User:Oritsu.me/Sandbox/Recipients list2
Appearance
Order of the Netherlands Lion[edit]
By reign[edit]
William I (1815–1840)[edit]
Image | Name | Life | Date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
William I, King of the Netherlands | 1772–1843 | 29 September 1815 | Also Grand Duke of Luxembourg Founder Grand Master of the Order | ||
Grand Duke Nicholas Pavlovich of Russia | 1796–1855 | 23 May 1817 | Later Nicholas I, Emperor of Russia | ||
Godert van der Capellen | 1778–1848 | 14 February 1821 | Governor-General of Dutch East Indies (1819–1826) |
- 1825: King John VI of Portugal
William II (1840–1849)[edit]
Image | Name | Life | Date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jan Jacob Rochussen | 1797–1871 | 10 October 1841 | Governor-General of Dutch East Indies (1845–1851) Later Chairman of the Council of Ministers (1858–1860) | ||
Floris Adriaan van Hall | 1791–1866 | 2 April 1844 | Prime Minister (1853–1856; 1860–1861) |
- 1842: Albert, Prince Consort
- 1849: King Edward VII of the United Kingdom
William III (1849–1890)[edit]
Image | Name | Life | Date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia | 1831–1891 | 30 August 1849 | |||
Schelto van Heemstra | 1807–1864 | 18 August 1860 | Prime Minister (1861–1862) | ||
Johan Rudolph Thorbecke | 1798–1872 | 7 June 1863 | Prime Minister (1849–1853; 1862–1866; 1871–1872) | ||
Alexander Alexandrovich, Tsesarevich of Russia | 1845–1894 | 19 May 1865 | Later Alexander III, Emperor of Russia | ||
Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia | 1847–1909 | 1 July 1870 | |||
Friedrich Wilhelm, Crown Prince of the German Empire and Prussia | 1859–1941 | 28 July 1877 | Later Wilhelm II, German Emperor and King of Prussia | ||
Jan Heemskerk | 1818–1897 | 1 May 1878 | Chairman of the Council of Ministers (1874–1878; 1883–1888) | ||
Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn | 1850–1942 | 23 August 1878 | Later Governor General of Canada (1911–1916) | ||
Grand Duke Nicholas Alexandrovich of Russia | 1868–1918 | 27 March 1881 | Later Nicholas II, Emperor of Russia | ||
Mutsuhito, Emperor of Japan | 1852–1912 | 26 July 1881 | Later Emperor Meiji (posthumously) | ||
Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh | 1844–1900 | 1 May 1882 | Later Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | ||
Prince Saionji Kinmochi | 1849–1940 | 16 March 1891 | Prime Minister of Japan (1906–1908; 1911–1912) | ||
Abbas II, Khedive of Egypt and Sudan | 1874–1944 | 12 August 1892 |
Wilhelmina (1890–1948)[edit]
Image | Name | Life | Date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prince Saionji Kinmochi | 1849–1940 | 16 March 1891 | Later Prime Minister of Japan | ||
Yoshihito, Crown Prince of Japan | 1879–1926 | 12 July 1900 | Later Emperor of Japan | ||
Henry, Prince Consort of the Netherlands | 1876–1934 | 7 February 1901 | Born Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin | ||
Prince Wilhelm, Duke of Södermanland | 1884–1965 | 6 July 1901 | |||
Aeneas Mackay Jr. | 1838–1909 | 27 May 1905 | Prime Minister (1888–1891) | ||
Kuniyoshi, Prince Kuni | 1873–1929 | 25 June 1909 | |||
Hiroyasu, Prince Fushimi | 1875–1946 | 27 April 1910 | |||
Pieter Cort van der Linden | 1846–1935 | 28 January 1915 | Prime Minister (1913–1918) | ||
J. B. van Heutsz | 1851–1924 | 4 December 1919 | Governor-General of Dutch East Indies (1904–1909) | ||
Fuad I, King of Egypt | 1868–1936 | 17 September 1925 | |||
Dirk Fock | 1858–1941 | 7 September 1926 | Governor-General of Dutch East Indies (1921–1926) | ||
Princess Juliana of the Netherlands | 1909–2004 | 30 April 1927 | Later Juliana, Queen of the Netherlands; Abdicated in 1980 | ||
Charles Ruijs de Beerenbrouck | 1873–1936 | 25 July 1927 | Prime Minister (1918–1929; 1929–1933) | ||
Hendrikus Colijn | 1869–1944 | 31 August 1929 | Prime Minister (1925–1926; 1933–1939) | ||
Prince Tisavarakumarn, the Prince Damrong Rajanubhab | 1862–1943 | 8 August 1930 | |||
Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia | 1892–1975 | 7 October 1930 | Abdicated in 1974 | ||
Dirk Jan de Geer | 1870–1960 | 31 August 1933 | Prime Minister (1926–1929; 1939–1940) Revoked on 15 March 1950 | ||
Hendrikus Colijn | 1869–1944 | 6 January 1937 | Prime Minister (1925–1926; 1933–1939) | ||
Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands | 1911–2004 | 7 January 1937 | Later Prince consort of the Netherlands | ||
Farouk I, King of Egypt | 1920–1965 | 23 June 1938 | |||
Willem Lodewijk de Vos van Steenwijk | 1859–1947 | 30 August 1938 | President of the Senate (1929–1946) | ||
General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower | 1890–1969 | 6 October 1945 | Chief of Staff of the Army of the United States (1945–1948) Later President of the United States (1953–1961) | ||
General Henri Winkelman | 1876–1952 | 14 April 1946 | Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces (1940) | ||
Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy | 1885–1961 | 6 May 1946 | Prime Minister (1940–1945) | ||
Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein |
1887–1976 | 16 January 1947 | Deputy Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (1951–1958) | ||
Admiral of the Fleet Andrew Cunningham, 1st Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope |
1883–1963 | 25 November 1947 | First Sea Lord and Chief of the Naval Staff of the United Kingdom (1943–1946) | ||
Rear Admiral Louis Mountbatten , 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma |
1900–1979 | 13 January 1948 | Governor-General of India (1947–1948) | ||
Field Marshal Alan Brooke, 1st Viscount Alanbrooke |
1883–1963 | 13 May 1948 | Chief of the General Staff of the United Kingdom (1941–1946) | ||
Roelof Kranenburg | 1880–1956 | 4 September 1948 | President of the Senate (1946–1951) |
- 1929: Tomáš Masaryk, former President of Czechoslovakia
- 1948: Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon
Juliana (1948–1980)[edit]
Image | Name | Life | Date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elizabeth, Queen of the United Kingdom | 1900–2002 | 22 November 1950 | Later Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother | ||
Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh | 1926–2022 | 22 November 1950 | Later Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom | ||
Faisal II, King of Iraq | 1935–1958 | 25 April 1953 | |||
Amha Selassie, Crown Prince of Ethiopia | 1916–1997 | 7 November 1953 | Later Emperor of Ethiopia | ||
René Coty | 1882–1962 | 22 July 1954 | President of France (1954–1959) | ||
Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands | Born 1938 | 31 January 1956 | Later Queen of the Netherlands and Grand Master of the Order Abdicated in 2013 | ||
Princess Irene of the Netherlands | Born 1939 | 5 August 1957 | Later Duchess of Parma | ||
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh | 1921–2021 | 25 March 1958 | Born Prince of Greece and Denmark | ||
Eelco van Kleffens | 1894–1983 | 1 May 1958 | Ambassador to the European Coal and Steel Community (1958–1967) | ||
Willem Drees | 1886–1988 | 22 December 1958 | Prime Minister (1948–1958) | ||
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran | 1919–1980 | 19 May 1959 | |||
Bhumibol Adulyadej, King of Thailand | 1927–2018 | 12 May 1960 | |||
Sirikit, Queen of Thailand | Born 1932 | 12 May 1960 | |||
Arturo Frondizi | 1908–1995 | 1 July 1960 | President of Argentina (1958–1962) | ||
Princess Margriet of the Netherlands | Born 1943 | 19 January 1961 | |||
Adolf Schärf | 1890–1965 | 18 May 1961 | President of Austria (1957–1965) | ||
Farah Pahlavi, Shahbanu of Iran | Born 1938 | 26 September 1963 | |||
Princess Christina of the Netherlands | 1947–2019 | 18 February 1965 | |||
Carl XVI Gustaf, King of Sweden | Born 1946 | 25 October 1965 | |||
Silvia, Queen of Sweden | Born 1943 | 25 October 1965 | |||
Prince Claus of the Netherlands | 1926–2002 | 10 March 1966 | Later Prince consort of the Netherlands | ||
Habib Bourguiba | 1903–2000 | 7 July 1966 | President of Tunisia (1957–1987) | ||
Mahendra, King of Nepal | 1920–1972 | 25 April 1967 | |||
Ratna, Queen of Nepal | Born 1928 | 25 April 1967 | |||
Suharto | 1921–2008 | 3 September 1970 | President of Indonesia (1968–1998) | ||
Josip Broz Tito | 1892–1980 | 20 October 1970 | President of Yugoslavia (1953–1980) | ||
