] Knights of the Round Table
[+] Society of Knights Bachelor
[+] Military Knights of Windsor
[+] Orders of Chivalry
[+] In Defence of Pomp
[+] The Joy of Order
[+] Equality Be Damned
[+] The Decline of Reverence
[+] Roundhd Values, Cavalier Tastes
[+] The Decent Draperies of Life
[+] Fade Britannia
But what are kings, when regiment is gone, But perfect shadows in a sunshine day?
- Christopher Marlowe
[+] Sir Winston Churchill
[+] Most Noble Order of the Garter
[+] Knights of the Round Table
[+] Society of Knights Bachelor
[+] Military Knights of Windsor
[+] Orders of Chivalry
[+] In Defence of Pomp
[+] The Joy of Order
[+] Equality Be Damned
[+] The Decline of Reverence
[+] Roundhd Values, Cavalier Tastes
[+] The Decent Draperies of Life
[+] Fade Britannia
But what are kings, when regiment is gone, But perfect shadows in a sunshine day?
- Christopher Marlowe
THE GENTLEMAN
[+] Mr. Gentleman
[+] The Chap Manifesto
[+] The Queen's Bankers
[+] The Black Tie Guide
[+] "Gentlemen's Champagne"
[+] Anyone for Pimm's?
[+] Gentlemen-at-Arms
[+] The Landed Gentry
[+] Master of Foxhounds
[+] Calcutta Polo Club
[+] Traditional Gentlemen's Club
[+] For Liberty and Livelihood!
[+] The Military Gentleman
[+] The Art of Manliness
[+] The Last Edwardian
All men are equal. All men, that is, who possess umbrellas. - E.M. Forster
[+] Mr. Gentleman
[+] The Chap Manifesto
[+] The Queen's Bankers
[+] The Black Tie Guide
[+] "Gentlemen's Champagne"
[+] Anyone for Pimm's?
[+] Gentlemen-at-Arms
[+] The Landed Gentry
[+] Master of Foxhounds
[+] Calcutta Polo Club
[+] Traditional Gentlemen's Club
[+] For Liberty and Livelihood!
[+] The Military Gentleman
[+] The Art of Manliness
[+] The Last Edwardian
All men are equal. All men, that is, who possess umbrellas. - E.M. Forster
THE PROUD TOWER
[+} Defending the Crown since 2005
[+] The Monarchist on Twitter
[+] The Monarchist Interview
[+] The Monarchist Spectrum
[+] Number One on Google!
[+] One of Taki's Favorite Blogs!
[+] List with Kiwi Blogs
[+] Member, Blogging Tories
[+] Member, English Free Press
[+] The Anglosphere Consortium
[+] Enlist in the Red Ensign Brigade
[+] Monarchist Message Board
[+] Email The Monarchist
The blog that brought back the
Royal Canadian Navy (R.C.N.) and the Royal Canadian Air Force (R.C.A.F.)
The reward of a thing well done is to have done it. - Ralph Emerson
From the proud tower in town, death looks gigantically down. - Edgar Allen Poe
If I have seen further than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants. - Sir Isaac Newton
[+} Defending the Crown since 2005
[+] The Monarchist on Twitter
[+] The Monarchist Interview
[+] The Monarchist Spectrum
[+] Number One on Google!
[+] One of Taki's Favorite Blogs!
[+] List with Kiwi Blogs
[+] Member, Blogging Tories
[+] Member, English Free Press
[+] The Anglosphere Consortium
[+] Enlist in the Red Ensign Brigade
[+] Monarchist Message Board
[+] Email The Monarchist
The blog that brought back the
Royal Canadian Navy (R.C.N.) and the Royal Canadian Air Force (R.C.A.F.)
The reward of a thing well done is to have done it. - Ralph Emerson
From the proud tower in town, death looks gigantically down. - Edgar Allen Poe
If I have seen further than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants. - Sir Isaac Newton
QUEEN ELIZABETH II (1952 -)
King George VI (1936-52)
King Edward VIII (1936)
King George V (Windsor)
King Edward VII (Saxe-Coburg)
Queen Victoria (1837-1901)
King William IV (1830-37)
King George IV (1820-30)
King George III (1760-1820)
King George II (1727-60)
King George I (Hanover)
Queen Anne (1702-14)
King William III (Orange)
King James II (1685-88)
King Charles II (1660-85)
Richard Cromwell (1658-59)
Oliver Cromwell ("Protector")
King Charles I ("Martyr")
King James I (Stuart)
Queen Elizabeth I ("Gloriana")
Queen Mary ("Bloody Mary")
Lady Jane Grey (Regent)
King Edward VI (1547-53)
King Henry VIII ("Majesty")
King Henry VII (Tudor)
King Richard III (1483-85)
King Edward V (1483)
King Edward IV (York)
King Henry VI (1422-61)
King Henry V (1413-22)
King Henry IV (Lancaster)
King Richard II (1377-99)
King Edward III (1327-77)
King Edward II (1307-27)
King Edward I ("Longshanks")
King Henry III (1216-72)
King John (Magna Carta)
King Richard I ("Lionheart")
King Henry II (Plantagenet)
King Stephen (House of Blois)
King Henry I (Charter Liberties)
King William II ("Rufus")
King William I ("Conqueror")
King Harold II (Godwinson)
King Edward ("Confessor")
Monarchy can easily be debunked, but watch the faces, mark well the debunkers. These are the men whose taproot in Eden has been cut: whom no rumour of the polyphony, the dance, can reach - men to whom pebbles laid in a row are more beautiful than an arch. Yet even if they desire mere equality they cannot reach it. Where men are forbidden to honour a king they honour millionaires, athletes or film stars instead: even famous prostitutes or gangsters. For spiritual nature, like bodily nature, will be served; deny it food and it will gobble poison - C.S. Lewis
British Monarchy
HER MAJESTY
Queen of Canada
Queen of Australia
Queen of New Zealand
Queen of Jamaica
Queen of Barbados
Commonwealth Realms
Style of the British Sovereign
The Prince Consort
The Prince of Wales
The Duke of York.Org
The Monarchy Today
Monarchy Media Centre
History of the Monarchy
Royal Art and Residences
Royal Society Portrait Painters
The Royal Collection
The Queen's Images
The Royal YouTube Channel
Official Royal Image Library
LOYAL PROCLAMATION
Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.
- William Shakespeare
Queen of Canada
Queen of Australia
Queen of New Zealand
Queen of Jamaica
Queen of Barbados
Commonwealth Realms
Style of the British Sovereign
The Prince Consort
The Prince of Wales
The Duke of York.Org
The Monarchy Today
Monarchy Media Centre
History of the Monarchy
Royal Art and Residences
Royal Society Portrait Painters
The Royal Collection
The Queen's Images
The Royal YouTube Channel
Official Royal Image Library
LOYAL PROCLAMATION
Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.
