The
Monarchy of the United Kingdom (commonly referred
to as the British monarchy) is the constitutional monarchy of the
United
Kingdom
and its overseas territories. The
present monarch,
Elizabeth II, has reigned
since 6 February 1952. She and
her immediate family undertake various
official, ceremonial and representational duties. As a
constitutional monarch, the Queen is limited to non-partisan
functions such as bestowing
honours.
Though the
ultimate executive authority over the government of the United
Kingdom is still by and through the monarch's royal prerogative, in practice these
powers are only used according to laws enacted in Parliament
or within the constraints of convention and
precedent.
The British
monarchy traces its origins
from the
kings of the
Angles and the early
Scottish
kings. By the year 1000, the kingdoms of
England and
Scotland had resolved from the petty
kingdoms of early
medieval Britain.
The last
Anglo-Saxon monarch (
Harold II) was defeated and killed in
the
Norman invasion of
1066 and the English monarchy passed to the Norman conquerors.
In the thirteenth century, the
principality of Wales was absorbed by
England, and the
Magna Carta began the
process of reducing the political powers of the monarch. From 1603,
when the Scottish king
James VI
inherited the English throne as James I, both kingdoms were ruled
by a single monarch. From 1649 to 1660, the tradition of monarchy
was broken by the republican
Commonwealth of England that
followed the
War of the Three
Kingdoms.
In 1707, the kingdoms of England and Scotland
were merged to create the Kingdom of Great Britain
and, in 1801, the Kingdom of Ireland joined to create the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland
. The British monarch became nominal head of
the vast
British Empire, which
covered a quarter of the world at its greatest extent in 1921. In
1922, most of Ireland seceded from the Union as the
Irish Free State, but in law the monarch
remained sovereign there until 1949. In 1931, the unitary British
monarchy throughout the empire was split into legally distinct
crowns for each of the
Commonwealth
realms. After
World War II, former
colonies and dominions became independent of Britain, bringing the
British Empire to an end.
George VI and his successor,
Elizabeth II, adopted the title
Head of the Commonwealth as a
symbol of the free association of the independent countries
comprising the
Commonwealth of
Nations.
At present, 15 other independent Commonwealth countries share with
the United Kingdom the same person as their monarch. As such, the
terms
British monarchy and
British monarch are
frequently still employed in reference not only to
the
extranational person and institution shared amongst all 16 of the
realms, but also to the distinct monarchies within each of
these countries, often at variance with the different, specific,
and official national
titles and
terms for
each jurisdiction.
Constitutional role
In the uncodified
Constitution of the United
Kingdom, the Monarch (otherwise referred to as The
Sovereign,
The Crown, or
His/
Her Majesty, abbreviated
H.M.) is the ceremonial
Head
of State.
Oaths of allegiance
are made to the Queen and her lawful successors.
God Save the Queen (or
God Save
the King) is the British
national
anthem, and the monarch appears on
postage stamps,
coins, and
banknotes.
The Monarch takes no part in Government. The decisions to exercise
Sovereign powers are entirely delegated
from the Monarch, either by
statute or by
constitutional convention,
to
Ministers or
Officers of the Crown, or other
public bodies, exclusive of the Monarch
personally. Thus the acts of state done in the name of the Crown,
such as Crown Appointments, and even if personally performed by the
Monarch, such as the
Queen's Speech
and the
State Opening of
Parliament, depend upon decisions made elsewhere:
- Legislative power is exercised by the
Crown in Parliament, by and with
the advice and consent of Parliament
, the House of Lords
and the House of Commons
.
- Executive power is exercised by H.M. Government,
which comprises Her Majesty's
Ministers, primarily the Prime Minister and the
Cabinet. They have the
direction of the Armed Forces
of the Crown, Her
Majesty's Civil Service and other Crown Servants such as the Diplomatic and Secret Services.
- Judicial power is vested in H.M. Judges, who by constitution
and statute have judicial
independence of the Government
- The Church of England, of
which the Monarch is the head, has its own legislative, judicial
and executive structures.
- Powers independent of government are legally granted to other
public bodies by statute such as the Police
Acts, statutory instrument
such as an Order-in-Council,
Royal Commission or otherwise.
- Apart from members of
parliament and local
authorities, no public officers are elected.
As a
constitutional monarch,
the Sovereign's role is largely limited to non-partisan functions,
such as granting
honours.
This role has been recognised since the 19th century; the
constitutional writer
Walter Bagehot
identified the monarchy in 1867 as the "dignified part" rather than
the "efficient part" of government. Constitutionally, the Crown
will act only upon the advice of H.M. Government; its practical
functions in that regard are only "to advise, to be consulted, and
to warn".
The degree to which the Monarch in unusual circumstances can or
should actually exercise power is a matter of academic debate. Any
exercise of the Monarch's discretion or
reserve powers may well cause some aggrieved
party to claim a
constitutional
crisis. The most obvious case for exercising powers without the
Prime Minister's advice is when there is no Prime Minister or when
he is subject to a disqualifying
conflict of interest, such as in
advising upon his own office.
