Order of Merit

dynastic order recognising distinguished service in Commonwealth realms

The Order of Merit (French: Ordre du Mérite)[n 1] is an award, for notable work in the armed forces, science, art, literature, or for the promotion of culture. The order was set up in 1902, by Edward VII. Membership of the order is a personal gift of its Sovereign (the monarch does not take advice from politicians about who should be a member). The sovereign of the order is the reigning monarch of the Commonwealth realms. The award is limited to 24 living recipients at any one time from these countries, plus a small number of honorary members.[1]

Order of Merit
Insignia of the Order of Merit presented to Dorothy Hodgkin, displayed in the Royal Society in London
Awarded by the

sovereign of the Commonwealth realms
TypeDynastic order
Royal houseHouse of Windsor
MottoFOR MERIT
EligibilityAll living citizens of the Commonwealth realms
Awarded forAt the monarch's pleasure
StatusCurrently awarded
SovereignCharles III
Grades (w/ post-nominals)Member (OM)
Established1902
Precedence
Next (higher)Dependent on state
Next (lower)Dependent on state
Ribbon of the Order of Merit

Whilst all members can use the post-nominal letters OM and a medallion for life,[2] the Order of Merit's precedence, amongst other honours, differs between Commonwealth realms.

History

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The award filled a gap in the honour system under Queen Victoria. It was only possible to reward people who held official positions. So, for example, T.H. Huxley could be rewarded because he had sat on Royal Commissions, but Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace held no official positions. Without question their work was as important as Huxley's, or more so. This kind of problem was known by Edward VII, and when he eventually became king, he drew up this new award which had no such limitations. The idea had been discussed before.

The first mention of a possible Order of Merit was made after the Battle of Trafalgar, in 1805. It was discussed in letters between the First Lord of the Admiralty, Lord Barham and Prime Minister William Pitt. Nothing came from the idea.[3] Later, Queen Victoria, her courtiers, and politicians,[4] all thought that a new order, based on the Prussian order Pour le Mérite, would make up for the insufficient recognition offered by the established honours system to achievement outside of public service, in realms such as art, music, literature, industry, and science.[3] Victoria's husband, Albert, Prince Consort, took an interest in the matter; he wrote in his diary that he met on 16 January 1844 with Robert Peel to discuss the "idea of institution of a civil Order of Merit" and three days later he talked with the Queen on the subject.[5] The concept did not wither and, on 5 January 1888, British prime minister the Marquess of Salisbury submitted to the Queen a draft constitution for an Order of Merit in Science and Art, consisting of one grade split into two branches of knighthood: the Order of Scientific Merit - for Knights of Merit in Science, with the post-nominal letters KMS— and the Order of Artistic Merit - for Knights of Merit in Art, with the post-nominal letters KMA. However, Sir Frederic Leighton, President of the Royal Academy, advised against the new order, primarily because of its selection process.[6]

King Edward VII, founder of the Order of Merit

It was Victoria's son, Edward VII, who eventually founded the Order of Merit, on 26 June 1902— the date for which his coronation had been originally planned[7]— as a means to acknowledge "exceptionally meritorious service in Our Navy and Our Army, or who may have rendered exceptionally meritorious service towards the advancement of Art, Literature and Science";[8] all modern aspects of the order were established under his direction, including the division for military figures.[2] From the outset, prime ministers attempted to propose candidates or lobbied to influence the monarch's decision on appointments, but the Royal Household adamantly guarded information about potential names.[2] After 1931, when the Commonwealth of Nations came into being and the former Dominions of the British Empire became independent states, equal in status to the UK,[9][10] the Order of Merit remained an honour open to all the King's realms; thus, as with the monarch who conferred it, the order ceased to be purely British.[1][11]

From the start, the order has been open to women, Florence Nightingale being the first woman to receive the honour, in 1907. Several people have not taken the honour, such as Rudyard Kipling, A. E. Housman, and George Bernard Shaw. To date, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, remains the youngest person ever inducted into the Order of Merit, having been admitted by Queen Elizabeth II, in 1968, when he was 47 years of age.[2]