- William Shakespeare
Royal Family
HOUSE OF WINDSOR
British Royal Family
Her Majesty The Queen
HRH The Duke of Edinburgh
HRH Prince Charles of Wales
HRH The Duchess of Cornwall
HRH Prince William of Wales
HRH Prince Henry of Wales
HRH The Princess Royal
HRH The Duke of York
HRH The Earl of Wessex
HRH The Countess of Wessex
HRH The Duke of Gloucester
HRH The Duchess of Gloucester
HRH The Duke of Kent
HRH The Duchess of Kent
HRH Prince Michael of Kent
HRH Princess Michael of Kent
HRH Princess Alexandra
Lord Mountbatten of Burma
They would never leave without me, I would never leave without the King, and the King would never leave. - Queen Mother, 1940
British Royal Family
Her Majesty The Queen
HRH The Duke of Edinburgh
HRH Prince Charles of Wales
HRH The Duchess of Cornwall
HRH Prince William of Wales
HRH Prince Henry of Wales
HRH The Princess Royal
HRH The Duke of York
HRH The Earl of Wessex
HRH The Countess of Wessex
HRH The Duke of Gloucester
HRH The Duchess of Gloucester
HRH The Duke of Kent
HRH The Duchess of Kent
HRH Prince Michael of Kent
HRH Princess Michael of Kent
HRH Princess Alexandra
Lord Mountbatten of Burma
They would never leave without me, I would never leave without the King, and the King would never leave. - Queen Mother, 1940
Monarchist Leagues
MONARCHY.NET
Canadian Royal Heritage Trust
Diamond Jubilee Trust Australia
British Monarchist League
Monarchist League of Canada
Australian Monarchist League
Monarchy New Zealand
British Monarchist Society
SA Monarchist Society
Monarchy Wales
American Monarchist League
Orange Lodge of Ireland
Orange Lodge of Canada
Orange Lodge of England
Orange Lodge of Australia
Loyal Orange Institution
Orange Historical Site
For Constitutional Monarchy
Junior Lodge of Ireland
Society of United Royalists
Monarchist Society of America
Royal Over-Seas League
The Victoria League
There is something behind the throne greater than the King himself.
- William Pitt the Elder
Canadian Royal Heritage Trust
Diamond Jubilee Trust Australia
British Monarchist League
Monarchist League of Canada
Australian Monarchist League
Monarchy New Zealand
British Monarchist Society
SA Monarchist Society
Monarchy Wales
American Monarchist League
Orange Lodge of Ireland
Orange Lodge of Canada
Orange Lodge of England
Orange Lodge of Australia
Loyal Orange Institution
Orange Historical Site
For Constitutional Monarchy
Junior Lodge of Ireland
Society of United Royalists
Monarchist Society of America
Royal Over-Seas League
The Victoria League
There is something behind the throne greater than the King himself.
- William Pitt the Elder
The Sacred Crown
CROWN JEWELS
Jewel House, Tower of London
The Stone of Scone (847 A.D.)
King Edward's Chair (1296)
Crown of Scotland (1540)
St. Edward's Crown (1661)
Mary Modena's Crown (1661)
Sceptre with the Cross (1661)
Sceptre with the Dove (1661)
The Sovereign's Orb (1661)
Sword of Mercy (Curtana)
Sword of Offering (1820)
George IV State Diadem (1820)
Coronation Ring (1831)
Imperial Crown of India (1911)
Imperial State Crown (1937)
Gold Armills and Royal Robe
Colobium Sindonis
Royal Regalia
The Sleeping King
Here lies an anachronism, in the vague expectation of eternity. - 'Lord Peter'
Jewel House, Tower of London
The Stone of Scone (847 A.D.)
King Edward's Chair (1296)
Crown of Scotland (1540)
St. Edward's Crown (1661)
Mary Modena's Crown (1661)
Sceptre with the Cross (1661)
Sceptre with the Dove (1661)
The Sovereign's Orb (1661)
Sword of Mercy (Curtana)
Sword of Offering (1820)
George IV State Diadem (1820)
Coronation Ring (1831)
Imperial Crown of India (1911)
Imperial State Crown (1937)
Gold Armills and Royal Robe
Colobium Sindonis
Royal Regalia
The Sleeping King
Here lies an anachronism, in the vague expectation of eternity. - 'Lord Peter'
Queen's Coronation
DIEU ET MON DROIT
The Devine Right of Kings
House of God, House of Kings
Throne and Altar
Order of Succession
Royal Line of Succession
King is Dead. Long Live the King!
The Interregnum
Accession Proclamation
QUEEN'S CORONATION:
Swearing of the Oath
Presenting of the Holy Bible
Anointing with Holy Oil
Presenting of Spurs and Sword
Investing with the Armills
Delivery of the Orb
Investiture and Crowning
"God Save the Queen!"
The Benediction
Enthroning and Homage
Holy Communion and the Recess
Archbishop: Will you solemnly promise and swear to govern the Peoples of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, ...and of your Possessions and other Territories to any of them belonging or pertaining, according to their respective laws and customs?
Queen: I solemnly promise so to do.
The Devine Right of Kings
House of God, House of Kings
Throne and Altar
Order of Succession
Royal Line of Succession
King is Dead. Long Live the King!
The Interregnum
Accession Proclamation
QUEEN'S CORONATION:
Swearing of the Oath
Presenting of the Holy Bible
Anointing with Holy Oil
Presenting of Spurs and Sword
Investing with the Armills
Delivery of the Orb
Investiture and Crowning
"God Save the Queen!"
The Benediction
Enthroning and Homage
Holy Communion and the Recess
Archbishop: Will you solemnly promise and swear to govern the Peoples of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, ...and of your Possessions and other Territories to any of them belonging or pertaining, according to their respective laws and customs?
Queen: I solemnly promise so to do.
Pomp and State
ELIZABETH REGINA
The Royal Yacht Britannia
In Defence of Pomp
Coronation of Elizabeth II
Reserve Powers of the Crown
Her Majesty's Privy Council
Queen's Privy Council
Great Officers of State
Queen's Golden Jubilee
Diamond Wedding Anniversary
Queen's Silver Jubilee
Trooping the Colour
Changing of the Guard
Sovereign's Fleet Review
Battle of Britain Memorial Flight
Accession Day (Feb 2)
Commonwealth Day (Mar 13)
Victoria Day (May 24)
Coronation Day (Jun 2)
Queen's Official B'day (Jun 6)
Remembrance Day (Nov 11)
Royal Xmas Message (Dec 25)
State Opening of Parliament
Sovereign's Ceremonial Mace
THE ROYAL TOURNAMENT
Edinburgh Military Tattoo
Royal Nova Scotia Tattoo
Royal International Air Tattoo
Canadian Military Tattoo
Australian Federation Tattoo
Virginia International Tattoo
Birmingham Military Tattoo
Quebec City Military Tattoo
Windsor Castle Royal Tattoo
SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
If your job is to leaven ordinary lives with elevating spectacle, be elevating or be gone. - George F. Will
The Royal Yacht Britannia
In Defence of Pomp
Coronation of Elizabeth II
Reserve Powers of the Crown
Her Majesty's Privy Council
Queen's Privy Council
Great Officers of State
Queen's Golden Jubilee
Diamond Wedding Anniversary
Queen's Silver Jubilee
Trooping the Colour
Changing of the Guard
Sovereign's Fleet Review
Battle of Britain Memorial Flight
Accession Day (Feb 2)
Commonwealth Day (Mar 13)
Victoria Day (May 24)
Coronation Day (Jun 2)
Queen's Official B'day (Jun 6)
Remembrance Day (Nov 11)
Royal Xmas Message (Dec 25)
State Opening of Parliament
Sovereign's Ceremonial Mace
THE ROYAL TOURNAMENT
Edinburgh Military Tattoo
Royal Nova Scotia Tattoo
Royal International Air Tattoo
Canadian Military Tattoo
Australian Federation Tattoo
Virginia International Tattoo
Birmingham Military Tattoo
Quebec City Military Tattoo
Windsor Castle Royal Tattoo
SPEECH FROM THE THRONE
If your job is to leaven ordinary lives with elevating spectacle, be elevating or be gone. - George F. Will
The Queen's Bench
QUEEN AND THE LAW
At Her Majesty's Pleasure
The Queen's Peace
Justices of the Peace
King's Court (Curia Regis)
Her Majesty's Courts Service
Royal Courts of Justice
Magna Carta Society
Constitution Society
English Common Law
Unwritten Constitution
The Liberty Papers
British House of Lords
Supreme Court of Canada
High Court of Australia
High Court of New Zealand
King's Bench Prison
Queen's Bench Bar Assn.