Appointment of the Prime Minister
Whenever necessary, the Monarch is responsible for appointing a new
Prime Minister (who by convention appoints and may dismiss every
other
Minister of the Crown,
and thereby constitutes and controls H.M. Government). In
accordance with unwritten constitutional conventions, the Sovereign
must appoint an individual who commands the support of the House of
Commons, usually the leader of the party or coalition that has a
majority in that House.The Prime Minister takes office by attending
the Monarch in private audience, and
Kissing Hands, and that appointment is
immediately effective without any other formality or instrument.In
a "
hung parliament", in which no
party or coalition holds a majority, the monarch has an increased
degree of latitude in choosing the individual likely to command
most support, but it would usually be the leader of the largest
party. Since 1945, there has only been one hung parliament,
following the
February 1974
general election. After failed negotiations between the
incumbent prime minister
Edward Heath
and
Liberal leader
Jeremy Thorpe, Heath resigned and
Harold Wilson was appointed Prime Minister.
Although Wilson's Labour Party did not have a majority, they were
the largest party.
On the sudden death of a Prime Minister, it is arguable whether the
Monarch is bound to appoint the successor on the advice of some
(and which) of her Ministers, or perhaps of the Cabinet, or the
Privy
Council.
Dissolution of Parliament
In 1950, the King's
Private
Secretary writing pseudonymously to
the Times newspaper asserted a constitutional
convention: according to the
Lascelles Principles, if a minority
government asked to dissolve Parliament to call an early election
to strengthen its position, the monarch could refuse, and would do
so under three conditions. When Prime Minister Wilson requested a
dissolution late in 1974, the Queen granted his request as Heath
had already failed to form a coalition. The
resulting general
election gave Wilson a small majority.It is notable that,
whatever the authority of the Lascelles Principles when published
in 1950, in 1994 the English historian Peter Hennessy noted that
they had somehow been varied: "the second of the three conditions
has since been "dropped from the canon", being no longer included
in internal Cabinet Office guidance". However, although the letter
and guidance might indicate their current views, neither the King
or his Private Secretary, nor the Cabinet Office is legally
definitive upon the subject.
Dismissal of Government
The monarch could in theory unilaterally dismiss a Prime Minister,
but in practice a Prime Minister's term now comes to an end only by
electoral defeat, death or resignation. The last monarch to remove
a Prime Minister was
William IV, who dismissed
Lord Melbourne
in 1834.
Royal Prerogative
Some of the government's executive authority is theoretically and
nominally vested in the Sovereign and is known as the
Royal Prerogative. The monarch acts within
the constraints of convention and precedent, only exercising
prerogative on the advice of ministers responsible to Parliament,
often through the Prime Minister or
Privy Council.
In practice, prerogative powers are only exercised on the Prime
Minister's advice—the Prime Minister, and not the Sovereign, has
control. The monarch holds a weekly audience with the Prime
Minister. The monarch may express his or her views, but, as a
constitutional ruler, must ultimately accept the decisions of the
Prime Minister and the Cabinet (providing they command the support
of the House). In Bagehot's words: "the Sovereign has, under a
constitutional monarchy ... three rights—the right to be
consulted, the right to encourage, the right to warn." Although the
Royal Prerogative is extensive and parliamentary approval is not
formally required for its exercise, it is limited. Many Crown
prerogatives have fallen out of use or have been permanently
transferred to Parliament. For example, the monarch cannot impose
and collect new taxes; such an action requires the authorisation of
an Act of Parliament. According to a parliamentary report, "The
Crown cannot invent new prerogative powers", and Parliament can
override any prerogative power by passing legislation.
The Royal Prerogative includes the powers to appoint and dismiss
ministers, regulate the civil service, issue passports, declare
war, make peace, direct the actions of the military, and negotiate
and ratify treaties, alliances, and international agreements.
However, a treaty cannot alter the domestic laws of the United
Kingdom; an Act of Parliament is necessary in such cases. The
monarch is
commander in chief of
the Armed Forces (the
Royal Navy, the
British Army, and the
Royal Air Force), accredits British
High Commissioners and ambassadors, and
receives diplomats from foreign states.
It is the prerogative of the monarch to summon,
prorogue and
dissolve Parliament. Each
parliamentary session begins with the monarch's summons. The new
parliamentary session is marked by the
State Opening of Parliament,
during which the Sovereign reads the
Speech from the Throne in the Chamber
of the House of Lords, outlining the Government's legislative
agenda. Prorogation usually occurs about one year after a session
begins, and formally concludes the session. Dissolution ends a
parliamentary term, and is followed by a general election for all
seats in the House of Commons. Again, these powers are always
exercised on the Prime Minister's advice. The timing of a
dissolution is affected by a variety of factors. No parliamentary
term may last more than five years; at the end of this period, a
dissolution is automatic under the
Parliament Act 1911. However, the Prime
Minister normally chooses the most politically opportune moment for
his or her party. Per the
Lascelles
Principles, the Sovereign may theoretically refuse a
dissolution, but the circumstances under which such an action would
be warranted are unclear. Before a bill passed by the legislative
Houses can become law, the
Royal Assent
(the monarch's approval) is required. In theory, assent can either
be granted (making the bill law) or withheld (vetoing the bill),
but since 1707 assent has always been granted.