Eligibility and appointment

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All citizens of the Commonwealth realms are able to be given the Order of Merit. There can only be 24 living people in the order at any given time, not including honorary appointees, and new members are personally selected by the reigning monarch of the 16 realms, presently Queen Elizabeth II, with the help of her private secretaries;[2] the order has thus been described as "quite possibly, the most prestigious honour one can receive on planet Earth."[12] Within the limited membership is a designated military division, with its own unique insignia; though it has not been abolished, it is currently unused, the Earl Mountbatten of Burma having been the last person so honoured.[2] Honorary members form another group, to which there is no limit, though such appointments are rare; individuals from countries in the Commonwealth of Nations that are not headed by Elizabeth II are considered foreigners, and thus are granted only honorary admissions, such as Nelson Mandela (South Africa) and Mother Teresa (India).[1]

On admission into the Order of Merit, members can use the post-nominal letters OM, and have the badge of the order, consisting of a golden crown from which is suspended a red enamelled cross, itself centred by a disk of blue enamel, surrounded by a gold laurel wreath, and bearing in gold lettering the words FOR MERIT;[13] the insignia for the military grouping has a pair of crossed swords behind the central disk. The ribbon of the Order of Merit is divided into two stripes of red and blue; men wear their badges on a neck ribbon, while women carry theirs on a ribbon bow pinned to the left shoulder, and aides-de-camp may wear the insignia on their aiguillettes.[13] Since 1991, the insignia is to be given back upon the recipient's death.[14]

Current members

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Members
  1. The Lord Foster of Thames Bank OM appointed 25 November 1997 [15]
  2. Sir Roger Penrose OM FRS appointed 9 May 2000 [15]
  3. Sir Tom Stoppard OM CBE FRSL appointed 9 May 2000 [15]
  4. The Lord Rothschild OM GBE CVO appointed 28 October 2002 [15]
  5. Sir David Attenborough OM CH CVO CBE FRS FSA appointed 10 June 2005 [15]
  6. The Lord Eames OM appointed 13 June 2007 [15]
  7. Sir Tim Berners-Lee OM KBE FRS FREng appointed 13 June 2007 [15]
  8. The Lord Rees of Ludlow OM FRS FMedSci FREng appointed 13 June 2007[15]
  9. Jean Chrétien OM CC PC QC appointed 13 July 2009 [16]
  10. Neil MacGregor OM AO FSA appointed 4 November 2010 [17]
  11. David Hockney OM CH appointed 1 January 2012 [18]
  12. John Howard OM AC appointed 1 January 2012 [18]
  13. Sir Simon Rattle OM CBE appointed 1 January 2014 [19]
  14. Sir Magdi Yacoub OM FRS appointed 1 January 2014 [19]
  15. The Lord Darzi of Denham OM KBE PC FRS FMedSci FRCS FREng appointed 31 December 2015 [20]
  16. Dame Ann Dowling OM DBE FRS FREng appointed 31 December 2015 [20]
  17. Sir James Dyson OM CBE FRS FREng appointed 31 December 2015 [20]
  18. Sir David Adjaye OM OBE appointed 11 November 2022[21]
  19. Dame Elizabeth Anionwu OM DBE appointed 11 November 2022[21]
  20. The Baroness Benjamin OM DBE appointed 11 November 2022[21]
  21. Margaret MacMillan OM CC CH appointed 11 November 2022[21]
  22. Sir Paul Nurse OM CH FRS appointed 11 November 2022[21]
  23. Venkatraman Ramakrishnan OM FRS appointed 11 November 2022[21]
  24. Vacant[22]
Honorary members

(none)

Precedence in each realm

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As the Order of Merit is open to the citizens of sixteen different countries, each with their own system of orders, decorations, and medals, the order's place of precedence varies from country to country. While in the United Kingdom, members rank below Knights and Dames Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, it has been claimed by Stanley Martin, in his book The Order of Merit 1902-2002: One Hundred Years of Matchless Honour, that the Order of Merit is actually the pinnacle of the British honours system.[23] Similarly, though it was not listed in the Canadian order of precedence for honours, decorations, and medals until December 2010,[24] except relating to those who were appointed to the order prior to 1 June 1972,[25] both Christopher McCreery, an expert on Canadian honours and secretary to the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia, and Rafal Heydel-Mankoo, an editor of Burke's Peerage, stated that the Order of Merit was the highest civilian award for merit a Canadian could receive.[26][27][28]