Joseph Luns | 1911–2002 | 17 July 1971 | Secretary-General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (1971–1984) | ||
Gustav Heinemann | 1899–1976 | 26 October 1971 | President of Germany (1969–1974) | ||
Louis Beel | 1902–1977 | 28 June 1972 | Prime Minister (1946–1948; 1958–1959) | ||
Sicco Mansholt | 1908–1995 | 18 December 1972 | President of the European Commission (1972–1973) | ||
Giovanni Leone | 1908–2001 | 23 October 1973 | President of Italy (1971–1978) | ||
Margrethe II, Queen of Denmark | Born 1940 | 29 October 1975 | Abdicated in 2024 | ||
Prince Henrik of Denmark | 1934–2018 | 29 October 1975 | Born Henri de Laborde de Monpezat Consort of the Danish Monarch (1972–2018) | ||
Johan Ferrier | 1910–2010 | 14 September 1977 | President of Suriname (1975–1980) | ||
Ahmadou Ahidjo | 1924–1989 | 4 July 1979 | President of Cameroon (1960–1982) |
- 1960: Konrad Adenauer, former Chancellor of Germany
- 2 Dec 1969: Pompidou
Beatrix (1980–2013)[edit]
Image | Name | Life | Date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jelle Zijlstra | 1918–2001 | 18 November 1981 | Prime Minister (1966–1967) | ||
François Mitterrand | 1916–1996 | 6 February 1984 | President of France (1981–1995) | ||
Willem-Alexander, Prince of Orange | Born 1967 | 27 April 1985 | Later King of the Netherlands and Grand Master of the Order | ||
Richard von Weizsäcker | 1920–2015 | 30 May 1985 | President of Germany (1984–1994) | ||
Juan Carlos I, King of Spain | Born 1938 | 8 October 1985 | Abdicated in 2014 | ||
Sofía, Queen of Spain | Born 1938 | 8 October 1985 | Born Princess of Greece and Denmark | ||
Vigdís Finnbogadóttir | Born 1930 | 18 September 1985 | President of Iceland (1980–1996) | ||
Prince Friso of Orange-Nassau | 1968–2013 | 25 September 1986 | |||
Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands | Born 1969 | 11 October 1987 | |||
Christos Sartzetakis | 1929–2022 | 17 April 1989 | President of Greece (1985–1990) | ||
Mário Soares | 1924–2017 | 26 September 1991 | President of Portugal (1986–1996) | ||
Akihito, Emperor of Japan | Born 1933 | 22 October 1991 | Abdicated in 2019 | ||
Michiko, Empress of Japan | Born 1934 | 22 October 1991 | |||
Thomas Klestil | 1932–2004 | 25 August 1994 | Federal President of Austria (1992–2004) | ||
Ruud Lubbers | 1939–2018 | 8 October 1994 | Prime Minister of the Netherlands (1982–1994) | ||
Martti Ahtisaari | 1937–2023 | 1 June 1995 | President of Finland (1994–2000) | ||
Aleksander Kwaśniewski | Born 1954 | 2 July 1997 | President of Poland (1995–2005) | ||
Helmut Kohl | 1930–2017 | 13 January 1999 | Chancellor of Germany (1982–1998) | ||
Jacques Chirac | 1932–2019 | 28 February 2000 | President of France (1995–2007) | ||
Albert II, King of the Belgians | Born 1934 | 4 April 2000 | Abdicated in 2013 | ||
Paola, Queen of the Belgians | Born 1937 | 4 April 2000 | |||
Máxima, Princess of Orange | Born 1971 | 2 February 2002 | Later Queen of the Netherlands | ||
Ricardo Lagos | Born 1938 | 19 March 2003 | President of Chile (2000–2006) | ||
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | Born 1945 | 24 March 2003 | President of Brazil (2003–2010; 2023–present) | ||
Pieter van Vollenhoven | Born 1939 | 29 April 2004 | |||
Néstor Kirchner | 1950–2010 | 30 March 2006 | President of Argentina (2003–2007) | ||
Kofi Annan | 1938–2018 | 12 April 2006 | Secretary-General of the United Nations (1997–2016) | ||
Henri, Grand Duke of Luxembourg | Born 1955 | 24 April 2006 | |||
Maria Teresa, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg | Born 1956 | 24 April 2006 | |||
Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga | Born 1937 | 22 May 2006 | President of Latvia (1999–2007) | ||
Abdullah II, King of Jordan | Born 1962 | 30 October 2006 | |||
Rania, Queen of Jordan | Born 1970 | 30 October 2006 | |||
Ivan Gašparovič | Born 1941 | 21 May 2007 | President of Slovakia (2004–2014) | ||
Horst Köhler | Born 1943 | 8 October 2007 | Federal President of Germany (2004–2010) | ||
Toomas Hendrik Ilves | Born 1953 | 14 May 2008 | President of Estonia (2006–2016) | ||
Valdas Adamkus | Born 1926 | 24 June 2008 | President of Lithuania (1998–2003; 2004–2009) | ||
John Kufuor | Born 1938 | 21 October 2008 | President of Ghana (2001–2009) | ||
Michelle Bachelet | Born 1951 | 25 May 2009 | President of Chile (2006–2010; 2014–2018) | ||
Felipe Calderón | Born 1962 | 3 November 2009 | President of Mexico (2006–2012) | ||
Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, Emir of Qatar | Born 1952 | 9 March 2011 | Abdicated in 2013 | ||
Christian Wulff | Born 1959 | 12 April 2011 | Federal President of Germany (2010–2012) | ||
Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan | 1948–2022 | 8 January 2012 | President of the United Arab Emirates (2004–2022) | ||
Qaboos bin Said, Sultan of Oman | 1940–2020 | 10 January 2012 | |||
Abdullah Gül | Born 1949 | 16 April 2012 | President of Turkey (2007–2014) | ||
Giorgio Napolitano | 1925–2023 | 23 October 2012 | President of Italy (2006–2015) | ||
Hassanal Bolkiah, Sultan of Brunei | Born 1946 | 21 January 2013 | |||
Saleha, Raja Isteri of Brunei | Born 1946 | 21 January 2013 |
Willem-Alexander (2013–present)[edit]
Image | Name | Life | Date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
François Hollande | Born 1954 | 20 January 2014 | President of France (2012–2017) | ||
Bronisław Komorowski | Born 1952 | 24 June 2014 | President of Poland (2010; 2010–2015) | ||
Anna Komorowska | Born 1954 | 24 June 2014 | First Lady of Poland (2010; 2010–2015) | ||
Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark | Born 1968 | 17 March 2015 | Later Frederik X, King of Denmark | ||
Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark | Born 1972 | 17 March 2015 | Later Queen of Denmark | ||
Ban Ki-moon | Born 1944 | 19 April 2016 | Secretary-General of the United Nations (2007–2016) | ||
Philippe, King of the Belgians | Born 1960 | 28 November 2016 | |||
Mathilde, Queen of the Belgians | Born 1973 | 28 November 2016 | |||
Joachim Gauck | Born 1940 | 7 February 2017 | President of Germany (2012–2017) | ||
Mauricio Macri | Born 1959 | 27 March 2017 | President of Argentina (2015–2019) | ||
Sergio Mattarella | Born 1941 | 20 June 2017 | President of Italy (2015–present) | ||
Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa | Born 1948 | 10 October 2017 | President of Portugal (2016–present) | ||
Raimonds Vējonis | Born 1966 | 11 June 2018 | President of Latvia (2015–2019) | ||
Kersti Kaljulaid | Born 1969 | 12 June 2018 | President of Estonia (2016–2021) | ||
Dalia Grybauskaitė | Born 1956 | 13 June 2018 | President of Lithuania (2009–2019) | ||
Jorge Carlos Fonseca | Born 1950 | 10 December 2018 | President of Cabo Verde (2011–2021) | ||
Frank-Walter Steinmeier | Born 1956 | 5 July 2021 | President of Germany (2017–present) | ||
Catharina-Amalia, Princess of Orange | Born 2003 | 7 December 2021 | |||
Alexander Van der Bellen | Born 1944 | 27 June 2022 | President of Austria (2017–present) | ||
Angela Merkel | Born 1954 | 13 July 2022 | Chancellor of Germany (2005–2021) | ||
Victoria, Crown Princess of Sweden | Born 1977 | 11 October 2022 | |||
Katerina Sakellaropoulou | Born 1956 | 31 October 2022 | President of Greece (2020–present) | ||
Zuzana Čaputová | Born 1973 | 7 March 2023 | President of Slovakia (2019–2024) | ||
Emmanuel Macron | Born 1977 | 11 April 2023 | President of France (2017–present) | ||
Princess Alexia of the Netherlands | Born 2005 | 26 June 2023 | |||
Yoon Suk Yeol | Born 1960 | 12 December 2023 | President of South Korea (2022–present) | ||
Felipe VI, King of Spain | Born 1968 | 17 April 2024 |
By country[edit]
Belgium[edit]
- 4 April 2000: Albert II, King of the Belgians
- 4 April 2000: Paola, Queen of the Belgians
- 28 November 2016: Philippe, King of the Belgians
- 28 November 2016: Mathilde, Queen of the Belgians
Chile[edit]
- 19 March 2003: Ricardo Lagos, President of Chile (2000–2006)
- 25 May 2009: Michelle Bachelet, President of Chile (2006–2010; 2014–2018)
Denmark[edit]
- 29 October 1975: Margrethe II, Queen of Denmark
- 29 October 1975: Prince Henrik of Denmark, later Prince Consort of Denmark
- 17 March 2015: Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark, later Frederik X, King of Denmark
- 17 March 2015: Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark, later Mary, Queen of Denmark
France[edit]
- 22 July 1954: René Coty, President of France (1954–1959)