The
monarch has a similar relationship with the devolved governments of Scotland
, Wales
, and
Northern
Ireland
. The Sovereign appoints the First Minister of Scotland on the
nomination of the Scottish Parliament
, and the First
Minister of Wales on the nomination of the National Assembly for
Wales. In Scottish matters, the Sovereign acts on the
advice of the
Scottish
Government. However, as devolution is more limited in Wales, in
Welsh matters the Sovereign acts on the advice of the Prime
Minister and Cabinet of the United Kingdom. The Sovereign can veto
any law passed by the
Northern
Ireland Assembly, if it is deemed unconstitutional by the
Secretary of
State for Northern Ireland.
The Sovereign is deemed the "fount of justice"; although the
Sovereign does not personally rule in judicial cases, judicial
functions are performed in his or her name. For instance,
prosecutions are brought on the monarch's behalf, and courts derive
their authority from the Crown. The common law holds that the
Sovereign "can do no wrong"; the monarch cannot be prosecuted for
criminal offences. The
Crown
Proceedings Act 1947 allows civil lawsuits against the Crown in
its public capacity (that is, lawsuits against the government), but
not lawsuits against the monarch personally. The Sovereign
exercises the "prerogative of mercy", which is used to
pardon convicted offenders or reduce sentences.
The monarch is the "
fount of
honour", the source of all honours and dignities in the United
Kingdom. The Crown creates all
peerages,
appoints members of the
orders of chivalry,
grants knighthoods and awards other honours. Although peerages and
most other honours are granted on the advice of the Prime Minister,
some honours are within the personal gift of the Sovereign, and are
not granted on ministerial advice. The monarch alone appoints
members of the
Order of the
Garter, the
Order of the
Thistle, the
Royal Victorian
Order and the
Order of
Merit.
History
English monarchy
Following
Viking raids and settlement in the ninth century, the Anglo-Saxon
kingdom of Wessex
emerged as
the dominant English kingdom. Alfred the Great secured Wessex, achieved
dominance over western Mercia
, and assumed
the title "King of the English". His grandson
Athelstan was the first king to rule over a
unitary kingdom roughly corresponding to the present borders of
England, though its constituent parts retained strong regional
identities. The 11th century saw England become more stable,
despite a number of wars with the Danes, which resulted in a Danish
monarchy for one generation.
William, Duke of Normandy's conquest of
England in 1066 was crucial in terms of both political and social
change. The new monarch continued the centralization of power begun
in the Anglo-Saxon period, while the
Feudal System continued to develop.
William I was succeeded by two of his sons:
William II, then
Henry I. Henry made a controversial
decision to name his daughter
Matilda (his only surviving child) as his
heir. Following Henry's death in 1135, one of William I's
grandsons,
Stephen, laid claim to
the throne, and took power with the support of most of the
barons.
Matilda challenged his reign; as a result England descended into a
period of disorder known as
the Anarchy.
Stephen maintained a precarious hold on power but agreed to a
compromise under which Matilda's son
Henry would succeed him. Henry
accordingly became the first monarch of the
Angevin, or
Plantagenet,
dynasty as Henry II in 1154.
The reigns of most of the Angevin monarchs were marred by civil
strife and conflicts between the monarch and the nobility. Henry II
faced rebellions from his own sons, the future monarchs
Richard I and
John. Nevertheless, Henry managed to expand
his kingdom. Upon Henry's death, his elder son Richard succeeded to
the throne; he was absent from England for most of his reign, as he
left to fight in the
Crusades. He was
killed besieging a castle, and John succeeded him. John's reign was
marked by conflict with the barons, particularly over the limits of
royal power. In 1215, the barons coerced the king into issuing the
Magna Carta (
Latin
for "Great Charter") to guarantee the rights and liberties of the
nobility. Soon afterwards further disagreements plunged England
into a civil war known as the
First
Barons' War. The war came to an abrupt end after John died in
1216, leaving the Crown to his nine-year-old son
Henry III. Later in Henry's reign,
Simon de
Montfort led the barons in another rebellion, beginning the
Second Barons' War. The war ended
in a clear royalist victory, and in the death of many rebels, but
not before the king had agreed to summon a parliament in
1265.
The next monarch,
Edward I, was
far more successful in maintaining royal power, and was responsible
for the conquest of Wales. He attempted to establish English
domination of Scotland. However, gains in Scotland were reversed
during the reign of his successor,
Edward II, who also faced conflict with
the nobility. Edward II was, in 1311, forced to relinquish many of
his powers to a committee of
baronial
"ordainers"; however, military victories helped him regain
control in 1322. Nevertheless, in 1327, Edward was deposed and then
murdered by his wife
Isabella.
His 14-year-old son became
Edward
III.
Edward III claimed the French Crown, setting
off the Hundred Years' War
between England and France
. His
campaigns conquered much French territory, but by 1374 all the
gains had been lost. Edward's reign was also marked by the further
development of Parliament, which came to be divided into two
Houses. In 1377, Edward III died, leaving the Crown to his
10-year-old grandson
Richard
II. Like many of his predecessors, Richard II conflicted with
the nobles by attempting to concentrate power in his own hands. In
1399, while he was campaigning in Ireland, his cousin
Henry Bolingbroke seized power. Richard
was deposed, imprisoned, and eventually murdered, and Henry became
king.