Some orders of precedence are as follows:

CountryPrecedingFollowing
Australia
Order of precedence
Knight/Dame Grand Cross of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (GCB)Knight/Dame of the Order of Australia (AK/AD)
Canada
Order of precedence
Cross of Valour (CV)Companion of the Order of Canada (CC)
New Zealand
Order of precedence
Knight/Dame Grand Cross of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (GCB)Member of the Order of New Zealand (ONZ)[29]
United Kingdom  England and
 Wales
Order of precedence
Knight/Dame Grand Cross of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (GCB)Knight/Dame Commander of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (KCB/DCB)

Past members

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Substantive members

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The Earl Roberts, first British member of the Order of Merit
Florence Nightingale, the first female member of the Order of Merit, appointed in 1907
The Lord Rutherford of Nelson, first New Zealand member of the Order of Merit, appointed in 1925
Samuel Alexander, the first Australian member of the Order of Merit, appointed in 1930
Jan Smuts, the first South African member of the Order of Merit, appointed in 1947
William Lyon Mackenzie King, the first Canadian member of the Order of Merit, appointed in 1947
Countries[n 2]NameDate of appointmentDate of death
1.[n 3] The Earl Roberts26 June 190214 November 1914
2. The Viscount Wolseley26 June 190225 March 1913
3. The Earl Kitchener26 June 19025 June 1916
4. The Lord Rayleigh26 June 190230 June 1919
5. The Lord Kelvin26 June 190217 December 1907
6. The Lord Lister26 June 190210 February 1912
7. Sir Henry Keppel26 June 190217 January 1904
8. The Viscount Morley of Blackburn26 June 190223 September 1923
9. William Edward Hartpole Lecky26 June 190222 October 1903
10. Sir Edward Hobart Seymour26 June 19022 March 1929
11. Sir William Huggins26 June 190212 May 1910
12. George Frederic Watts26 June 19021 July 1904
13. Sir George Stuart White30 June 190524 June 1912
14. The Lord Fisher30 June 190510 July 1920
15. Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb30 June 19059 December 1905
16. Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema30 June 190525 June 1912
17. George Meredith30 June 190518 May 1909
18. William Holman Hunt30 June 19057 September 1910
22. The Earl of Cromer29 June 190629 January 1917
23. The Viscount Bryce11 February 190722 January 1922
24. Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker30 June 190710 December 1911
25. Florence Nightingale12 May 190713 August 1910
26. Henry Jackson26 June 190825 September 1921
27. Alfred Russel Wallace26 June 19087 November 1913
28. Sir William Crookes8 July 19104 April 1919
29. Thomas Hardy8 July 191011 January 1928
30. Sir George Otto Trevelyan19 June 191117 August 1928
31. Sir Edward William Elgar19 June 191123 February 1934
32. Sir Arthur Knyvet Wilson8 March 191225 May 1921
33. Sir Joseph John Thomson15 March 191230 August 1940
34. Sir Archibald Geikie1 January 191410 November 1924
35. The Earl of Ypres3 December 191422 May 1925
36. The Viscount Haldane26 May 191519 August 1928
37. Henry James1 January 191628 February 1916
38. The Earl Jellicoe31 May 191620 November 1935
39. The Earl of Balfour3 June 191619 March 1930