- 6 February 1984: François Mitterrand, President of France (1981–1995)
- 28 February 2000: Jacques Chirac, President of France (1995–2007)
- 20 January 2014: François Hollande, President of France (2012–2017)
- 11 April 2023: Emmanuel Macron, President of France (2017–present)
Germany[edit]
West Germany[edit]
- 26 October 1971: Gustav Heinemann, President of West Germany (1969–1974)
- 30 May 1985: Richard von Weizsäcker, President of West Germany (1984–1994)
Poland[edit]
- 2 July 1997: Aleksander Kwaśniewski, President of Poland (1995–2005)
- 24 June 2014: Bronisław Komorowski, President of Poland (2010; 2010–2015)
- 24 June 2014: Anna Komorowska, First Lady of Poland (2010; 2010–2015)
Mexico[edit]
- 3 November 2009; Felipe Calderón, President of Mexico (2006–2012)
South Korea[edit]
- 19 April 2016: Ban Ki-moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations (2006–2016)
- 12 December 2023: Yoon Suk Yeol, President of South Korea (2021–present)
Spain[edit]
- 8 October 1985: Juan Carlos I, King of Spain
- 8 October 1985: Sofía, Queen of Spain
- 17 April 2024: Felipe VI, King of Spain
Order of Merit of Germany, Grand Cross First Class[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
6 June 1954 | Governing Mayor of Berlin | |
10 December 1956 | Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands | |
16 July 1958 | Former Reich Minister of Finance | |
9 February 1963 | President of the Landtag of Baden-Württemberg | |
1 March 1963 | Minister-President of Lower Saxony | |
14 March 1963 | Minister-President of Schleswig-Holstein | |
23 May 1963 | Secretary General of NATO | |
26 August 1963 | Archbishop of Munich and Freising | |
8 October 1963 | Prime Minister of Belgium | |
5 May 1972 | President of the European Commission | |
13 May 1977 | President of Deutsche Bundesbank | |
3 February 1986 | Leader of the Social Democratic Party | |
3 September 1990 | President of the Bundestag | |
25 November 1996 | Later King of Nepal | |
4 February 1997 | Violinist and conductor | |
13 February 1997 | President of German Football Association | |
15 July 1997 | State Minister of Research and Technology of Indonesia; later President | |
1 July 1998 | Former Prime Minister of Sweden | |
13 July 1998 | Later King of the Belgians | |
13 July 1998 | ||
13 July 1998 | ||
13 July 1998 | ||
26 June 2000 | First Lady of France | |
3 September 2001 | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Poland | |
24 July 2002 | President of European Central Bank | |
20 May 2003 | ||
20 May 2003 | ||
20 May 2003 | ||
20 May 2003 | ||
20 May 2003 | ||
3 April 2008 | President of European Central Bank | |
5 May 2008 | Former Secretary-General of the United Nations | |
15 December 2008 | Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic | |
27 October 2012 | Former Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada | |
8 March 2016 | Secretary-General of the United Nations | |
5 December 2016 | Secretary of State of the United States | |
17 September 2018 | First Lady of Finland | |
22 February 2019 | First Lady of Germany | |
31 January 2020 | Former President of European Central Bank; later Prime Minister of Italy | |
7 September 2021 | ||
7 September 2021 | Speaker of the Riksdag of Sweden | |
7 September 2021 | Marshal of the Realm of Sweden | |
22 September 2023 | President of the Bundestag |
Order of the Crown (Belgium)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
25 October 1919 | Superintendent of United States Military Academy; later General of the Army | |
15 September 1950 | Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands | |
10 December 1966 | Prime Minister of the Netherlands | |
18 October 1968 | First Vice President of the European Commission; later President | |
28 March 2017 | Later Queen of Denmark | |
28 March 2017 | ||
28 March 2017 | Prime Minister of Denmark | |
28 March 2017 | Speaker of the Folketing of Denmark | |
28 March 2017 | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Denmark | |
24 November 2017 | Prime Minister of Luxembourg | |
9 December 2022 | Former President of the Senate | |
15 February 2024 | President of the International Criminal Court |
Order of Leopold II (Belgium)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
28 March 2017 |
Grand Cross, Legion of Honour[edit]
Napoleon (1802–1814)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
September 1803 | Later John VI, King of Portugal; Appointed Grand Cross on 3 March 1817 | |
2 February 1805 | Later Charles XIV John, King of Sweden and Norway | |
7 July 1807 | ||
1811 |
Louis XVIII (1814–1815; 1815–1824)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
August 1814 | Naval officer | |
3 July 1816 | Later Louis Philippe I, King of France and Grand Master of the Order |
Louis Philippe I (1830–1848)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
May 1840 | ||
May 1840 | ||
1842 | Later Governor-General of Algeria | |
5 September 1843 | ||
5 September 1843 | ||
5 January 1845 | ||
9 November 1845 | ||
September 1846 | Later Frederick I, Grand Duke of Baden | |
October 1846 | King Consort of Spain |
Napoleon III (1852–1870)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
3 January 1853 | ||
14 May 1857 | Later Emperor of Germany and King of Prussia | |
12 February 1854 | Later Leopold II, King of the Belgians | |
May 1857 | Later Viceroy of Poland | |
14 May 1857 | Later William I, King of Prussia and German Emperor | |
September 1857 | Later Prince Regent of Bavaria | |
1858 | ||
24 October 1859 | ||
14 December 1860 | Former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sardinia | |
28 June 1860 | ||
28 June 1860 | Minister President of Prussia | |
March 1863 | Later Alfonso XII, King of Spain | |
15 March 1863 | Later Edward VII, King of the United Kingdom | |
May 1865 | Later Chancellor of Germany | |
6 June 1867 | ||
June 1867 | Later Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | |
July 1867 | ||
August 1867 | King of Saxony |
Adolphe Thiers (1871–1873)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|
Patrice de MacMahon (1873–1879)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
November 1874 | ||
1875 | ||
9 June 1878 | Later Alexander III, King of Russia |
Jules Grévy (1879–1887)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
1880 | ||
20 March 1883 | Later Emperor Meiji, posthumously | |
18 May 1884 | Later Nicholas II, Emperor of Russia | |
13 December 1886 | Later Constantine I, King of the Hellenes |
Sadi Carnot (1887–1894)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
1887 | ||
20 June 1891 | Governor-General of Moscow | |
1890 | ||
1892 |
Jean Casimir-Perier (1894–1895)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|
Félix Faure (1895–1899)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
23 July 1895 | Later Emperor of Korea | |
5 October 1895 | ||
December 1896 | ||
January 1897 | ||
7 May 1897 | Later Prime Minister of Japan | |
September 1897 | Later Head of the House of Romanov | |
April 1898 | Abdicated in 1948 | |
29 April 1898 | Prime Minister of Japan | |
17 November 1898 | ||
20 December 1898 | Later Governor General of Canada |
Émile Loubet (1899–1906)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
3 May 1899 | Later Emperor of Japan; Emperor Taishō, posthumously | |
20 September 1901 | ||
June 1902 | ||
1903 | ||
January 1903 | ||
7 July 1903 | Later George V, King of the United Kingdom | |
31 December 1905 | Later Manuel II, King of Portugal and the Algarves |
Armand Fallières (1906–1913)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
27 December 1906 | Chief of General Staff of Japan | |
1907 | High Commander of Naval Infantry | |
1907 | Later Prime Minister of Japan | |
23 October 1907 | Prime Minister of Japan | |
12 June 1909 | ||
1912 | ||
August 1912 | Later Edward VIII, King of the United Kingdom; Abdicated in 1936 |
Raymond Poincaré (1913–1920)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
6 May 1913 | President of Argentina | |
1914 | ||
8 July 1914 | ||
8 October 1915 | Later Supreme Allied Commander | |
1916 | ||
24 February 1916 | Commander-in-Chief of Expeditionary Force | |
15 September 1916 | Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Fleet; later Governor-General of New Zealand | |
14 November 1918 | ||
23 May 1919 | First Sea Lord of the United Kingdom | |