Henry IV was the grandson of Edward III and the son of
John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster; hence, his
dynasty was known as the
House of
Lancaster. For most of his reign, Henry IV was forced to fight
off plots and rebellions; his success was partly due to the
military skill of his son, the future
Henry V. Henry V's own reign, which began
in 1413, was largely free from domestic strife, leaving the king
free to pursue the Hundred Years' War in France. Although he was
victorious, his sudden death in 1422 left his infant son
Henry VI on the throne, and gave the
French an opportunity to overthrow English rule. The unpopularity
of Henry's counsellors and his belligerent consort,
Margaret of Anjou, as well as his own
ineffectual leadership, led to the weakening of the House of
Lancaster. The Lancastrians faced a challenge from the House of
York, so called because its head, a descendant of Edward III, was
Richard, Duke of
York. Although the Duke of York died in battle in 1460, his
eldest son
Edward led the
Yorkists to victory in 1461. The
Wars
of the Roses, nevertheless, continued intermittently during the
reigns of the Yorkists Edward IV,
Edward V, and
Richard III.
Ultimately, the
conflict culminated in success for the Lancastrian branch, led by
Henry Tudor, in 1485, when
Richard III was killed in the Battle of Bosworth Field
.
Now as King Henry VII, Henry Tudor neutralised the remaining
Yorkist forces, partly by marrying
Elizabeth of York, a Yorkist heir. Through
skill and ability, Henry re-established absolute supremacy in the
realm, and the conflicts with the nobility that had plagued
previous monarchs came to an end. The reign of the second Tudor
king,
Henry VIII, was one of
great political change. Religious upheaval and disputes with the
Pope led the monarch to break from the
Roman Catholic Church and to establish
the
Church of England (the
Anglican Church). Wales, which had been conquered centuries earlier
but had remained a separate dominion, was annexed to England under
the
Laws in Wales
Acts 1535–1542. Henry VIII's son and successor, the young
Edward VI, continued with
further religious reforms but his early death in 1553 precipitated
a succession crisis. He was wary of allowing his Catholic elder
half-sister
Mary to succeed, and
therefore drew up a will designating
Lady
Jane Grey as his heiress. Jane's reign however lasted only nine
days; with tremendous popular support, Mary deposed her, and
declared herself the lawful Sovereign. Mary I pursued disastrous
wars in France and attempted to return England to Roman
Catholicism, in the process burning Protestants at the stake as
heretics. She died in 1558, and was succeeded by her half-sister
Elizabeth I. England returned
to Protestantism, and continued its growth into a major world power
by building its navy and exploring the New World.
Scottish monarchy
In Scotland, as in England, monarchies emerged after the withdrawal
of Rome in the early fifth century. The three groups that lived in
Scotland at this time were the
Picts in the
north, the
Britons in the south,
including the
Kingdom of
Strathclyde, and the
Gaels or
Scotti (who would later give their name to Scotland),
of the Irish province of
Dál Riata in
the west.
Kenneth MacAlpin is
traditionally viewed as the first king of a united Scotland (known
as Scotia to writers in Latin, or
Alba to the Scots). The expansion of
Scottish dominions continued over the next two centuries, as other
territories such as Strathclyde were conquered.
Early Scottish monarchs did not inherit the Crown directly; instead
the custom of
tanistry was followed, where
the monarchy alternated between different branches of the
House of Alpin. As a result, however, the
rival dynastic lines clashed, often violently. From 942 to 1005,
seven consecutive monarchs were either murdered or killed in
battle. In 1005,
Malcolm II
ascended the throne having killed many rivals. He continued to
ruthlessly eliminate opposition, and when he died in 1034 he was
succeeded by his grandson,
Duncan
I, instead of a cousin, as had been usual. In 1040, Duncan
suffered defeat in battle at the hands of
Macbeth, who was killed himself in 1057
by Donald's son
Malcolm. The
following year, after killing Macbeth's stepson
Lulach, Malcolm ascended the throne as Malcolm
III.
With a further series of battles and deposings, five of Malcolm's
sons as well as one of his brothers successively became king.
Eventually, the Crown came to his youngest son,
David. David was succeeded by his
grandsons
Malcolm IV, and
then by
William the Lion, the
longest-reigning King of Scots before the
Union of the Crowns. William
participated in a rebellion against King Henry II of England but
when the rebellion failed, William was captured by the English. In
exchange for his release, William was forced to acknowledge Henry
as his feudal overlord. The English King Richard I agreed to
terminate the arrangement in 1189, in return for a large sum of
money needed for the Crusades. William died in 1214, and was
succeeded by his son
Alexander
II.
Alexander II, as well as his successor
Alexander III, attempted
to take over the Western
Isles
, which were still under the overlordship of
Norway
.
During the reign of Alexander III, Norway launched an unsuccessful
invasion of Scotland; the ensuing
Treaty
of Perth recognised Scottish control of the Western Isles and
other disputed areas.
Alexander III's unexpected death in a riding accident in 1286
precipitated a major succession crisis. Scottish leaders appealed
to King Edward I of England for help in determining who was the
rightful heir. Edward chose Alexander's three-year-old Norwegian
granddaughter,
Margaret. On her way
to Scotland in 1290, however, Margaret died at sea, and Edward was
again asked to adjudicate between
13 rival claimants to the
throne. A court was set up and after two years of deliberation,
it pronounced
John Balliol to be king.