41. The Earl Beatty3 June 191911 March 1936
42. The Earl Haig3 June 191929 January 1928
44. The Earl Lloyd-George5 August 191926 March 1945
45. Sir James Matthew Barrie2 January 192219 June 1937
46. Francis Herbert Bradley3 June 192418 September 1924
47. Sir Charles Scott Sherrington3 June 19244 March 1952
48. Sir James George Frazer1 January 19257 May 1941
49. / The Lord Rutherford of Nelson1 January 192519 October 1937
50. Sir Charles Algernon Parsons3 June 192711 February 1931
51. Sir George Abraham Grierson4 June 19289 March 1941
52. Robert Seymour Bridges3 June 192921 April 1930
53. John Galsworthy3 June 192931 January 1933
54. / Samuel Alexander3 June 193013 September 1938
55. Montague Rhodes James3 June 193012 June 1936
56. George Macaulay Trevelyan3 June 193021 July 1962
57. Sir Charles Edward Madden1 January 19315 June 1935
58. Philip Wilson Steer1 January 193118 March 1942
59. Sir William Henry Bragg3 June 193110 March 1942
60. John William Mackail1 January 193513 December 1945
61. John Edward Masefield3 June 193512 May 1967
62. Ralph Vaughan Williams3 June 193526 August 1958
63. Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins3 June 193516 May 1947
64. The Lord Chetwode1 January 19366 July 1950
65. Herbert Albert Laurens Fisher1 February 193718 April 1940
66. The Lord Baden-Powell11 May 19378 January 1941
67. Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington9 June 193822 November 1944
68. The Lord Chatfield2 January 193915 November 1967
69. Sir James Hopwood Jeans2 January 193916 September 1946
70. The Lord Newall29 October 194030 November 1963
71. / George Gilbert Aimé Murray1 January 194120 May 1957
72. Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens1 January 19421 January 1944
73. Augustus Edwin John11 June 194231 October 1961
74. The Lord Adrian11 June 19424 August 1977
75. Sir William Searle Holdsworth1 January 19432 January 1944
76. Sir Alfred Dudley Pickman Rogers Pound3 September 194321 October 1943
77. The Lord Passfield8 June 194413 October 1947
78. Sir Henry Hallett Dale8 June 194423 July 1968
79. Sir Giles Gilbert Scott8 June 19448 February 1960
80. / Alfred North Whitehead1 January 194530 December 1947
82. Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill1 January 194624 January 1965
83. The Viscount Portal of Hungerford1 January 194622 April 1971
84. The Viscount Alanbrooke13 June 194617 June 1963
85. The Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope13 June 194612 June 1963
86. The Earl of Halifax13 June 194623 December 1959
87. Jan Christiaan Smuts1 January 194711 September 1950
89. William Lyon Mackenzie King17 November 194722 July 1950
90. Thomas Stearns Eliot1 January 19484 January 1965
91. Sir Robert Robinson9 June 19498 February 1975
92. The Earl Russell9 June 19492 February 1970
93. Sir Alexander George Montagu Cadogan1 January 19519 July 1968
94. The Viscount Trenchard1 January 195110 February 1956
95. George Edward Moore7 June 195124 October 1958
96. The Earl Attlee5 November 19518 October 1967
97. Wilder Graves Penfield1 January 19535 April 1976
98. Walter John de la Mare1 June 195322 June 1956
100. The Lord Hailey31 May 19561 June 1969
101. Sir John Douglas Cockcroft1 January 195718 September 1967
102. The Viscount Waverley8 December 19574 January 1958
103. Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet12 June 195831 August 1985