Crown Attorney
Crown Prosecutor
Tower of London
The Old Bailey
Without authority there is no liberty. Freedom is doomed to destruction at every turn, unless there is a recognized right to freedom. And if there are rights, there is an authority to which we appeal for them.
- G. K. Chesterton
At Her Majesty's Pleasure
The Queen's Peace
Justices of the Peace
King's Court (Curia Regis)
Her Majesty's Courts Service
Royal Courts of Justice
Magna Carta Society
Constitution Society
English Common Law
Unwritten Constitution
The Liberty Papers
British House of Lords
Supreme Court of Canada
High Court of Australia
High Court of New Zealand
King's Bench Prison
Queen's Bench Bar Assn.
Crown Attorney
Crown Prosecutor
Tower of London
The Old Bailey
Without authority there is no liberty. Freedom is doomed to destruction at every turn, unless there is a recognized right to freedom. And if there are rights, there is an authority to which we appeal for them.
- G. K. Chesterton
King's Colleges
KING'S COLLEGE
University of Oxford (1167)
Westminster School (1179)
University of Cambridge (1209)
Winchester College (1382)
University St. Andrews (1410)
ETON COLLEGE (1440)
University of Glasgow (1451)
King's College, Aberdeen (1495)
Saint Paul's School (1509)
Shrewsbury School (1552)
Merchant Taylors' School (1561)
Rugby School (1567)
Harrow School (1572)
Trinity College, Dublin (1592)
Charterhouse School (1611)
Harvard University (1636)
College William & Mary (1693)
Yale University (1701)
Princeton University (1746)
King's College, Columbia (1754)
University King's College (1789)
McGill University (1821)
King's College, Toronto (1827)
King's College London (1829)
Upper Canada College (1829)
King's College School (1829)
Queen's University (1841)
Queensland University (1909)
Gordonstoun (1933)
KING'S SCHOLAR
Oxford gave the world marmalade and a manner, Cambridge science and a sausage
University of Oxford (1167)
Westminster School (1179)
University of Cambridge (1209)
Winchester College (1382)
University St. Andrews (1410)
ETON COLLEGE (1440)
University of Glasgow (1451)
King's College, Aberdeen (1495)
Saint Paul's School (1509)
Shrewsbury School (1552)
Merchant Taylors' School (1561)
Rugby School (1567)
Harrow School (1572)
Trinity College, Dublin (1592)
Charterhouse School (1611)
Harvard University (1636)
College William & Mary (1693)
Yale University (1701)
Princeton University (1746)
King's College, Columbia (1754)
University King's College (1789)
McGill University (1821)
King's College, Toronto (1827)
King's College London (1829)
Upper Canada College (1829)
King's College School (1829)
Queen's University (1841)
Queensland University (1909)
Gordonstoun (1933)
KING'S SCHOLAR
Oxford gave the world marmalade and a manner, Cambridge science and a sausage
Her Majesty's Government
"MY GOVERNMENT"
The Royal Prerogative
Her Majesty's Privy Council
Queen's Privy Council
Federal Executive Council
Executive Council of N.Z.
Her Majesty's Government
Westminster Cabinet
Rt. Hon. Prime Minister
Minister of the Crown
Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition
Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition
Order-in-Council
Chief Government Whip
Letters Patent
Petition of Right (1628)
The King-Byng Affair (1926)
The Dismissal of 1975
Dropping the Writ
The attitude of successive governments towards the monarchy is that of the urchin, secretly urinating on some shrub in the hope that it will die. - Peter Brimelow
The Royal Prerogative
Her Majesty's Privy Council
Queen's Privy Council
Federal Executive Council
Executive Council of N.Z.
Her Majesty's Government
Westminster Cabinet
Rt. Hon. Prime Minister
Minister of the Crown
Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition
Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition
Order-in-Council
Chief Government Whip
Letters Patent
Petition of Right (1628)
The King-Byng Affair (1926)
The Dismissal of 1975
Dropping the Writ
The attitude of successive governments towards the monarchy is that of the urchin, secretly urinating on some shrub in the hope that it will die. - Peter Brimelow
Westminster Parliaments
QUEEN-IN-PARLIAMENT
Palace of Westminster
The Westminster System
Granting of Royal Assent
Act of Parliament
Parliamentary Privilege
Unparliamentary Language
Prorogation of Parliament
Anglo-Saxon Witenagemot (650)
The Model Parliament (1295)
U.K. Parliament (1801)
New Zealand Parliament (1852)
Parliament of Canada (1867)
Parliament of Australia (1901)
British House of Lords
Gentleman Usher of Black Rod
British House of Commons
Speaker of the House (1377)
Sergeant-at-Arms
(Let's Not) Elect The Lords
For an English Parliament
Scottish Parliament
National Assembly for Wales
As nature’s ties decay
As duty, love, and honour fail to sway,
Fictitious bonds, the bonds of wealth and law,
Still gather strength, and force unwilling awe.
- Oliver Goldsmith
Palace of Westminster
The Westminster System
Granting of Royal Assent
Act of Parliament
Parliamentary Privilege
Unparliamentary Language
Prorogation of Parliament
Anglo-Saxon Witenagemot (650)
The Model Parliament (1295)
U.K. Parliament (1801)
New Zealand Parliament (1852)
Parliament of Canada (1867)
Parliament of Australia (1901)
British House of Lords
Gentleman Usher of Black Rod
British House of Commons
Speaker of the House (1377)
Sergeant-at-Arms
(Let's Not) Elect The Lords
For an English Parliament
Scottish Parliament
National Assembly for Wales
As nature’s ties decay
As duty, love, and honour fail to sway,
Fictitious bonds, the bonds of wealth and law,
Still gather strength, and force unwilling awe.