However, Edward proceeded to treat Balliol as a vassal, and tried
to exert influence over Scotland. In 1295, when Balliol renounced
his allegiance to England, Edward I invaded. During the first ten
years of the ensuing
Wars
of Scottish Independence, Scotland had no monarch, until
Robert the Bruce declared
himself king in 1306. Robert's efforts to control Scotland
culminated in success, and Scottish independence was acknowledged
in 1328. However, only one year later, Robert died and was
succeeded by his five-year-old son,
David II. On the pretext of restoring
John Balliol's rightful heir,
Edward
Balliol, the English again invaded in 1332. During the next
four years, Balliol was crowned, deposed, restored, deposed,
restored, and deposed until he eventually settled in England, and
David remained king for the next 35 years.
David II died childless in 1371 and was succeeded by his nephew
Robert II of the
House of Stuart. The reigns of both Robert
II and his successor,
Robert
III, were marked by a general decline in royal power. When
Robert III died in 1406, regents had to rule the country; the
monarch, Robert III's son
James
I, had been taken captive by the English. Having paid a large
ransom, James returned to Scotland in 1424; to restore his
authority, he used ruthless measures, including the execution of
several of his enemies. He was assassinated by a group of nobles.
James II continued his father's
policies by subduing influential noblemen but he was killed in an
accident at the age of thirty, and a council of regents again
assumed power.
James III was
defeated in a battle against rebellious Scottish earls in 1488,
leading to another boy-king:
James
IV. In 1513, James IV launched an invasion of England,
attempting to take advantage of the absence of the English King
Henry VIII.
His forces met with disaster at Flodden
Field
; the King, many senior noblemen, and hundreds of
soldiers were killed. As his son and successor,
James V, was an infant, the government
was again taken over by regents. James V led another disastrous war
with the English in 1542, and his death in the same year left the
Crown in the hands of his six-day-old daughter,
Mary. Once again, a regency was
established. Mary, a Roman Catholic, reigned during a period of
great religious upheaval in Scotland. Due to the efforts of
reformers such as
John Knox, a Protestant
ascendancy was established. Mary caused alarm by marrying her
Catholic cousin,
Lord
Darnley, in 1565. After Lord Darnley's assassination in 1567,
Mary contracted an even more unpopular marriage with the
Earl of Bothwell, who
was widely suspected of Darnley's murder. The nobility rebelled
against the Queen, forcing her to abdicate. She fled to England,
and the Crown went to her infant son
James VI, who was brought up as a
Protestant. Mary was imprisoned and later executed by the English
Queen Elizabeth I.
Personal union and republican phase

In 1603, James VI and I was the first
monarch to rule over England, Scotland, and Ireland together.
Elizabeth's death in 1603 ended Tudor rule in England. Since she
had no children, she was succeeded by the Scottish monarch
James VI, who was the great-grandson of
Henry VIII's older sister.
James VI ruled in England as James I after what was known as the
"
Union of the Crowns". Although
England and Scotland were in
personal
union under one monarch—James I became the first monarch to
style himself "King of Great Britain" in 1604—they remained
separate kingdoms. James I's successor,
Charles I, experienced frequent
conflicts with the English Parliament related to the issue of royal
and parliamentary powers, especially the power to impose taxes. He
provoked opposition by ruling without Parliament from 1629 to 1640
(the "
Eleven Years' Tyranny"),
unilaterally levying taxes, and adopting controversial religious
policies (many of which were offensive to the Scottish
Presbyterians and the English
Puritans). In 1642, the conflict between King and
Parliament reached its climax and the
English Civil War began. The war
culminated in the execution of the king in 1649, the overthrow of
the monarchy, and the establishment of a
republic known as the
Commonwealth of England. In 1653,
Oliver Cromwell, the most prominent
military and political leader in the nation, seized power and
declared himself
Lord Protector
(effectively becoming a military dictator, but refusing the title
of king). Cromwell ruled until his death in 1658, when he was
succeeded by his son
Richard. The
new Lord Protector had little interest in governing; he soon
resigned. The lack of clear leadership led to civil and military
unrest, and for a popular desire to restore the monarchy. In 1660,
the
monarchy was restored when
Charles I's son
Charles II was
declared king.
Charles II's reign was marked by the development of the first
modern political parties in England. Charles had no legitimate
children, and was due to be succeeded by his Roman Catholic
brother,
James, Duke of York. A
parliamentary effort to exclude James from the line of succession
arose; the "Petitioners", who supported exclusion, became the Whig
Party, whereas the "Abhorrers", who opposed exclusion, became the
Tory Party. The Exclusion Bill failed; on several occasions,
Charles II dissolved Parliament because he feared that the bill
might pass. After the dissolution of the Parliament of 1681,
Charles ruled as an
absolute
monarch until his death in 1685. When James succeeded Charles,
he pursued a policy of offering religious tolerance to Roman
Catholics, thereby drawing the ire of many of his Protestant
subjects. Many opposed James's decisions to maintain a large
standing army, to appoint Roman Catholics to high political and
military offices, and to imprison
Church
of England clerics who challenged his policies. As a result, a
group of Protestants known as the
Immortal Seven invited James II's daughter
Mary and her husband
William of Orange to depose the king.
William obliged, arriving in England on 5 November 1688 to great
public support. Faced with the defection of many of his Protestant
officials, James fled the realm and William and Mary (rather than
James II's Catholic son)
were declared joint Sovereigns of England, Scotland and
Ireland.