104. The Viscount Samuel21 November 19582 February 1963
105. The Earl Alexander of Tunis23 April 196016 June 1969
106. Sir Cyril Norman Hinshelwood23 April 19609 October 1967
107. Graham Sutherland23 April 196017 February 1980
108. Sir Geoffrey de Havilland23 November 196221 May 1965
109. Sir Basil Urwin Spence23 November 196219 November 1976
110. Sir Owen Dixon29 May 19637 July 1972
112. George Peabody Gooch16 August 196331 August 1968
113. Henry Spencer Moore16 August 196331 August 1986
114. The Lord Britten23 March 19654 December 1976
115. Dorothy Mary Hodgkin23 March 196529 July 1994
116. The Earl Mountbatten of Burma15 July 196527 August 1979
117. / The Lord Florey15 July 196521 February 1968
118. The Lord Blackett20 November 196713 July 1974
119. Sir William Turner Walton20 November 19678 March 1983
120. Benjamin Lauder Nicholson23 April 19686 February 1982
121. / The Lord Zuckerman23 April 19681 April 1993
123. Edward Morgan Forster1 January 19697 June 1970
124. Malcolm John MacDonald14 July 196911 January 1981
125. The Lord Penney14 July 19693 March 1991
126. Sir Geoffrey Ingram Taylor14 July 196927 June 1975
127. Dame Cicely Veronica Wedgwood14 July 19699 March 1997
128. John Cawte Beaglehole21 March 197010 October 1971
129. Lester Bowles Pearson20 May 197127 December 1972
130. Sir Isaiah Berlin20 May 19715 November 1997
131. Sir George Robert Freeman Edwards20 May 19712 March 2003
132. Sir Alan Lloyd Hodgkin17 April 197320 December 1998
133. Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac17 April 197320 October 1984
134. The Earl of Stockton2 April 197629 December 1986
135. The Lord Hinton of Bankside2 April 197622 June 1983
136. The Lord Clark2 April 197621 May 1983
137. / Sir Ronald Syme2 April 19764 September 1989
138. The Lord Todd24 October 197710 January 1997
139. The Lord Franks24 October 197715 October 1992
140. Sir Frederick William Mallandaine Ashton24 October 197718 October 1988
141. John Boynton Priestley24 October 197714 August 1984
142. The Lord Olivier6 February 198111 July 1989
143. Sir Peter Brian Medawar6 February 19812 October 1987
144. The Lord Cheshire6 February 198131 July 1992
147. Sir Sidney Robert Nolan11 November 198328 November 1992
148. Sir Michael Kemp Tippett11 November 19838 January 1998
150. Henry Graham Greene11 February 19863 April 1991
152. Sir Frank Whittle11 February 19869 August 1996
153. The Lord Menuhin25 February 198712 March 1999
154. Sir Ernst Hans Josef Gombrich15 February 19883 November 2001
155. Max Ferdinand Perutz15 February 19886 February 2002
156. Dame Cicely Mary Saunders30 November 198914 July 2005
157. The Lord Porter of Luddenham30 November 198931 August 2002
158. Margaret Thatcher7 December 19908 April 2013
159. Dame Joan Alston Sutherland29 November 199110 October 2010
160. / Francis Harry Compton Crick27 November 199128 July 2004
161. Dame Ninette de Valois17 November 19928 March 2001
163. The Lord Jenkins of Hillhead6 December 19935 January 2003
167. Sir Arthur John Gielgud9 December 199621 May 2000
168. The Lord Denning25 November 19975 March 1999
170. Sir Denis Eric Rooke25 November 19972 September 2008
171. Edward James Hughes10 August 199828 October 1998
172. George Basil Hume25 May 199917 June 1999
173. Sir James Whyte Black9 May 200022 March 2010