10 November 1919 | Later George VI, King of the United Kingdom |
Paul Deschanel (1920)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|
Alexandre Millerand (1920–1924)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
28 December 1920 | Former Chief of Army Staff | |
1921 | President of Czechoslovakia | |
2 March 1921 | Prime Minister of the United Kingdom | |
22 June 1923 | Abdicated in 1964 | |
16 May 1924 | Later Emperor of Ethiopia; Abdicated in 1974 |
Gaston Doumergue (1924–1931)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
3 July 1924 | Former Prime Minister of Japan | |
30 December 1924 | Prime Minister of Poland | |
1 April 1927 | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Japan; later Prime Minister | |
16 May 1927 | ||
27 September 1927 | ||
1930 |
Paul Doumer (1931–1932)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
2 January 1932 | Later Emperor of Ethiopia | |
16 February 1932 |
Albert Lebrun (1932–1940)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
10 September 1932 | ||
21 December 1937 | Later Deputy Prime Minister | |
20 July 1938 | Later Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother | |
1939 | Engineer and industrialist | |
March 1939 | ||
15 June 1939 | Later Shah of Iran |
Philippe Pétain (1940–1944)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
21 October 1941 | Abdicated in 1955; 2004 | |
15 May 1943 | Later King of Tunisia | |
15 June 1943 | Later President of the United States |
Charles de Gaulle (1944–1946)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
9 January 1945 | President of Taiwan | |
May 1945 | Later Chief of General Staff of the United Kingdom | |
8 May 1945 | Chief of Defence Staff | |
13 November 1945 | Chairman of the Provisional Government; later President |
Félix Gouin (1946)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
3 June 1946 | Later Governor-General of India |
Vincent Auriol (1947–1954)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
14 May 1948 | Later Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom | |
28 August 1952 | ||
15 January 1954 | Chairman of Électricité de France |
René Coty (1954–1959)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
10 July 1954 | Prime Minister of the Netherlands | |
12 August 1954 | Later Secretary-General of NATO | |
1955 | Jeweller and fashion designer | |
7 May 1956 | President of Yugoslavia | |
16 June 1956 | ||
9 April 1957 | Consort of the British Monarch |
Charles de Gaulle (1959–1969)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
12 October 1960 | ||
1 June 1962 | Secretary-General of NATO | |
4 July 1962 | Chancellor of West Germany | |
16 October 1963 | ||
22 September 1964 | President of Colombia | |
6 April 1965 | ||
3 June 1965 | ||
4 July 1967 |
Georges Pompidou (1969–1974)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
20 June 1969 | President of France and Grand Master of the Order | |
13 November 1972 | President of Indonesia | |
14 May 1973 |
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing (1974–1981)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
27 May 1974 | President of France and Grand Master of the Order | |
5 May 1975 | Later Mohammed VI, King of Morocco | |
17 June 1975 | Chairman of the Council of State of Poland | |
26 April 1976 | President of Brazil | |
20 May 1976 | President of Portugal | |
30 October 1976 | Abdicated in 2014 | |
14 December 1976 | ||
17 October 1978 | Abdicated in 2024 | |
11 December 1978 | ||
5 March 1979 | President of Portugal |
François Mitterrand (1981–1995)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
21 May 1981 | President of France and Grand Master of the Order | |
24 November 1982 | President of Egypt | |
16 November 1983 | President of Finland | |
6 February 1984 | Abdicated in 2013 | |
6 February 1984 | ||
14 May 1984 | Later Harald V, King of Norway | |
16 May 1984 | ||
23 October 1984 | Later Charles III, King of the United Kingdom | |
12 September 1988 | President of Tunisia | |
31 May 1989 | ||
14 June 1989 | Chairman of the Council of State of Poland | |
19 March 1990 | President of Czechoslovakia; later President of the Czech Republic | |
7 May 1990 | President of Portugal | |
9 April 1991 | President of Poland | |
28 November 1991 | Secretary-General of the United Nations | |
28 December 1994 | President of South Africa |
Jacques Chirac (1995–2007)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
17 May 1995 | President of France and Grand Master of the Order | |
11 September 1996 | President of Poland | |
16 January 1997 | President of Hungary | |
11 March 1997 | President of Brazil | |
14 March 1997 | President of Bolivia | |
27 July 2001 | President of Latvia | |
6 February 1998 | Resistance member | |
2 June 1998 | Abdicated in 2013 | |
21 August 1998 | President of Austria | |
4 September 1998 | President of Moldova | |
1 October 1998 | President of Economic and Social Council | |
10 May 1999 | President of Finland | |
4 October 1999 | ||
21 October 1999 | President of Italy | |
15 November 1999 | ||
29 November 1999 | President of Portugal | |
19 December 1999 | Resistance member, neurosurgeon, aviator | |
13 June 2001 | President of Hungary | |
25 June 2001 | President of Syria; Revoked 16 April 2018 | |
26 July 2001 | President of Lithuania | |
28 July 2001 | President of Estonia | |
15 November 2002 | President of Mexico | |
27 October 2003 | Abdicated in 2013 | |
16 July 2003 | President of Armenia | |
17 November 2003 | President of South Africa | |
8 May 2004 | ||
13 July 2004 | Catholic priest, Resistance member | |
1 March 2005 | President of Finland | |
14 March 2005 | Former Inspector General of Navy | |
14 July 2005 | President of Brazil | |
8 November 2005 | ||
2 June 2006 | Judge; former President of Court of Cassation | |
22 September 2006 | President of Russia | |
20 November 2006 | ||
30 November 2006 | ||
29 January 2007 | President of Azerbaijan |
Nicolas Sarkozy (2007–2012)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
16 May 2007 | President of France and Grand Master of the Order | |
11 June 2008 | President of Kazakhstan | |
14 July 2008 | Financier and philanthropist | |
16 March 2009 | President of Lebanon | |
27 April 2009 | Later Felipe VI, King of Spain | |
7 October 2010 | President of Ukraine | |
13 July 2011 | Former Governor General of Canada | |
14 July 2011 | Perpetual Secretary of Académie Française |
François Hollande (2012–2017)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
15 May 2012 | President of France and Grand Master of the Order | |
12 October 2012 | President of Senegal | |
7 November 2012 | President of Liberia | |
11 November 2012 | Resistance member and sociologist | |
11 November 2012 | Journalist, writer and art historian | |
16 November 2012 | President of Poland | |
21 November 2012 | President of Italy | |
11 December 2012 | President of Brazil | |
14 June 2013 | Soldier and politician; former member of National Assembly | |
9 July 2013 | President of Finland | |
3 September 2013 | President of Germany | |
22 October 2013 | Physicist and material scientist | |
29 October 2013 | President of Slovakia | |
5 November 2013 | President of Austria | |
20 January 2014 | ||
6 February 2014 | ||
10 April 2014 | President of Mexico | |
15 July 2014 | President of Niger | |
17 June 2014 | Chief Executive Officer of Lazard Bank | |
6 March 2015 | ||
5 April 2015 | Painter, printmaker and sculptor | |
22 October 2015 | President of Greece | |
24 February 2016 | President of Argentina | |
25 February 2016 | President of Uruguay | |
26 August 2016 | President of Portugal | |
27 March 2017 |
Emmanuel Macron (2017–present)[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
14 May 2017 | President of France and Grand Master of the Order | |
27 September 2017 | President of Lebanon | |
31 January 2018 | President of Tunisia | |
19 September 2018 | Imam of Nizari Ismaili | |
19 November 2018 | ||
14 July 2019 | Resistance member | |
7 December 2020 | President of Egypt | |
31 December 2020 | Military officer | |
1 June 2021 | Secretary-General of OECD | |
5 July 2021 | President of Italy | |
13 July 2021 | Businessman | |
13 July 2021 | Philosopher and sociologist | |
4 November 2021 | Chancellor of Germany | |
8 November 2021 | ||
8 November 2021 | ||
8 November 2021 | ||
29 December 2021 | Former President of Court of Auditors | |