James's overthrow, known as the
Glorious Revolution, was one of the most
important events in the long evolution of parliamentary power. The
Bill of Rights 1689 affirmed
parliamentary supremacy, and declared that the English people held
certain rights, including the freedom from taxes imposed without
parliamentary consent. The Bill of Rights required future monarchs
to be Protestants, and provided that, after any children of William
and Mary, Mary's sister
Anne
would inherit the Crown. Mary died childless in 1694, leaving
William as the sole monarch. By 1700, a political crisis arose, as
all of Anne's children had died, leaving her as the only individual
left in the line of succession. Parliament was afraid that the
former James II or his supporters, known as
Jacobites, might attempt to reclaim the throne.
Parliament passed the
Act of
Settlement 1701, which excluded James and his Catholic
relations from the succession and made William's Protestant first
cousin once removed,
Sophia, Electress
of Hanover, second in line to the throne. Soon after the
passage of the Act, William III died, leaving the Crown to his
sister-in-law Anne.
After the 1707 Acts of Union

England and Scotland were united as
Great Britain under Queen Anne in 1707.
After Anne's accession, the problem of the succession re-emerged.
The Scottish Parliament, infuriated that the English Parliament did
not consult them on the choice of Sophia of Hanover, passed the
Act of Security, threatening to end
the personal union between England and Scotland. The Parliament of
England retaliated with the
Alien Act
1705, threatening to devastate the Scottish economy by
restricting trade. The Scottish and English parliaments negotiated
the
Act of Union 1707, under which
England and Scotland were united into a single Kingdom of Great
Britain, with succession under the rules prescribed by the Act of
Settlement.
In 1714, Queen Anne was succeeded by the son of the deceased Sophia
of Hanover,
George I, who
consolidated his position by defeating Jacobite rebellions in 1715
and 1719. The new monarch was less active in government than many
of his British predecessors, but retained control over his German
kingdoms, with which Britain was now in personal union. Power
shifted towards George's ministers, especially to
Sir Robert Walpole, who is often considered
the first
Prime
Minister of the United Kingdom, although the title was not then
in use. The next monarch,
George II, witnessed the final
end of the Jacobite threat in 1746, when the Catholic Stuarts were
completely defeated.
During the long reign of his grandson,
George III,
Britain's American colonies were lost, but British influence
elsewhere in the world continued to grow, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland
was created by the Act
of Union 1800.
The union of Great Britain and Ireland into the United Kingdom
occurred in 1801 during the reign of King George III.
From 1811 to 1820 George III suffered a severe bout of what is now
believed to be
porphyria, an illness
rendering him incapable of ruling. His son, the future
George IV, ruled in his
stead as
Prince Regent. During
the Regency and his own reign, the
power of the monarchy declined and by the time of his successor,
William IV, the
monarch was no longer able to effectively interfere with
parliamentary power. In 1834, William dismissed the Whig Prime
Minister,
William
Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, and appointed a Tory,
Sir Robert Peel. In the ensuing elections,
however, Peel lost. The King had no choice but to recall Lord
Melbourne. During William IV's reign the
Reform Act 1832, which reformed
parliamentary representation, was passed. Together with others
passed later in the century, the Act led to an expansion of the
electoral franchise, and the rise of the House of Commons as the
most important branch of Parliament.
The final transition to a
constitutional monarchy was made
during the long reign of William IV's successor,
Victoria.
As a woman, Victoria
could not rule Hanover
, which only permitted succession in the male line,
so the personal union of the United Kingdom and Hanover came to an
end. The
Victorian era was
marked by great cultural change, technological progress, and the
establishment of the United Kingdom as one of the world's foremost
powers. In recognition of British rule over India, Victoria was
declared
Empress of India in 1876.
However, her reign was also marked by increased support for the
republican movement, due
in part to Victoria's permanent mourning and lengthy period of
seclusion following the death of
her husband in 1861.
Victoria's son,
Edward
VII, became the first monarch of the
House of Saxe-Coburg and
Gotha in 1901. In 1917, the next monarch,
George V, changed
"Saxe-Coburg and Gotha" to "Windsor" due to the anti-German
sympathies aroused by the
First World
War. George V's reign was marked by the separation of Ireland
into Northern Ireland, which remained a part of the United Kingdom,
and the
Irish Free State, an
independent nation, in 1922.
Shared monarchy

Map of the British Empire in
1921

Map of the Commonwealth realms
today
During the twentieth-century, the
Commonwealth of Nations evolved from
the
British Empire. Prior to 1926,
the British Crown reigned over the British Empire collectively, the
Dominions and
Crown colonies being
subordinate to the United Kingdom. The
Balfour Declaration of 1926 gave
complete self-government to the Dominions, effectively creating a
system whereby a single monarch operated independently in each
separate Dominion. The concept was solidified by the
Statute of Westminster 1931,
which has been likened to "a treaty among the Commonwealth
countries". The monarchy thus ceased to be an exclusively British
institution, although it is often still referred to as "British"
for legal and historical reasons and for convenience. The monarch
became separately monarch of the United Kingdom,
monarch of Australia,
monarch of Canada, and so forth. The
independent states within the Commonwealth, known as the
Commonwealth realms, would share the same
monarch in a relationship likened to a
personal union.