Honorary members

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Mother Teresa (Agnesë Bojaxhiu) was appointed to the Order of Merit in 1983
Countries[30]NameDate of appointmentDate of death
19. Prince Yamagata Aritomo21 February 19061 February 1922
20. Prince Ōyama Iwao21 February 190610 December 1916
21. Marquess Tōgō Heihachirō21 February 190630 May 1934
40. Ferdinand Foch29 November 191820 March 1929
43. Joseph Jacques Césaire Joffre26 June 19193 January 1931
81. Dwight David Eisenhower12 June 194528 March 1969
88. John Gilbert Winant1 January 19473 November 1947
99. Albert Schweitzer25 February 19554 September 1965
111. Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan12 June 196317 April 1975
149. / Agnesë Gonxhe Bojaxhiu18 November 19835 September 1997

Notes

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  1. For use in Canada, which uses French and English as official languages at federal level.
  2. Flags denote country of origin and country or countries of later residence, respectively.
  3. The number shown is the individual's place in the wider order of appointment since the Order of Merit's inception.

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 The Royal Household. "The Queen and the UK > Queen and Honours > Order of Merit". Queen's Printer. Archived from the original on 18 July 2009. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Jackson, Michael D. (2007). "The Order of Merit 1902-2002: One Hundred Years of Matchless Honour" (PDF). Canadian Monarchist News. Toronto: Monarchist League of Canada. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 June 2008. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Martin 2007, p. 11
  4. Martin 2007, p. 12
  5. Martin 2007, p. 13
  6. Martin 2007, pp. 18–20
  7. Martin 2007, p. 1
  8. Mountbatten, Philip (2007). "Foreword". Written at London. In Martin, Stanley (ed.). The Order of Merit: One Hundred Years of Matchless Honour. New York: I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd. pp. xvii. ISBN 978-1-86064-848-9. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
  9. Arthur, Balfour (November 1926). Imperial Conference 1926: Inter-Imperial Relations Committee Report (PDF). London: King's Printer. p. 1. E (I.R./26) Series. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 July 2016. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
  10. George V (11 December 1931). "The Statute of Westminster, 1931". 2.2. Westminster: King's Printer. Archived from the original on 12 May 2009. Retrieved 29 July 2009. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. "Chrétien says Order of Merit 'humbling experience'". CTV. 14 July 2009. Archived from the original on 31 July 2012. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
  12. Editorial Board (15 July 2009). "Order Worthy?". National Post. Retrieved 29 July 2009. [dead link]
  13. 13.0 13.1 Clarence House. "For Children > Medals and Uniforms > Medals > Picture 4: The Order of Merit". Queen's Printer. Archived from the original on 1 March 2009. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
  14. Martin 2007, p. 56
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 The Royal Household. "The Queen and the UK > Queen and Honours > Order of Merit > List of current members". Queen's Printer. Archived from the original on 16 July 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  16. "Queen gives Chrétien Order of Merit". CBC. 13 July 2009. Archived from the original on 17 July 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  17. Buckingham Palace. "Mr Neil MacGregor appointed to the Order of Merit, 4 November 2010". The Royal Household. Archived from the original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved 4 November 2010.
  18. 18.0 18.1 "Appointments to the Order of Merit". Archived from the original on 7 January 2012. Retrieved 1 January 2012.
  19. 19.0 19.1 "New Year Honours 2013: The Full List". The Guardian. 30 December 2013. Archived from the original on 11 January 2014. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 "New Year's Honours 2016". 30 December 2015. Archived from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 3 January 2016.
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 21.4 21.5 Dunn, Charlotte (2022-11-11). "New Appointments to the Order of Merit". The Royal Family. Retrieved 2023-01-18.
  22. "Baroness Boothroyd, first female Speaker of the House of Commons, has died aged 93". Sky News. Retrieved 2023-02-28.
  23. Martin, Stanley (2007). "The Order of Merit 1902-2002: One Hundred Years of Matchless Honour". Written at London and New York. In Jackson, Michael D. (ed.). The Order of Merit 1902-2002: One Hundred Years of Matchless Honour (PDF). Vol. Summer 2007. Toronto: Monarchist League of Canada. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 June 2008. Retrieved 28 July 2009. {{cite book}}: |periodical= ignored (help)
  24. Government of Canada (8 December 2010), "Order of Merit (O.M.) Order", Canada Gazette, 144 (25), Queen's Printer for Canada, SI/2010-88, archived from the original on 19 December 2010, retrieved 10 December 2010
  25. Office of the Governor General of Canada. "Honours > Order of Precedence". Queen's Printer for Canada. Archived from the original on 9 October 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2009.
  26. McCreery, Christopher (2005). The Order of Canada: Its Origins, History and Development. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-3940-5.
  27. Taber, Jane (15 July 2009). "Chrétien 'thrilled' by rare honour from Queen". The Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on 17 July 2009. Retrieved 24 July 2009.
  28. Heydel-Mankoo, Rafal (2009). "Letter". In The Monarchist (ed.). A Letter from Burke's Peerage and Gentry. London: The Monarchist (published 25 July 2009). Archived from the original on 7 August 2010. Retrieved 26 July 2009. {{cite book}}: |periodical= ignored (help)
  29. New Zealand Defence Force. "Medals Home > general medals information > order of wear". Queen's Printer for New Zealand. Archived from the original on 24 February 2021. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  30. name=Flags

References

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