13 July 2022 | Historian and lawyer | |
13 July 2022 | Former Prime Minister | |
13 July 2022 | Singer and actress | |
18 July 2022 | President of the United Arab Emirates | |
13 October 2022 | ||
7 November 2022 | Resistance member | |
7 November 2022 | ||
7 November 2022 | ||
7 November 2022 | ||
29 December 2022 | Biochemist and endocrinologist | |
18 January 2023 | Later Grand Chancellor of the Order | |
9 February 2023 | President of Ukraine | |
11 April 2023 | ||
13 July 2023 | Resistance member | |
14 July 2023 | Prime Minister of India | |
10 November 2023 | ||
10 November 2023 | ||
29 December 2023 | Businessman and investor | |
29 December 2023 | Director of Vienna State Opera | |
7 March 2024 | President of Moldova |
Order of Chula Chom Klao[edit]
Nationals[edit]
Year | Image | Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1968 | Princess Ubol Ratana Rajakanya | Born 1951 | ||
1972 | Princess Sirindhorn, Princess Debaratana Rajasuda | Born 1955 | ||
1975 | Princess Chulabhorn, Princess Srisavangavadhana | Born 1957 | ||
1984 | Princess Soamsawali, Princess Suddhanarinatha | Born 1957 | ||
1991 | Princess Bajrakitiyabha, Princess Rajasarini Siribajra | Born 1978 | ||
2000 | Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana Rajakanya | Born 1987 | ||
2004 | Princess Srirasmi, Royal Consort to the Crown Prince | Born 1971 | Later Than Phu Ying Srirasmi Suwadee | |
2007 |
| |||
2017 | General Suthida Vajiralongkorn Na Ayutthaya | Born 1978 | Aide-de-Camp to the King; later Queen of Thailand | |
2017 | Air Chief Marshal Satitphong Sukwimon | Born 1949 | Secretary-General of the Royal Household | |
2017 | Chirayu Isarangkun Na Ayuthaya | Born 1942 | Lord Chamberlain of the Royal Household Director of the Crown Property Bureau; Later Privy Councilor | |
2018 | General Surayud Chulanont | Born 1943 | Privy Councilor; later President of the Privy Council | |
2019 | Major General Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi | Born 1985 | Later Royal Noble Consort of the King | |
2019 | Princess Siribha Chudabhorn | Born 1982 | ||
2019 | Princess Aditayadornkitikhun | Born 1984 | ||
2019 | Admiral Momchao Pusan Sawatdiwat | Born 1929 |
Foreigners[edit]
Year | Image | Name | Lifespan | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1898 | Otto von Bismarck, Prince of Bismarck | 1815–1898 | Former Chancellor of Germany | ||
1899 | Abbas II, Khedive of Egypt and Sudan | 1874–1944 | Abdicated in 1914 | ||
1902 | 'Abd al-Ahad Khan, Emir of Bukhara | 1859–1911 | |||
1906 | Prince Ferdinando, Duke of Genoa | 1884–1963 | |||
1909 | Princess Elisabeth of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach | 1854–1908 | |||
1941 | Hideki Tojo | 1884–1948 | Prime Minister of Japan | ||
1954 | Prince Sisowath Monipong | 1912–1956 | Former Prime Minister of Cambodia | ||
1955 | Sisavang Vatthana, Crown Prince of Laos | 1907–1978 | Later King of Laos | ||
1955 | Khamphoui, Crown Princess of Laos | 1912–1982 | Later Queen of Laos | ||
1957 | Ngo Dinh Diem | 1901–1963 | President of South Vietnam | ||
1958 | Prince Axel of Denmark | 1888–1964 | |||
1960 | Sukarno | 1901–1970 | President of Indonesia | ||
1960 | Win Maung | 1916–1989 | President of Burma | ||
1960 | Princess Alexandra of Kent | Born 1936 | Later Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy | ||
1960 | Heinrich Lübke | 1894–1972 | President of West Germany | ||
1960 | Wilhelmine Lübke | 1885–1981 | First Lady of West Germany | ||
1960 | Gertrudes Tomás | 1894–1991 | First Lady of Portugal | ||
1960 | Giovanni Gronchi | 1887–1978 | President of Italy | ||
1960 | Carla Gronchi | 1912–1993 | First Lady of Italy | ||
1960 | Princess Astrid of Norway | Born 1932 | Later Princess Astrid, Mrs. Ferner | ||
1960 | Joséphine-Charlotte, Hereditary Grand Duchess of Luxembourg | 1927–2005 | Later Grand Duchess of Luxembourg | ||
1960 | Princess Irene of the Netherlands | Born 1939 | |||
1960 | Carmen Polo | 1900–1988 | First Lady of Spain | ||
1961 | Arturo Frondizi | 1908–1995 | President of Argentina | ||
1962 | Tengku Budriah, Raja Permaisuri Agong of Malaya | 1924–2008 | |||
1962 | Tunku Abdul Rahman | 1903–1990 | Prime Minister of Malaya (later Malaysia) | ||
1963 | Nobuhito, Prince Takamatsu | 1905–1987 | |||
1963 | Soong Mei-ling | 1898–2003 | First Lady of Taiwan | ||
1963 | Princess Irene of Greece and Denmark | Born 1942 | |||
1963 | Eva Macapagal | 1915–1999 | First Lady of the Philippines | ||
1968 | Imelda Marcos | Born 1929 | First Lady of the Philippines | ||
1981 | Lee Soon-ja | Born 1939 | First Lady of South Korea | ||
1986 | Aishwarya Rajya Lakshmi Devi Shah, Queen of Nepal | 1949–2001 | |||
1987 | Sofía, Queen of Spain | Born 1938 | Born Princess of Greece and Denmark | ||
1990 | Tuanku Bainun, Raja Permaisuri Agong of Malaysia | Born 1932 | |||
2000 | Tuanku Siti Aishah, Raja Permaisuri Agong of Malaysia | Born 1971 | |||
2001 | Prince Henrik of Denmark | 1934–2018 | Consort of the Danish Monarch | ||
2001 | Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark | Born 1968 | Later Frederik X, King of Denmark | ||
2002 | Mariam Abdul Aziz, Pengiran Raja Isteri of Brunei | Born 1956 | |||
2003 | Silvia, Queen of Sweden | Born 1943 | |||
2003 | Willem-Alexander, Prince of Orange | Born 1967 | Later King of the Netherlands | ||
2009 | Sultanah Nur Zahirah, Raja Permaisuri Agong of Malaysia | Born 1973 | |||
2013 | Tuanku Hajah Haminah, Raja Permaisuri Agong of Malaysia | Born 1953 |
Honours exchange during Queen's state visits[edit]
Visits made[edit]
Visits hosted[edit]
Date | Country | Visiting Head of State | Honour for Visiting Head of State | Honour for Queen | Honour for Prince Philip |
---|
Honours of Juliana[edit]
Foreign honours[edit]
Argentina: Collar of the Order of the Liberator General San Martín, 1 July 1960[1]
Austria: Grand Star of the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria, 18 May 1961[2]
Belgium:
- Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold I, 1950
- Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown
Brazil: Grand Collar of the Order of the Southern Cross
Cameroon: Grand Cross of the Order of Valour, 4 July 1979
Colombia:
- Grand Collar of the Order of Boyaca
- Grand Cross of the Order of San Carlos
Chile: Grand Collar of the Order of Merit
Republic of China: Grand Cordon of the Order of Propitious Clouds
Czech Republic: First Class of the Order of the White Lion
Dominican Republic: Grand Cross with Gold Breast Star of the Order of Merit of Duarte, Sanchez and Mella
Ecuador: Grand Collar of the National Order of San Lorenzo
Ethiopian Imperial Family: Knight Grand Collar of the Order of Solomon
Finland: Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of the White Rose of Finland, 24 October 1972[3]
France: Grand Cross of the Order of the Legion of Honour
Germany: Grand Cross Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, 24 November 1969
German Imperial and Royal Family: Dame of the Royal Order of Louise
Grand Ducal Family of Mecklenburg: Grand Cross of the House Order of the Wendish Crown
Greek Royal Family:
- Grand Cross of the Royal Order of the Redeemer
- Grand Cross of the Order of George I
Honduras:
- Grand Cross of the Order of Santa Rosa and of Civilisation
- Grand Cross of the Order of Francisco Morazán
Indonesia: First Class (Adipurna) of the Star of the Republic of Indonesia, 3 September 1970[4]
Iranian Imperial Family: Collar of the Order of Pahlavi
Italy: Knight Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic, 23 October 1973[5]
Sovereign Military Order of Malta: Knight Grand Cross of Justice of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
Ivory Coast: Collar of the National Order of the Ivory Coast
Japan: Grand Cordon (Paulownia) of the Order of the Precious Crown
Liberia:
- Grand Cordon of the Order of the Pioneers of Liberia
- Grand Cross of the Order of the Star of Africa
Luxembourg: Knight of the Order of the Gold Lion of the House of Nassau
Mexico: Collar of the Order of the Aztec Eagle
Nepal:
- Recipient of the Mahendra Chain
- Member of the Nepal Pratap Bhaskara
Nicaragua: Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Rubén Darío
Norway: Knight Grand Cross with Collar of the Royal Norwegian Order of Saint Olav, 12 April 1946[6]
Panama: Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Manuel Amador Guerrero
Paraguay: Grand Cross with Collar of the National Order of Merit