- Oliver Goldsmith
Hansard Societies
HANSARD
U.K. Hansard
CAN Hansard
AUS Hansard
NZ Hansard
Ireland Hansard
Wales Hansard
Scotland Hansard
Northern Ireland Hansard
Isle of Man Hansard
Jersey Hansard
British Columbia Hansard
A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. - Edward R. Murrow
U.K. Hansard
CAN Hansard
AUS Hansard
NZ Hansard
Ireland Hansard
Wales Hansard
Scotland Hansard
Northern Ireland Hansard
Isle of Man Hansard
Jersey Hansard
British Columbia Hansard
A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. - Edward R. Murrow
Orders of Chivalry
KNIGHTS AND CHIVALRY
Military Knights of Windsor
Noble Order of the Garter
Ancient Order of the Thistle
Illustrious Order of St. Patrick
Honourable Order of the Bath
Order of the Star of India
Order of St. Michael & St. George
The Order of Canada
The Order of Australia
The Order of New Zealand
Order of the Crown of India
The Order of Merit
New Zealand Order of Merit
Order of Military Merit
Royal Victorian Order
Order of the British Empire
Order of the Indian Empire
Order of Australia Association
Distinguished Service Order
Merit of the Police Forces
Companions of Honour
Society of Knights Bachelor
Knight Bachelor
Venerable Order of St. John
...in a nation of gallant men, in a nation of men of honour, and of cavaliers! I thought ten thousand swords must have leaped from their scabbards, to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult. But the age of chivalry is gone; that of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded, and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever. - Edmund Burke
Military Knights of Windsor
Noble Order of the Garter
Ancient Order of the Thistle
Illustrious Order of St. Patrick
Honourable Order of the Bath
Order of the Star of India
Order of St. Michael & St. George
The Order of Canada
The Order of Australia
The Order of New Zealand
Order of the Crown of India
The Order of Merit
New Zealand Order of Merit
Order of Military Merit
Royal Victorian Order
Order of the British Empire
Order of the Indian Empire
Order of Australia Association
Distinguished Service Order
Merit of the Police Forces
Companions of Honour
Society of Knights Bachelor
Knight Bachelor
Venerable Order of St. John
...in a nation of gallant men, in a nation of men of honour, and of cavaliers! I thought ten thousand swords must have leaped from their scabbards, to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult. But the age of chivalry is gone; that of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded, and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever. - Edmund Burke
Victoria Cross
VICTORIA CROSS
For Valour: The Monarchist
Canadian Victoria Cross
Anzac Victoria Cross
The Victoria Cross Society
History of the Victoria Cross
Canadian Recipients of the VC
Australian Winners of the VC
New Zealand Recipients
Victoria Cross at Sea
Imperial War Museum VCs
Victoria Cross Heroes
BRITISH MEDALS
Canadian Victoria Cross
New Zealand Cross (Civilian)
George Cross (Civilian)
Cross of Valour (Civilian)
Cross of Valour (Civilian)
Conspicuous Gallantry Cross
Star of Military Valour
Distinguished Service Cross
Distinguished Service Cross
Military Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross
Star of Courage (Civilian)
Star of Courage (Civilian)
Medal of Military Valour
New Zealand Cross (Civilian)
Meritorious Service Cross
Medal of Bravery
The Sacrifice Medal
The King feels so strongly that, no matter the crime committed by anyone on whom the VC has been conferred, the decoration should not be forfeited. Even were a VC to be sentenced to be hanged for murder, he should be allowed to wear his VC on the gallows. - Lord Stamfordham, 1920
For Valour: The Monarchist
Canadian Victoria Cross
Anzac Victoria Cross
The Victoria Cross Society
History of the Victoria Cross
Canadian Recipients of the VC
Australian Winners of the VC
New Zealand Recipients
Victoria Cross at Sea
Imperial War Museum VCs
Victoria Cross Heroes
BRITISH MEDALS
Canadian Victoria Cross
New Zealand Cross (Civilian)
George Cross (Civilian)
Cross of Valour (Civilian)
Cross of Valour (Civilian)
Conspicuous Gallantry Cross
Star of Military Valour
Distinguished Service Cross
Distinguished Service Cross
Military Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross
Star of Courage (Civilian)
Star of Courage (Civilian)
Medal of Military Valour
New Zealand Cross (Civilian)
Meritorious Service Cross
Medal of Bravery
The Sacrifice Medal
The King feels so strongly that, no matter the crime committed by anyone on whom the VC has been conferred, the decoration should not be forfeited. Even were a VC to be sentenced to be hanged for murder, he should be allowed to wear his VC on the gallows. - Lord Stamfordham, 1920
Queen and Armed Forces
QUEEN AND ARMED FORCES
Land Forces of the Empire
The British Army
HM Canadian Armed Forces
The Australian Army
The New Zealand Army
Royal Armouries
The Royal Air Force
Royal Australian Air Force
Royal New Zealand Air Force
THE ROYAL NAVY
My Royal Canadian Navy
Royal Australian Navy
Royal New Zealand Navy
Her Majesty's Canadian Navy
Her Majesty's Royal Marines
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Digger History (ANZAC)
Wellington's Dispatches
REGIMENTS.ORG
Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.
- Winston Churchill
Land Forces of the Empire
The British Army
HM Canadian Armed Forces
The Australian Army
The New Zealand Army
Royal Armouries
The Royal Air Force
Royal Australian Air Force
Royal New Zealand Air Force
THE ROYAL NAVY
My Royal Canadian Navy
Royal Australian Navy
Royal New Zealand Navy
Her Majesty's Canadian Navy
Her Majesty's Royal Marines
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Digger History (ANZAC)
Wellington's Dispatches
REGIMENTS.ORG
Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.
- Winston Churchill
Arms and Heraldry
COLLEGE OF ARMS
Court of the Lord Lyon
Canadian Heraldic Authority
Heraldry Australia
Royal Heraldry Society Canada
The Heraldry Society
ALMANACH DE LA COUR
ONLINE GOTHA
Garter Principal King of Arms
Lord Lyon King of Arms
Clarenceux King of Arms
Norroy and Ulster King of Arms
Chief Herald of Canada
Heraldry Wikipedia
HERALDICA.ORG
Nobility and Royalty
Heraldry is the fusion of fact and fancy, myth and manner, romance and reality. It is an exuberant union of family, art, and history.
- Charles Burnett, 1997
Court of the Lord Lyon
Canadian Heraldic Authority
Heraldry Australia
Royal Heraldry Society Canada
The Heraldry Society
ALMANACH DE LA COUR
ONLINE GOTHA
Garter Principal King of Arms
Lord Lyon King of Arms
Clarenceux King of Arms
Norroy and Ulster King of Arms
Chief Herald of Canada
Heraldry Wikipedia
HERALDICA.ORG
Nobility and Royalty
Heraldry is the fusion of fact and fancy, myth and manner, romance and reality. It is an exuberant union of family, art, and history.
- Charles Burnett, 1997
The Admiralty
LORD HIGH ADMIRAL
First Lord of the Admiralty
The First Sea Lord
The Nelson Society
Nelson's Dispatches
The 1805 Club
Vice-Admiral United Kingdom
Rear-Admiral United Kingdom
Nelson and His Navy
THE ROYAL NAVY
Royal Canadian Navy
Royal Australian Navy
Royal New Zealand Navy
The Great White Fleet
Her Majesty's Canadian Navy
Her Majesty's Royal Marines
Britannia Royal Naval College
Annapolis Naval Academy
Royal Naval College Greenwich
Royal Roads Military College
Royal Naval College Osborne
Trafalgar 200th
Admiral Cod
Nelson's Victory
Duty is the great business of a sea officer; all private considerations must give way to it, however painful it may be. - Lord Nelson
First Lord of the Admiralty
The First Sea Lord
The Nelson Society
Nelson's Dispatches
The 1805 Club
Vice-Admiral United Kingdom
Rear-Admiral United Kingdom
Nelson and His Navy
THE ROYAL NAVY
Royal Canadian Navy
Royal Australian Navy
Royal New Zealand Navy
The Great White Fleet
Her Majesty's Canadian Navy
Her Majesty's Royal Marines
Britannia Royal Naval College
Annapolis Naval Academy
Royal Naval College Greenwich
Royal Roads Military College
Royal Naval College Osborne
Trafalgar 200th
Admiral Cod
Nelson's Victory
Duty is the great business of a sea officer; all private considerations must give way to it, however painful it may be. - Lord Nelson
Royal Yachts
HMY BRITANNIA
Royal Yacht Squadron
The Royal Yacht Britannia
Royal Thames Yacht Club
Royal Canadian Yacht Club
Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron
Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Sqn.