George V's death in 1936 was followed by the accession of
Edward VIII, who caused a
public scandal by announcing his desire to marry the divorced
American,
Wallis Simpson,
even though the Church of England opposed the remarriage of
divorcées. Accordingly, Edward announced his intention to
abdicate; the Parliaments
of the United Kingdom and of other Commonwealth realms granted his
request. Edward VIII and any children by his new wife were excluded
from the line of succession, and the Crown went to his brother,
George VI. George
served as a rallying figure for the British people during
World War II, making morale-boosting visits to
the troops as well as to munitions factories and to areas bombed by
Nazi Germany. After the war George VI
relinquished the title "Emperor of India", when India became
independent in 1947, and became "King of India" instead.
At first, every member of the Commonwealth was a Commonwealth realm
but when India became a republic in 1950, it would no longer share
in a common monarchy. Instead, the British monarch was acknowledged
as "
Head of the
Commonwealth" in all Commonwealth member states, whether realms
or not. The position is purely ceremonial, and is not inherited by
the British monarch as of right but is vested in an individual
chosen by the Commonwealth Heads of Government.
Modern status
Today, 16 of the 53 independent states within the Commonwealth,
including the United Kingdom, remain Commonwealth realms and share
the same monarch. The present monarch,
Elizabeth II succeeded
her father, George VI, in 1952. Like her recent predecessors,
Elizabeth II continues to function as a constitutional monarch.
During her reign, there has been some support for the
republican movement,
especially due to negative publicity associated with the Royal
Family (for instance, following the death of
Diana, Princess of Wales).
Nevertheless, more recent polls show that a large majority of the
British public support the continuation of the monarchy.
Monarchy in Ireland
In the 12th century the only English pope,
Adrian IV, authorized King
Henry II of England to take possession
of Ireland as a feudal territory nominally under papal
overlordship.
Celtic
Christianity was not closely following
Roman Catholic practices, and was accused of
heretical beliefs. The pope wanted the English monarch to annex
Ireland and bring the Irish church into line with Rome. Around
1170, King
Dermot MacMurrough of
Leinster was deposed by his arch-enemy King
Rory O'Connor of
Connaught. Dermot escaped to England and asked
Henry for help. Henry let him use a group of Anglo-Norman
aristocrats and adventurers, led by
Richard de Clare, 2nd
Earl of Pembroke, to help him regain his throne. Dermot and his
Anglo-Norman allies succeeded and he became King of Leinster again.
de Clare married Dermot's daughter, and when Dermot died in 1171,
de Clare became King of Leinster. Henry was afraid that de Clare
would make Ireland a rival Norman state or a place of refuge for
Anglo-Saxons, so he took advantage of the papal bull and invaded,
forcing de Clare and the other Anglo-Norman aristocrats in Ireland
and some Gaelic Irish chieftains to recognize him as their
overlord. By 1541, King Henry VIII of
England had broken with the Church of Rome and declared himself
Supreme Head of
the Church of England. The pope's grant of Ireland to the
English monarch became invalid, so Henry summoned a meeting of the
Irish Parliament to change his title from Lord of Ireland to King
of Ireland.
In 1800,
the Act of Union merged the kingdom of Great Britain and the
kingdom of Ireland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland
. Ireland continued to be a part of the United
Kingdom until 1922, when what is now the Republic of
Ireland
won independence as the Irish Free State. The Irish Free State
was a separate Dominion from 1922 until
1949, when the Free State became a republic and severed all ties
with the monarchy, while Northern Ireland
remained within the Union, thus creating the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Religious role
The sovereign is the
Supreme Governor
of the
established Church of England. Archbishops and bishops
are appointed by the monarch, on the advice of the Prime Minister,
who chooses the appointee from a list of nominees prepared by a
Church Commission. The Crown's role in the Church of England is
titular; the most senior clergyman, the
Archbishop of Canterbury, is the
spiritual leader of the Church and of the worldwide
Anglican Communion.
The monarch is an
ordinary member of the Church of Scotland
, but he or she holds the power to appoint the
Lord High Commissioner to the
Church's General
Assembly. The Sovereign plays no formal role in the
disestablished
Church in Wales or
Church of Ireland.
Succession
The relationship between the Commonwealth realms is such that any
change to the laws governing succession to the shared throne
requires the unanimous consent of all the realms. Succession is
governed by statutes, such as the
Bill of Rights 1689, the
Act of Settlement 1701 and the
Acts of Union, and by
male-preference cognatic primogeniture, under
which sons inherit before daughters, and elder children inherit
before younger ones of the same sex. The rules of succession may
only be changed by an
Act of
Parliament; it is not possible for an individual to renounce
his or her right of succession.
The Act of Settlement restricts the succession to the natural
legitimate descendants of
Sophia of
Hanover (1630–1714), a granddaughter of
James I. The Bill of Rights and Act of
Settlement include religious restrictions, which were imposed
because of the English and Scots' distrust of
Roman Catholicism during the late 17th
century. Only individuals who are
Protestants may inherit the Crown. Roman
Catholics and spouses of Roman Catholics are prohibited from
succeeding. An individual thus disabled from inheriting the Crown
is deemed "naturally dead" for succession purposes, and the
disqualification does not extend to the individual's legitimate
descendants. In recent years there have been efforts to remove the
religious restrictions and to give equal rights to males and
females, but at present the provisions remain in effect.
Upon the death of the Sovereign, his or her heir immediately and
automatically succeeds (hence the phrase "
The King is dead.