Peru: Grand Cross with Diamonds of the Order of the Sun
Poland: Knight of the Order of the White Eagle
Senegal: Grand Cross of the National Order of the Lion
Spain: Dame of the Collar of the Order of Charles III, 15 March 1980[7]
Suriname: Grand Cordon of the Honorary Order of the Yellow Star
Sweden: Member with Collar (6 October 1976) of the Order of the Seraphim, 8 April 1946
Tanzania: Grand Cross of the Order of the Uhuru Torch
Thailand:
- Dame of the Order of the Rajamitrabhorn, 15 October 1963[8]
- Dame of the Order of the Royal House of Chakri, 24 October 1960[9]
Tunisia: Grand Cross of the Order of Independence, 7 July 1966[10]
United Kingdom:
- Stranger Lady of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, 26 March 1958
- Recipient of the Royal Victorian Chain, 22 November 1950
- Recipient of the King George VI Coronation Medal, 12 May 1937
United States:
- Chief Commander of the Legion of Merit, 23 April 1952[11]
- Recipient of the World War II Victory Medal
Venezuela: Collar of the Order of the Liberator
Yugoslavia: Great Star of the Order of the Yugoslav Star, 20 October 1970[12][13]
Order of White Double Cross[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
5 February 2001 | High Commissioner on National Minorities of OSCE | |
3 April 2002 | ||
2 July 2002 | ||
29 January 2003 | President of the Czech Republic | |
20 October 2003 | President of Hungary | |
21 May 2007 | ||
22 October 2007 | ||
21 November 2007 | President of Kazakhstan | |
23 October 2008 | ||
21 February 2009 | President of Poland | |
17 July 2009 | Secretary-General of NATO | |
26 October 2010 | ||
6 March 2013 | President of the Czech Republic | |
29 October 2013 | President of France | |
19 October 2015 | President of Estonia | |
2 May 2017 | ||
17 November 2017 | President of Germany | |
25 March 2018 | Former President of Germany | |
7 February 2019 | President of Germany | |
21 March 2019 | President of Austria | |
6 September 2022 | President of Greece | |
7 March 2023 | ||
7 March 2023 |
Supreme Order of the Renaissance[edit]
Date | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
1917 | Later Faisal I, King of Iraq | |
25 June 1948 | ||
28 July 1949 | ||
19 July 1966 | Consort of the British Monarch | |
1 September 1972 | Later Emir and King of Bahrain | |
1 March 1976 | First Lady of the Philippines | |
18 September 1989 | ||
20 October 1999 | ||
20 October 1999 | Later Felipe VI, King of Spain | |
10 April 2000 | ||
10 April 2000 | ||
14 January 2001 | Vice President of China; later President | |
7 October 2003 | ||
30 October 2006 | ||
30 October 2006 | ||
30 October 2006 | ||
30 October 2006 | ||
13 May 2008 | ||
13 May 2008 | ||
13 May 2008 | ||
28 May 2009 | First Lady of Portugal Received Grand Cordon with Brilliants on 10 December 2009 | |
10 December 2009 | President of Portugal; Grand Cordon with Brilliants | |
20 October 2015 | President of Tunisia | |
18 May 2016 | ||
20 March 2018 | ||
6 March 2024 |
KCMG/DCMG[edit]
Victoria[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
21 June 1887 | Edward Newton | Former Lieutenant-Governor and Colonial Secretary of Jamaica |
21 June 1887 | Malcolm Fraser | Colonial Secretary of Western Australia |
21 June 1887 | William Henry Marsh | Former Colonial Secretary and Auditor-General of Hong Kong |
21 June 1887 | Sidney Godolphin Alexander Shippard | Administrator and Chief Magistrate of British Bechuanaland |
21 June 1887 | John William Akerman | Speaker of the Legislative Council of Natal |
21 June 1887 | James Alexander Grant | |
22 June 1897 | William Lambert Dobson | Chief Justice of the Colony of Tasmania |
22 June 1897 | Frederick Matthew Darley | Lieutenant-Governor and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Colony of New South Wales |
22 June 1897 | Colonel Frederic Cardew | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Colony of Sierra Leone |
22 June 1897 | His Honour the Honourable George Airey Kirkpatrick | Lieutenant-Governor of the Province of Ontario, in the Dominion of Canada |
22 June 1897 | William Alexander Baillie-Hamilton | Chief Clerk of the Colonial Department |
22 June 1897 | Sandford Fleming | For services connected with the Dominion of Canada |
22 June 1897 | Frederick Richard Saunders | Treasurer of the Island of Ceylon |
22 June 1897 | Frank Athelstane Swettenham | Resident-General for the Federation of the Protected States of the Malay Peninsula |
22 June 1897 | Clement Courtenay Knollys | Colonial Secretary of the Colony of Trinidad and Tobago |
22 June 1897 | Count Strickland della Catena | Chief Secretary to the Government of the Island of Malta |
22 June 1897 | Cavendish Boyle | Government Secretary of the Colony of British Guiana |
22 June 1897 | Charles Gage Brown | Medical Adviser to the Colonial Office |
22 June 1897 | Walter Peace | Agent-General in London for the Colony of Natal |
22 June 1897 | Godfrey Yeatman Lagden | Government Secretary and Accountant of Basutoland |
22 June 1897 | The Honourable Horace Tozer | Colonial Secretary of the Colony of Queensland |
22 June 1897 | The Honourable Lewis Henry Davies | Minister of Marine and Fisheries for the Dominion of Canada |
22 June 1897 | The Honourable Henry Cuthbert | Solicitor-General of the Colony of Victoria |
22 June 1897 | Edward Montague Nelson | For services in connection with the Australasian Colonies |
22 June 1897 | His Highness Ibrahim (Honorary) | Sultan of the State and Territory of Johore |
Edward VII (1901–1910)[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
26 June 1902 | Major Matthew Nathan | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Gold Coast Colony |
26 June 1902 | Major Hamilton John Goold-Adams | Lieutenant-Governor of the Orange River Colony |
26 June 1902 | His Honour Daniel Hunter McMillan | Lieutenant-Governor of the Province of Manitoba, in the Dominion of Canada |
26 June 1902 | The Honourable Neil Elliott Lewis | Prime Minister of the State of Tasmania |
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 | ||
26 June 1902 |
George V (1910–1936)[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
19 June 1911 | Sir John Michael Fleetwood Fuller, 1st Baronet | Governor of the State of Victoria |
19 June 1911 | The Honourable James Carroll | Native Minister and Minister of Stamp Duties of the Dominion of'New Zealand |
19 June 1911 | The Honourable John George Findlay | Attorney-General of the Dominion of New Zealand |
19 June 1911 | The Honourable Perceval Maitland Laurence | Puisne Judge of the Cape of Good Hope Provincial Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa |
19 June 1911 | Hartmann Wolfgang Just | Assistant Under-Secretary of State in the Colonial Office, and Secretary to the Imperial Conference |
19 June 1911 | Rear-Admiral William Rooke Creswell | Director of Naval Forces of the Commonwealth of Australia |
19 June 1911 | John Pringle | Member of the Privy and Legislative Councils of the Island of Jamaica |
19 June 1911 | Major-General John Charles Hoad | Chief of the General Staff of the Military Forces of the Commonwealth of Australia |
19 June 1911 | Colonel David Harris | Member of the House of Assembly of the Union of South Africa |
19 June 1911 | Herbert Cecil Sloley | Resident Commissioner for Basutoland |
19 June 1911 | Frederick James Clark | Member of the Executive Council and Speaker of the House of Assembly of the Island of Barbados |
19 June 1911 | John Rose Bradford | a Secretary to the Royal Society |
19 June 1911 | His Highness Abdul Hamid Halimshah ibni Adhmat Tajudin (Honorary) | Sultan of Kedah |
19 June 1911 | His Highness Zainul-ab-din ibni Marhum Ahmad (Honorary) | Sultan of Terengganu |
19 June 1911 | Reginald Thomas Tower | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Buenos Ayres |
19 June 1911 | Walter Beaupré Townley | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Bucharest |
19 June 1911 | Henry George Outram Bax-Ironside | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Sofia |
19 June 1911 | The Honourable Reginald Lister | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Tangier |
3 June 1935 | The Honourable Sir James William Blair | Chief Justice and Lieutenant-Governor of the State of Queensland |
3 June 1935 | Air Vice-Marshal Sir Philip Woolcott Game | Former Governor of the State of New South Wales |