Royal Cork Yacht Club
Royal Perth Yacht Club
Royal Ulster Yacht Club
The New York Yacht Club
Royal Brighton Yacht Club
Royal Irish Yacht Club
Royal Southampton Yacht Club
Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania
It takes 3 years to build a ship, but 300 years to build a tradition.
- Admiral Cunningham, 1941
Royal Yacht Squadron
The Royal Yacht Britannia
Royal Thames Yacht Club
Royal Canadian Yacht Club
Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron
Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Sqn.
Royal Cork Yacht Club
Royal Perth Yacht Club
Royal Ulster Yacht Club
The New York Yacht Club
Royal Brighton Yacht Club
Royal Irish Yacht Club
Royal Southampton Yacht Club
Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania
It takes 3 years to build a ship, but 300 years to build a tradition.
- Admiral Cunningham, 1941
Ceremonial Guards
THE QUEEN'S GUARD
Yeomen of the Guard
Gentlemen at Arms
Royal Company of Archers
Yeomen Warders
Warden of the Cinque Ports
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Military Knights of Windsor
HOUSEHOLD DIVISION
The King's Troops
The Life Guards
The Blues and Royals
The G-G's Horse Guards
Australia's Federation Guard
The Grenadier Guards
The Canadian Grenadier Guards
The Coldstream Guards
The Scots Guards
The Irish Guards
The Welsh Guards
The G-G's Foot Guards
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers; For he to-day that sheds his blood with me Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, This day shall gentle his condition: And gentlemen in England now a-bed Shall think themselves accursed they were not here, And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day. - William Shakespeare
Yeomen of the Guard
Gentlemen at Arms
Royal Company of Archers
Yeomen Warders
Warden of the Cinque Ports
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Military Knights of Windsor
HOUSEHOLD DIVISION
The King's Troops
The Life Guards
The Blues and Royals
The G-G's Horse Guards
Australia's Federation Guard
The Grenadier Guards
The Canadian Grenadier Guards
The Coldstream Guards
The Scots Guards
The Irish Guards
The Welsh Guards
The G-G's Foot Guards
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers; For he to-day that sheds his blood with me Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, This day shall gentle his condition: And gentlemen in England now a-bed Shall think themselves accursed they were not here, And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day. - William Shakespeare
Cavalry Regiments
HOUSEHOLD CAVALRY
The Life Guards
The Blues and Royals
The G-G's Horse Guards
DRAGOON REGIMENTS:
1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
Royal Dragoon Guards
Royal Canadian Dragoons
The British Columbia Dragoons
The Saskatchewan Dragoons
HUSSAR REGIMENTS:
Queen's Royal Hussars
Prince of Wales's Royal Lancers
King's Royal Hussars
Royal Canadian Hussars
The Light Dragoons
1st Hussars
The Sherbrooke Hussars
Princess Louise's Hussars
LANCER REGIMENTS:
The Queen's Royal Lancers
Lord Strathcona's Horse
Hunter River Lancers
Royal New South Wales Lancers
LIGHT HORSE REGIMENTS:
Queensland Mounted Infantry
Queen Alexandra's Mounted
South Australia Mounted Rifles
South Alberta Light Horse
Prince of Wales' Light Horse
The Light Horse Regiment
The Fort Garry Horse
Le Regiment blinde du Canada
TANK REGIMENTS:
1st Royal Tank Regiment
2nd Royal Tank Regiment
1st Armoured Regiment
2nd Cavalry Regiment
3rd/4th Cavalry Regiment
The Ontario Regiment
Queen's York Rangers
Prince Edward Island Regiment
Duke of Connaught's Own
King's Own Calgary Regiment
Le Regiment de Hull
The Windsor Regiment
From time to time, the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots. - Thomas Jefferson
The Life Guards
The Blues and Royals
The G-G's Horse Guards
DRAGOON REGIMENTS:
1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
Royal Dragoon Guards
Royal Canadian Dragoons
The British Columbia Dragoons
The Saskatchewan Dragoons
HUSSAR REGIMENTS:
Queen's Royal Hussars
Prince of Wales's Royal Lancers
King's Royal Hussars
Royal Canadian Hussars
The Light Dragoons
1st Hussars
The Sherbrooke Hussars
Princess Louise's Hussars
LANCER REGIMENTS:
The Queen's Royal Lancers
Lord Strathcona's Horse
Hunter River Lancers
Royal New South Wales Lancers
LIGHT HORSE REGIMENTS:
Queensland Mounted Infantry
Queen Alexandra's Mounted
South Australia Mounted Rifles
South Alberta Light Horse
Prince of Wales' Light Horse
The Light Horse Regiment
The Fort Garry Horse
Le Regiment blinde du Canada
TANK REGIMENTS:
1st Royal Tank Regiment
2nd Royal Tank Regiment
1st Armoured Regiment
2nd Cavalry Regiment
3rd/4th Cavalry Regiment
The Ontario Regiment
Queen's York Rangers
Prince Edward Island Regiment
Duke of Connaught's Own
King's Own Calgary Regiment
Le Regiment de Hull
The Windsor Regiment
From time to time, the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots. - Thomas Jefferson
War Veterans
REMEMBRANCE DAY
War Graves Commission
British Ex-Services League
For King and Empire
Queen's Book of the Red Cross
THE POPPY APPEAL
Royal British Legion
Royal British Legion Scotland
Royal Canadian Legion
Returned Services League
Returned Services Association
The American Legion
Land Forces of the Empire
Grand Army of the Republic
The Earl Haig Fund Scotland
Veterans Affairs Canada
Anzac Day Dawn Service
Western Front Association
Surviving WW1Veterans
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old. Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them.
- Laurence Binyon, For the Fallen
War Graves Commission
British Ex-Services League
For King and Empire
Queen's Book of the Red Cross
THE POPPY APPEAL
Royal British Legion
Royal British Legion Scotland
Royal Canadian Legion
Returned Services League
Returned Services Association
The American Legion
Land Forces of the Empire
Grand Army of the Republic
The Earl Haig Fund Scotland
Veterans Affairs Canada
Anzac Day Dawn Service
Western Front Association
Surviving WW1Veterans
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old. Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them.