3 June 1935 | The Honourable Herbert Meredith Marler | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary for the Dominion of Canada in Japan |
3 June 1935 | The Honourable Ethelbert Alfred Ransom | Minister of Lands of the Dominion of New Zealand |
3 June 1935 | The Honourable George Ritchie | Minister of Mines and Minister of Afforestation of the State of South Australia |
3 June 1935 | Percy Hubert Ezechiel | Third Crown Agent for the Colonies |
3 June 1935 | Alfred John Harding | Director of Colonial Audit |
3 June 1935 | Henry Monck-Mason Moore | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Colony of Sierra Leone |
3 June 1935 | Geoffry Alexander Stafford Northcote | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Colony of British Guiana |
3 June 1935 | Arthur Frederick Richards | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Colony of the Gambia |
3 June 1935 | His Highness Abu Bakar ibni almerhum Sultan Abdullah (Honorary) | Sultan of Pahang, Federated Malay States |
3 June 1935 | Herbert Ernest Fass | Former Financial Secretary to the Sudan Government |
3 June 1935 | Stephen Gaselee | Librarian and Keeper of the Papers in the Foreign Office |
3 June 1935 | Hugh Gurney | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Copenhagen |
3 June 1935 | George Bailey Sansom | Commercial Counsellor at Embassy in Tokio |
3 June 1935 | Sydney Philip Perigal Waterlow | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Athens |
Edward VIII (1936)[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|
George VI[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
11 May 1937 | David Thomas Chadwick | Secretary of the Imperial Economic Committee and of the Executive Council of the Imperial Agricultural Bureau |
11 May 1937 | The Honourable Sir Frederick Wollaston Mann | Lieutenant-Governor and Chief Justice of the State of Victoria |
11 May 1937 | Algernon Phillips Withiel Thomas | Emeritus Professor of the Auckland University College, Dominion of New Zealand |
11 May 1937 | Sir John Caulcutt | For services to the Colonial Office and to the Colonies in regard to currency and banking problems |
11 May 1937 | Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Henry Fortnom Cox | British Resident, Trans-Jordan |
11 May 1937 | Sir Arthur Salisbury Lawrance | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Somaliland Protectorate |
11 May 1937 | Lieutenant-General Lord Francis George Montagu-Douglas-Scott | For public services in Kenya |
11 May 1937 | William Barrowclough Brown | Second Secretary to the Board of Trade |
11 May 1937 | Cecil Francis Joseph Dormer | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Oslo |
11 May 1937 | Norman King | Consul-General at Barcelona |
11 May 1937 | George Arthur Drostan Ogilvie-Forbes | Counsellor at His Majesty's Embassy at Berlin |
11 May 1937 | William Henry Robinson | Assistant to the Principal Establishment Officer in the Foreign Office |
1 January 1947 | Guildhaume Myrddin-Evans | Deputy Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and National Service |
1 January 1947 | Terence Allen Shone | High Commissioner to India |
1 January 1947 | Sir John Ballingall Forbes Watson | Director of the British Employers' Confederation |
1 January 1947 | John Alexander Calder | Senior Crown Agent for the Colonies |
1 January 1947 | The Right Reverend Michael Bolton Furse | Former Bishop of St. Albans and Prelate of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George |
1 January 1947 | Thomas Ingram Kynaston Lloyd | Assistant Under-Secretary of State in the Colonial Office |
1 January 1947 | John Balfour | Minister at His Majesty's Embassy at Washington |
1 January 1947 | Sir George Nevile Maltby Bland | Ambassador to the Netherlands |
1 January 1947 | Robert George Howe | Assistant Under-Secretary of State in the Foreign Office |
1 January 1947 | Edmund Leo Hall-Patch | Deputy Under-Secretary of State |
1 January 1947 | The Honourable Humphrey Francis O'Leary | Chief Justice of New Zealand |
12 June 1947 | Richard Gordon Munro | Representative of HM Treasury in Washington |
12 June 1947 | Lieutenant General Sir Brian Hubert Robertson | Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief of the British Forces in Germany, and Deputy Military Governor |
12 June 1947 | The Honourable Sir John Waters Kirwan | Former President of the Legislative Council of State of Western Australia |
12 June 1947 | Sir John Valentine Wistar Shaw | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of Trinidad |
12 June 1947 | Sydney Caine | Joint Deputy Under-Secretary of State in the Colonial Office |
12 June 1947 | Nevile Montagu Butler | Assistant Under-Secretary of State in the Foreign Office |
12 June 1947 | Cecil Bertrand Jerram | Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at Stockholm |
12 June 1947 | William Henry Bradshaw Mack | Political Representative to the Austrian Government |
Elizabeth II[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
1 June 1953 | Harold Graham Vincent | Secretary of the Government Hospitality Fund |
1 June 1953 | Lieutenant General Sir James Bennett Hance | Medical Adviser and President of Medical Board in the Commonwealth Relations Office |
1 June 1953 | Frederick Crawford | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of Seychelles |
1 June 1953 | Robert de Zouche Hall | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of Sierra Leone |
1 June 1953 | Tom Hickinbotham | Governor and Commander-in-Chief of Aden |
1 June 1953 | Stephen Elliot Vyvyan Luke | Comptroller for Development and Welfare in the West Indies, and British Co-Chairman of the Caribbean Commission |
1 June 1953 | His Highness Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddin ibni Almerhom Sultan Mohamed Jemalulalam (Honorary) | Sultan of Brunei |
1 June 1953 | Douglas Frederick Howard | Ambassador to Uruguay |
1 June 1953 | Frank Kenyon Roberts | Deputy Under-Secretary of State in the Foreign Office |
1 June 1953 | Sir James Wilson Robertson | Civil Secretary of the Sudan Government |
1 June 1953 | Geoffrey Arnold Wallinger | Ambassador to Thailand |
5 April 1974 | Anthony Henry Fanshawe Royle | Former Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Office |
11 June 1974 | Colin Hamilton Allan | Governor of Solomon Islands |
11 June 1974 | Arthur Wilfred Bonsall | Director of Government Communications Headquarters |
11 June 1974 | John Archibald Ford | Ambassador to Indonesia |
11 June 1974 | Donald Arthur Logan | Leader to the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea |
11 June 1974 | Willie Morris | Ambassador to Egypt |
11 June 1974 | Norman Statham | Ambassador to Brazil |
11 June 1974 | The Honourable Francis Theodore Page Burt | Chief Justice of Western Australia |
21 July 1983 | The Right Honourable Humphrey Edward Gregory Atkins | Former Lord Privy Seal, and Secretary of State for Northern Ireland |
21 July 1983 | The Right Honourable Peter Allan Renshaw Blaker | Former Minister of State for Defence, and former Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Office |
21 December 1990 | Charles David Powell | Private Secretary, Prime Minister's Office, 10 Downing Street |
2 August 1997 | The Right Honourable Alastair Robertson Goodlad | Former Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and Parliamentary Secretary in HM Treasury |
2 August 1997 | The Right Honourable Jeremy James Hanley | Former Chairman of the Conservative Party, and Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Office |
2 August 1997 | The Right Honourable Malcolm Leslie Rifkind | Former Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Scotland, Transport and Defence |
30 April 2013 | His Highness Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan (Honorary) | Minister of Foreign Affairs of the United Arab Emirates |
2013 | Count Jacques Jean Marie Rogge (Honorary) | President of the International Olympic Committee |
5 November 2013 | His Excellency Yun Byung-se (Honorary) | Minister of Foreign Affairs of South Korea |
5 June 2014 | Laurent Fabius (Honorary) | Minister of Foreign Affairs of France |
5 June 2014 | Laurent Stefanini (Honorary) | Ambassador, Chief of Protocol to the President of France |
14 June 2014 | Angelina Jolie* (Honorary) | Actress, filmmaker and humanitarian |
28 July 2014 | The Right Honourable Alan James Carter Duncan | Former Minister of State for International Development |