- Laurence Binyon, For the Fallen
Lest We Forget
O VALIANT HEARTS (mp3)
Menin Gate Memorial
The Verdun Memorial
National Vimy Memorial
Thiepval War Memorial
ANZAC War Memorial
The Unknown Warrior
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Tomb of the Unknown Warrior
The Cenotaph at Whitehall
Arlington National Cemetary
Tyne Cot War Graves Cemetary
Scottish War Memorial
Ireland War Memorial
Canadian War Memorial
Australian War Memorial
Nfld National War Memorial
New Zealand War Memorial
Shot at Dawn Memorial
Saint Julien Memorial
Shrine of Remembrance (*)
The Armed Forces Memorial
Douaumont Ossuary Verdun
National Memorial Arboretum
The Welsh Memorial
British Commando Memorial
Lewis War Memorial
Old City Hall Cenotaph
Ottawa Memorial
Korean War Memorial Wall
South African War Memorial
Vancouver Victory Square
The Hobart Cenotaph
Next of Kin Memorial Avenue
Auckland War Memorial
Saskatchewan Memorial Gates
Beaumont-Hamel Memorial
Notre Dame de Lorette
The Normandy Memorial
Groesbeek War Cemetery
Garden of Remembrance
The Hong Kong Cenotaph
Juno Beach Centre
Women of World War II
Peacekeeping Monument
LAST POST ASSOCIATION
Their name liveth forevermore.
- Rudyard Kipling, from Ecclesiasticus
Menin Gate Memorial
The Verdun Memorial
National Vimy Memorial
Thiepval War Memorial
ANZAC War Memorial
The Unknown Warrior
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Tomb of the Unknown Warrior
The Cenotaph at Whitehall
Arlington National Cemetary
Tyne Cot War Graves Cemetary
Scottish War Memorial
Ireland War Memorial
Canadian War Memorial
Australian War Memorial
Nfld National War Memorial
New Zealand War Memorial
Shot at Dawn Memorial
Saint Julien Memorial
Shrine of Remembrance (*)
The Armed Forces Memorial
Douaumont Ossuary Verdun
National Memorial Arboretum
The Welsh Memorial
British Commando Memorial
Lewis War Memorial
Old City Hall Cenotaph
Ottawa Memorial
Korean War Memorial Wall
South African War Memorial
Vancouver Victory Square
The Hobart Cenotaph
Next of Kin Memorial Avenue
Auckland War Memorial
Saskatchewan Memorial Gates
Beaumont-Hamel Memorial
Notre Dame de Lorette
The Normandy Memorial
Groesbeek War Cemetery
Garden of Remembrance
The Hong Kong Cenotaph
Juno Beach Centre
Women of World War II
Peacekeeping Monument
LAST POST ASSOCIATION
Their name liveth forevermore.
- Rudyard Kipling, from Ecclesiasticus
Commonwealth Premiers
YES, PRIME MINISTER
David Thompson (2008-)
Kevin Rudd (2007-)
Bruce Golding (2007-)
Gordon Brown (2007-)
Hubert Ingraham (2007-)
Stephen Harper (2006-)
P. Simpson-Miller (2006-07)
Michael Somare (2002-)
Perry Christie (2002-07)
Paul Martin (2003-06)
Mekere Morauta (1999-2002)
Helen Clark (1999-)
Bill Skate (1997-99)
Tony Blair (1997-2007)
Jenny Shipley (1997-99)
John Howard (1996-2007)
Keith Mitchell (1995-)
Julius Chan (1994-97)
Owen Arthur (1994-2008)
Jean Chretien (1993-2003)
Kim Campbell (1993)
Paias Wingti (1992-94)
Hubert Ingraham (1992-2002)
P.J. Patterson (1992-2006)
Paul Keating (1991-96)
Nicholas Brathwaite (1990-95)
Jim Bolger (1990-97)
John Major (1990-97)
Mike Moore (1990)
Geoffrey Palmer (1989-90)
Ben Jones (1989-90)
Michael Manley (1989-92)
Rabbie Namaliu (1988-92)
Paias Wingti (1985-88)
Brian Mulroney (1984-93)
Erskine Sandiford (1987-94)
Errol Barrow (1986-87)
Bernard St. John (1985-86)
David Lange (1984-89)
Herbert Blaize (1984-89)
John Turner (1984)
Nicholas Brathwaite (1983-84)
Bob Hawke (1983-91)
Michael Somare (1982-85)
Edward Seaga (1980-89)
Julius Chan (1980-82)
Pierre Trudeau (1980-84)
Margaret Thatcher (1979-90)
Joe Clark (1979-80)
Tom Adams (1976-85)
James Callaghan (1976-79)
Michael Somare (1975-80)
Robert Muldoon (1975-84)
Malcolm Fraser (1975-83)
Bill Rowling (1974-75)
Harold Wilson (1974-76)
Lynden Pindling (1973-92)
Gough Whitlam (1972-75)
Norman Kirk (1972-74)
Michael Manley (1972-80)
Jack Marshall (1972)
William McMahon (1971-72)
Edward Heath (1970-74)
John Gorton (1968-71)
Pierre Trudeau (1968-79)
Hugh Shearer (1967-72)
John McEwen (1967-68)
Errol Barrow (1966-76)
Harold Holt (1966-67)
Donald Sangster (1967)
Harold Wilson (1964-70)
Lester Pearson (1963-68)
Alec Douglas-Home (1963-64)
Alex Bustamante (1962-67)
Keith Holyoake (1957-72)
John Diefenbaker (1957-63)
Harold Macmillan (1957-63)
Walter Nash (1957-60)
Anthony Eden (1955-57)
Louis St. Laurent (1948-57)
Sidney Holland (1949-57)
Robert Menzies (1949-66)
Winston Churchill (1951-55)
Thereupon the people picked a leader nearer to their mood, Churchill, who was at any rate able to grasp that wars are not won without fighting. - George Orwell
David Thompson (2008-)
Kevin Rudd (2007-)
Bruce Golding (2007-)
Gordon Brown (2007-)
Hubert Ingraham (2007-)
Stephen Harper (2006-)
P. Simpson-Miller (2006-07)
Michael Somare (2002-)
Perry Christie (2002-07)
Paul Martin (2003-06)
Mekere Morauta (1999-2002)
Helen Clark (1999-)
Bill Skate (1997-99)
Tony Blair (1997-2007)
Jenny Shipley (1997-99)
John Howard (1996-2007)
Keith Mitchell (1995-)