28 July 2014 | The Right Honourable Hugh Michael Robertson | Former Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and Minister for Sport and the Olympics |
21 October 2014 | Grace Fu* (Honorary) | Minister in the Prime Minister's Office, and Second Minister for Foreign Affairs of Singapore |
3 March 2015 | José Antonio Meade Kuribreña (Honorary) | Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs of Mexico |
26 October 2015 | His Honour Howard Andrew Clive Morrison | Judge of the UN International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia |
26 November 2015 | Joseph Muscat (Honorary) | Prime Minister of Malta |
30 November 2015 | Anders Fogh Rasmussen (Honorary) | Former Secretary-General of North Atlantic Treaty Organisation |
4 August 2016 | The Right Honourable Hugo George William Swire | Former Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, and Minister of State for Northern Ireland |
10 September 2019 | George Michael Edward Hollingbery | Former Minister of State for Trade Policy, and Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Prime Minister |
10 September 2019 | Oliver Robbins | Former Europe Adviser to the Prime Minister, and Chief Negotiator for Exiting the European Union |
19 July 2022 | His Excellency Khaled Al-Duwaisan (Honorary) | Former Ambassador of Kuwait, and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps |
Charles III[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
15 October 2022 | James Philip Duddridge | Member of Parliament for Rochford and Southend East and Minister of State for International Trade |
30 December 2022 | Deborah Jane Bronnert* | Ambassador to Russia |
30 December 2022 | Professor Fiona Elizabeth Murray* | Associate Dean of Innovation and Inclusion and William Porter Professor of Entrepreneurship, Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Management |
30 December 2022 | Melinda Veronica Simmons* | Ambassador to Ukraine |
30 December 2022 | Masood Ahmed | President of the Center for Global Development |
30 December 2022 | Mohammed Fathi Ahmed Ibrahim | Founder of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation |
30 December 2022 | David Nunes Nabarro | World Health Organisation Special Envoy for Covid-19 Prevention and Response |
30 December 2022 | Matthew John Rycroft | Permanent Secretary in the Home Office |
30 December 2022 | The Right Honourable Alok Kumar Sharma | President of the United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) |
30 December 2023 | Thomas Drew | Director General for Defence and Intelligence in the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office |
30 December 2023 | Richard Grenville Russell Evans | Chairman of Hemingways Hospitality Ltd. |
30 December 2023 | Crawford Dunlop Falconer | Chief Trade Negotiation Adviser and Second Permanent Secretary, Department for Business and Trade |
15 June 2024 | Tariq Ahmad, Baron Ahmad of Wimbledon | Prime Minister's Special Representative for Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict and Minister of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office |
15 June 2024 | William Felix Browder | Chief Executive Officer of Hermitage Capital Management, and Head of Global Magnitsky Justice Campaign |
15 June 2024 | Alexander Wykeham Ellis | Former High Commissioner to India |
15 June 2024 | Keith Francis Palmer | Chair of Trustees of Enterprise for Development and former Chair of AgDevCo, InfraCo Africa and InfraCo Asia |
15 June 2024 | Andrew David Steer | President and Chief Executive Officer of Bezos Earth Fund |
Commanders, Royal Victorian Order[edit]
Elizabeth II (1952–2022)[edit]
2020–2022[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|
Charles III (2022–present)[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
30 December 2023 | Ian Angus Campbell | Lord-Lieutenant of Dorset |
30 December 2023 | Sophia Louisa Densham | Private Secretary to Her Majesty The Queen |
30 December 2023 | Patric Laurence Dickinson | Secretary of the Order of the Garter |
30 December 2023 | Veronica Mary Geneste Ferguson | Surgeon-Oculist to Queen Elizabeth II |
30 December 2023 | Alastair Gilbert Martin | Secretary to the Duchy of Cornwall |
30 December 2023 | Malcolm Ian, Baron Offord of Garvel | Formerly Trustee of The Duke of Edinburgh's Award Scheme |
30 December 2023 | Sir Antonio Pappano | Conductor of the Coronation Orchestra |
30 December 2023 | Professor James Roy Robertson | Former Apothecary to His Majesty The King at the Palace of Holyroodhouse |
20 March 2024 | Timothy Hugh David Evans | Former Apothecary to Queen Elizabeth II, and Apothecary to the Royal Household |
26 March 2024 | John Lynes | Former Private Secretary's Office in the Royal Household |
15 June 2024 | John David Sebastian Booth | Chair of The Prince's Trust |
15 June 2024 | Sir John Rawcliffe Airey Crabtree | Lord-Lieutenant of the West Midlands |
15 June 2024 | Michael David Dixon | Head of the Royal Medical Household |
15 June 2024 | His Excellency General the Honourable David John Hurley | Governor-General of Australia |
15 June 2024 | Alan Gordon Simpson | Lord-Lieutenant of Stirling and Falkirk |
15 June 2024 | Julian Arthur Vaughan Smith | Private Solicitor to His Majesty The King, Farrer & Co |
15 June 2024 | Professor Sir Hew Francis Anthony Strachan | Lord-Lieutenant of Tweeddale |
Knight Commander, Order of the Star of India (KCSI)[edit]
George V[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
3 June 1935 | Sir Campbell Ward Rhodes | Former Member of the Council of India |
3 June 1935 | Raja Sri Ravu Swetachalupati Ramakrishna Ranga Rao Bahadur, of Bobbili | Minister for Local Self-Government to the Governor of Madras |
3 June 1935 | Raja Brijnath Singh | Raja of Maihar |
3 June 1935 | Courtenay Latimer | Agent to the Governor-General in the States of Western India |
3 June 1935 | Abraham James Lainé | Member of the Executive Council of the Governor of Assam |
3 June 1935 | George Cunningham | Member of the Executive Council of the Governor of the North-West Frontier Province |
3 June 1935 | ||
3 June 1935 | ||
3 June 1935 |
George VI[edit]
Appointment | Name | Notes |
---|
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha>
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- ^ Queen Juliana at the gala dinner in honour of Argentine President Arturo Frondizi. Alamy. 1 July 1960.
- ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (PDF) (in German). p. 111. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
- ^ Queen Juliana at the state dinner for the President of Finland, Urho Kekkonen. 24 October 1972.
- ^ State Banquet in honour of the Indonesian President Suharto. Alamy. 3 September 1970.
- ^ Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard at the state dinner for the President of Italy. 25 October 1973.
- ^ Norges statskalender (in Norwegian), 1954, p. 1441 – via runeberg.org
- ^ "Real Decreto 752/1980, de 15 de marzo, por el que se concede el Collar de la Real y Muy Distinguida Orden de Carlos III a su Majestad Juliana, Reina de los Países Bajos" [Royal Decree 752/1980, of March 15, by which the Collar of the Royal and Very Distinguished Order of Charles III is granted to Her Majesty Juliana, Queen of the Netherlands.]. boe.es (in Spanish). 15 March 1980.
- ^ แจ้งความสำนักนายกรัฐมนตรี เรื่อง ถวายเครื่องราชอิสริยาภรณ์แด่สมเด็จพระราชินีนาถแห่งเนเทอร์แลนด์ (PDF) (in Thai). www.ratchakitcha.soc.go.th. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 31, 2014. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
- ^ Royal Thai Government Gazette (28 December 1960). "แจ้งความสำนักนายกรัฐมนตรี เรื่อง พระราชทานเครื่องราชอิสริยาภรณ์" (PDF) (in Thai). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 5, 2015. Retrieved 2019-05-08.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Queen Juliana at the gala dinner for President Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia. Getty Images. 7 July 1966.
- ^ "Individual Awards" (PDF). Army Publishing Directorate. Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army. April 23, 1952. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
- ^ See the photo. http://hdl.handle.net/10648/ad90d43a-d0b4-102d-bcf8-003048976d84
- ^ "Одликувања" (PDF). Službeni list SFRJ (in Macedonian). XXVII (56): 1049, 1064. 16 December 1971.