Julius Chan (1994-97)
Owen Arthur (1994-2008)
Jean Chretien (1993-2003)
Kim Campbell (1993)
Paias Wingti (1992-94)
Hubert Ingraham (1992-2002)
P.J. Patterson (1992-2006)
Paul Keating (1991-96)
Nicholas Brathwaite (1990-95)
Jim Bolger (1990-97)
John Major (1990-97)
Mike Moore (1990)
Geoffrey Palmer (1989-90)
Ben Jones (1989-90)
Michael Manley (1989-92)
Rabbie Namaliu (1988-92)
Paias Wingti (1985-88)
Brian Mulroney (1984-93)
Erskine Sandiford (1987-94)
Errol Barrow (1986-87)
Bernard St. John (1985-86)
David Lange (1984-89)
Herbert Blaize (1984-89)
John Turner (1984)
Nicholas Brathwaite (1983-84)
Bob Hawke (1983-91)
Michael Somare (1982-85)
Edward Seaga (1980-89)
Julius Chan (1980-82)
Pierre Trudeau (1980-84)
Margaret Thatcher (1979-90)
Joe Clark (1979-80)
Tom Adams (1976-85)
James Callaghan (1976-79)
Michael Somare (1975-80)
Robert Muldoon (1975-84)
Malcolm Fraser (1975-83)
Bill Rowling (1974-75)
Harold Wilson (1974-76)
Lynden Pindling (1973-92)
Gough Whitlam (1972-75)
Norman Kirk (1972-74)
Michael Manley (1972-80)
Jack Marshall (1972)
William McMahon (1971-72)
Edward Heath (1970-74)
John Gorton (1968-71)
Pierre Trudeau (1968-79)
Hugh Shearer (1967-72)
John McEwen (1967-68)
Errol Barrow (1966-76)
Harold Holt (1966-67)
Donald Sangster (1967)
Harold Wilson (1964-70)
Lester Pearson (1963-68)
Alec Douglas-Home (1963-64)
Alex Bustamante (1962-67)
Keith Holyoake (1957-72)
John Diefenbaker (1957-63)
Harold Macmillan (1957-63)
Walter Nash (1957-60)
Anthony Eden (1955-57)
Louis St. Laurent (1948-57)
Sidney Holland (1949-57)
Robert Menzies (1949-66)
Winston Churchill (1951-55)
Thereupon the people picked a leader nearer to their mood, Churchill, who was at any rate able to grasp that wars are not won without fighting. - George Orwell
Imperial Prime Ministers
Winston Churchill (1951-55)
Ben Chifley (1945-49)
Frank Forde (1945)
Clement Attlee (1945-51)
John Curtin (1941-45)
Arthur Fadden (1941)
Winston Churchill (1940-45)
Peter Fraser (1940-49)
Robert Menzies (1939-41)
Earle Page (1939)
Neville Chamberlain (1937-40)
MacKenzie King (1935-48)
Michael Savage (1935-40)
Stanley Baldwin (1935-37)
Joseph Lyons (1932-39)
Richard Bennett (1930-35)
George Forbes (1930-35)
James Scullin (1929-32)
Ramsay MacDonald (1929-35)
Joseph Ward (1928-30)
MacKenzie King (1926-30)
Arthur Meighen (1926)
Gordon Coates (1925-28)
Francis Bell (1925)
Stanley Baldwin (1924-29)
Stanley Bruce (1923-29)
MacKenzie King (1921-26)
Andrew Bonar Law (1922-23)
Arthur Meighen (1920-21)
David Lloyd George (1916-22)
Billy Hughes (1915-23)
Andrew Fisher (1914-15)
Joseph Cook (1913-14)
William Massey (1912-25)
Thomas Mackenzie (1912)
Robert Borden (1911-20)
Andrew Fisher (1910-13)
Alfred Deakin (1909-10)
Herbert Asquith (1908-16)
Andrew Fisher (1908-09)
Joseph Ward (1906-12)
William Hall-Jones (1906)
Alfred Deakin (1905-08)
Campbell-Bannerman (1905-8)
George Reid (1904-05)
Chris Watson (1904)
Alfred Deakin (1903-04)
Arthur Balfour (1902-05)
Edmund Barton (1901-03)
Wilfred Laurier (1896-1911)
Charles Tupper (1896)
Marquess of Salisbury (1895-02)
Mackenzie Bowell (1894-96)
Earl of Rosebery (1894-95)
Richard Seddon (1893-1906)
John Thompson (1892-94)
William Gladstone (1892-94)
John Ballance (1891-93)
John Caldwell Abbott (1891-92)
Marq. of Salisbury (1886-92)
William Gladstone (1886)
Marquess of Salisbury (1885-86)
Robert Stout (1884-87)
Frederick Whitaker (1882-83)
John Hall (1879-82)
John A. MacDonald (1878-91)
George Edward Grey (1877-79)
Julius Vogel (1876)
Daniel Pollen (1875-76)
William Gladstone (1880-85)
Benjamin Disraeli (1874-80)
Julius Vogel (1873-75)
Alexander Mackenzie (1873-78)
George Waterhouse (1872-73)
William Fox (1869-72)
William Gladstone (1868-74)
Benjamin Disraeli (1868)
John A. MacDonald (1867-73)
Earl of Derby (1866-68)
Edward Stafford (1865-69)
Earl Russell (1865-66)
Frederick Weld (1864-65)
Frederick Whitaker (1863-64)
Alfred Domett (1862-63)
William Fox (1861-62)
Viscount Palmerston (1859-65)
Earl of Derby (1858-59)
Edward Stafford (1856-61)
Henry Sewell (1856)
Viscount Palmerston (1855-58)
Earl of Aberdeen (1852-55)
Earl of Derby (1852)
Earl Russell (1846-52)
Robert Peel (1841-46)
Viscount Melbourne (1835-41)
Robert Peel (1834-35)
Duke of Wellington (1834)
Earl Grey (1830-34)
Duke of Wellington (1828-30)
Viscount Goderich (1827-28)
George Canning (1827)
Earl of Liverpool (1812-27)
Spencer Perceval (1809-12)
Duke of Portland (1807-09)
Lord Grenville (1806-07)
William Pitt (1804-06)
Henry Addington (1801-04)
William Pitt (1783-1801)
Duke of Portland (1783)
Earl of Shelburne (1782-83)
Marquess of Rockingham (1782)
Lord North (1770-82)
Duke of Grafton (1768-70)
Earl of Chatham (1766-68)
Marq. of Rockingham (1765-66)
George Grenville (1763-65)
Earl of Bute (1762-63)
Duke of Newcastle (1757-62)
Duke of Devonshire (1756-57)
Duke of Newcastle (1754-56)
Henry Pelham (1743-54)
Earl of Wilmington (1742-43)
Robert Walpole (1721-42)
RIGHT HONOURABLE
Primus Inter Pares. First Among Equals.
Ben Chifley (1945-49)
Frank Forde (1945)
Clement Attlee (1945-51)
John Curtin (1941-45)
Arthur Fadden (1941)
Winston Churchill (1940-45)
Peter Fraser (1940-49)
Robert Menzies (1939-41)
Earle Page (1939)
Neville Chamberlain (1937-40)
MacKenzie King (1935-48)
Michael Savage (1935-40)
Stanley Baldwin (1935-37)
Joseph Lyons (1932-39)
Richard Bennett (1930-35)
George Forbes (1930-35)
James Scullin (1929-32)
Ramsay MacDonald (1929-35)
Joseph Ward (1928-30)
MacKenzie King (1926-30)
Arthur Meighen (1926)
Gordon Coates (1925-28)
Francis Bell (1925)
Stanley Baldwin (1924-29)
Stanley Bruce (1923-29)
MacKenzie King (1921-26)
Andrew Bonar Law (1922-23)
Arthur Meighen (1920-21)
David Lloyd George (1916-22)
Billy Hughes (1915-23)
Andrew Fisher (1914-15)
Joseph Cook (1913-14)
William Massey (1912-25)
Thomas Mackenzie (1912)
Robert Borden (1911-20)
Andrew Fisher (1910-13)
Alfred Deakin (1909-10)
Herbert Asquith (1908-16)
Andrew Fisher (1908-09)
Joseph Ward (1906-12)
William Hall-Jones (1906)
Alfred Deakin (1905-08)
Campbell-Bannerman (1905-8)
George Reid (1904-05)
Chris Watson (1904)
Alfred Deakin (1903-04)
Arthur Balfour (1902-05)
Edmund Barton (1901-03)
Wilfred Laurier (1896-1911)
Charles Tupper (1896)
Marquess of Salisbury (1895-02)
Mackenzie Bowell (1894-96)
Earl of Rosebery (1894-95)
Richard Seddon (1893-1906)
John Thompson (1892-94)
William Gladstone (1892-94)
John Ballance (1891-93)
John Caldwell Abbott (1891-92)
Marq. of Salisbury (1886-92)
William Gladstone (1886)
Marquess of Salisbury (1885-86)
Robert Stout (1884-87)
Frederick Whitaker (1882-83)
John Hall (1879-82)
John A. MacDonald (1878-91)
George Edward Grey (1877-79)
Julius Vogel (1876)
Daniel Pollen (1875-76)
William Gladstone (1880-85)
Benjamin Disraeli (1874-80)
Julius Vogel (1873-75)
Alexander Mackenzie (1873-78)
George Waterhouse (1872-73)
William Fox (1869-72)
William Gladstone (1868-74)
Benjamin Disraeli (1868)
John A. MacDonald (1867-73)
Earl of Derby (1866-68)
Edward Stafford (1865-69)
Earl Russell (1865-66)
Frederick Weld (1864-65)
Frederick Whitaker (1863-64)
Alfred Domett (1862-63)
William Fox (1861-62)
Viscount Palmerston (1859-65)
Earl of Derby (1858-59)
Edward Stafford (1856-61)
Henry Sewell (1856)
Viscount Palmerston (1855-58)
Earl of Aberdeen (1852-55)
Earl of Derby (1852)
Earl Russell (1846-52)
Robert Peel (1841-46)
Viscount Melbourne (1835-41)
Robert Peel (1834-35)
Duke of Wellington (1834)
Earl Grey (1830-34)
Duke of Wellington (1828-30)
Viscount Goderich (1827-28)
George Canning (1827)
Earl of Liverpool (1812-27)
Spencer Perceval (1809-12)
Duke of Portland (1807-09)
Lord Grenville (1806-07)
William Pitt (1804-06)
Henry Addington (1801-04)
William Pitt (1783-1801)
Duke of Portland (1783)
Earl of Shelburne (1782-83)
Marquess of Rockingham (1782)
Lord North (1770-82)
Duke of Grafton (1768-70)
Earl of Chatham (1766-68)
Marq. of Rockingham (1765-66)
George Grenville (1763-65)
Earl of Bute (1762-63)
Duke of Newcastle (1757-62)
Duke of Devonshire (1756-57)
Duke of Newcastle (1754-56)
Henry Pelham (1743-54)
Earl of Wilmington (1742-43)
Robert Walpole (1721-42)
RIGHT HONOURABLE
Primus Inter Pares. First Among Equals.
9 comments:
Thank you for reposting this, Kipling. I'm going to save it under Treasured Posts.
I see so much talk from the republican side in the media and in the public, and so few for the crown, I had even begun to doubt myself, and why i felt so loyal to it, as oppose to the "country" they seem to sprout but what I never seem to see the advantages of.
I thank you for restoring my faith, given me a sword to fight back, where before i had alway been on the defensive
thank you. God Save the Queen.
No one, however, is seriously arguing in the debate over the monarchy that Her Majesty be given real decision making power.
I, for one, would certainly argue for this, at least as far as judicial matters are concerned. At least, make the Monarch the final court of appeal above the Supreme Court. The title of "Lord/Lady High Justice of the Realm", along with some real decision-making power, would be a good thing in my perspective.
For it is wrong that the Monarchy - currently Windsor rather than Stuart - has been reduced to figure head status. That makes England and the Commonwealth nothing better than "crowned republics". And that is just dead wrong.
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Emotional symbolism sounds great but when the interest of the queen intervenes in the politics and economics of a free nation then the monarchy is simply outdated. Are we all equal or not. Kingship is bases on imperialistic imposiontion that is it's only tradition. Only liberal as far as the mocharchy isn't affected quite convenient state of affairs. For that matter I would be a communist as long as it doesn't apply to me.
The roots of Canada also deeply lie in its indegenous people which you conveniently avoided as emotional symbols of Canada but you like most Canadian would conveniently left that fact out of the pictures. Thanks for your post but your argument is very weak and poorly reason leaning on the side of faith. Tell me if you really believe that the monarchy was chosen by providence? or Instead imposed by humans.
I have nothing much to say but just to tell you that these artworks are magnificent. breast Lift San Francisco
Dear Garrotero,
You write:
'Emotional symbolism sounds great but when the interest of the queen intervenes in the politics and economics of a free nation then the monarchy is simply outdated.'
Aside from receiving Civil List funds, in what way does the 'interest' of the present Queen 'interfere in the politics and economics of a free nation'? Moreover, in what sense is the monarchy 'outdated', and why do you suppose political structures ought to be spoken of like computer chips, as if they could be good one day and bad the next?
'Are we all equal or not.'
Emphatically not.
'Kingship is bases on imperialistic imposiontion that is it's only tradition.'
I hope sincerely that English is not your first language. I have no idea what this is supposed to mean.
'Only liberal as far as the mocharchy isn't affected quite convenient state of affairs.'
Please clarify this sentence.
'For that matter I would be a communist as long as it doesn't apply to me.'
I'm sure that would make sense if the previous two sentences had been intelligible.
'The roots of Canada also deeply lie in its indegenous people...'
In what way?
'...which you conveniently avoided as emotional symbols of Canada...'
Only inasmuch as any completely irrelevant topic is 'conveniently ignored' in any piece of writing.
'...but you like most Canadian would conveniently left that fact out of the pictures.'
Supra.
'Thanks for your post but your argument is very weak and poorly reason leaning on the side of faith.'
Whereas you have no argument at all that I can extract from your incoherent scribblings, unless it is that monarchy is somehow contrary to freedom(which you have not established and which we would all dispute) or to equality(which is itself contrary to freedom).
'Tell me if you really believe that the monarchy was chosen by providence? or Instead imposed by humans.'
I'll leave this question to the author for whom it was intended.
As an aside, in response to RTH's comment that 'No one, however, is seriously arguing in the debate over the monarchy that Her Majesty be given real decision making power.', I can only say that I am, and I can think of a few other monarchists, including at least one of The Monarchist's own scribes, who would probably agree.
Good luck getting people behind this one. Though you make some VERY fascinating points, youre going to have to do more than bring up a few things that may be different than what weve already heard. What are trying to say here? What do you want us to think? It seems like you cant really get behind a unique thought. Anyway, thats just my opinion. Facelift San Francisco
If there is a Monarch,then the rules should be followed and the correct one in place.
And that person is King Micheal (Plantagenet),who is residing in Australia.
See Britains real monarch, by Tony Robinson on Youtube.!
Micheal though,is a Republican.
In any day and age having a Royal family is Madness! They are just ordinary people(more interbred maybe) Descended from bullies,thieves,murderers. Which is how they cam to be in their positions.
I wonder, if the queen had free reign today, would we see heads rolling, innocents locked in the Tower etc ?
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