Long live the King!"),
and the accession of the sovereign is publicly proclaimed by an
Accession Council that meets at
St. James's
Palace
. The monarch is crowned in Westminster
Abbey
, normally by the Archbishop of Canterbury. A
coronation is not necessary for a sovereign to reign; indeed, the
ceremony usually takes place many months after accession to allow
sufficient time for its preparation and for a period of
mourning.
After an individual ascends the throne, he or she reigns until
death. The only voluntary abdication, that of
Edward VIII, had to be
authorised by a special Act of Parliament,
His Majesty's
Declaration of Abdication Act 1936. The last monarch
involuntarily removed from power was
James VII and II, who fled into exile in
1688 during the
Glorious
Revolution.
Regency
The
Regency Acts allow for regencies in
the event of a monarch who is a minor or who is physically or
mentally incapacitated. When a regency is necessary, the next
qualified individual in the line of succession automatically
becomes regent, unless they themselves are a minor or
incapacitated. Special provisions were made for Queen Elizabeth II
by the Regency Act 1953, which stated that
the Duke of Edinburgh (the
Queen's husband) could act as regent in these circumstances.
During a temporary physical infirmity or an absence from the
kingdom, the sovereign may temporarily delegate some of his or her
functions to
Counsellors of
State, the monarch's spouse and the first four adults in the
line of succession. The present Counsellors of State are: The Duke
of Edinburgh,
The Prince of
Wales,
Prince William of
Wales,
Prince Henry of
Wales and
The Duke of
York.
Finances
Parliament meets much of the sovereign's official expenditure from
public funds, known as the
Civil List and
the
Grants-in-Aid. An annual Property
Services Grant-in-Aid pays for the upkeep of the royal residences,
and an annual Royal Travel Grant-in-Aid pays for travel. The Civil
List covers most expenses, including those for staffing, state
visits, public engagements, and official entertainment. Its size is
fixed by Parliament every 10 years; any money saved may be carried
forward to the next 10-year period.
Until 1760 the monarch met all official expenses from hereditary
revenues, which included the profits of the
Crown Estate (the royal property portfolio).
King George III
agreed to surrender the hereditary revenues of the Crown in return
for the Civil List, and this arrangement persists. In modern times,
the profits surrendered from the Crown Estate have by far exceeded
the Civil List and Grants-in-Aid provided to the monarch. For
example, the Crown Estate produced £200 million for the Treasury in
the financial year 2007–8, whereas parliamentary funding for the
monarch was £40 million during the same period. The Crown Estate is
one of the largest property owners in the United Kingdom, worth
over £7.3 billion.
Like the Crown Estate, the land and assets of the
Duchy of Lancaster are held in trust. The
revenues of the Duchy form part of the
Privy
Purse, and are used for expenses not borne by the Civil List.
The
Duchy of Cornwall is a similar
estate held in trust to meet the expenses of the monarch's eldest
son. The sovereign is subject to indirect taxes such as
value added tax, and since 1993 the Queen
has paid
income tax and
capital gains tax on personal income. The
Civil List and Grants-in-Aid are not treated as income as they are
solely for official expenditure.
Estimates of the Queen's wealth vary, depending on whether assets
owned by her personally or held in trust for the nation are
included. For example, the
Royal
Collection is not the personal property of the monarch but is
administered by the Royal Collection Trust, a registered charity.
Forbes magazine estimated her wealth
at $650 million in 2008, but no official figure is available. In
1993, the
Lord Chamberlain said
estimates of £100 million were "grossly overstated".
Residences

Buckingham Palace, the monarch's
principal residence

Holyrood Palace, the monarch's
official Scottish residence
The
Sovereign's official residence in London is Buckingham
Palace
. It is the site of most state banquets,
investitures, royal christenings and other ceremonies.
Another official
residence is Windsor
Castle
, the largest occupied castle in the world, which is
used principally at weekends, Easter and during Royal
Ascot
, an annual race meeting that is part of the
social calendar.
The
Sovereign's official residence in Scotland is the Palace of
Holyroodhouse
in Edinburgh
. The monarch stays at Holyrood for at least
one week each year, and when visiting Scotland on state
occasions.
Historically, the Palace of
Westminster
and the Tower of London
were the main residences of the English Sovereign
until Henry VIII acquired the Palace of Whitehall
. Whitehall was destroyed by fire in 1698,
leading to a shift to St James's Palace
. Although replaced as the monarch's primary
London residence by Buckingham Palace in 1837, St James's is still
the senior palace and remains the ceremonial Royal residence. For
example, foreign ambassadors are accredited to the
Court of St. James's, and the Palace is
the site of the meeting of the
Accession Council. It is also used by
other members of the Royal Family.
Other
residences include Clarence
House
and Kensington Palace
. The palaces belong to the Crown; they are
held in trust for future rulers, and cannot be sold by the monarch.
The Queen
also owns two private estates as personal property: Sandringham
House
in Norfolk, and Balmoral
Castle
in Aberdeenshire
, Scotland.
Style
The present Sovereign's full style and title is "Elizabeth the
Second, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen,
Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith". The title
"
Head of the Commonwealth"
is held by the Queen personally, and is not vested in the British
Crown.
Pope Leo X first granted the title
"
Defender of the Faith" to King Henry
VIII in 1521, rewarding him for his support of the Papacy during
the early years of the
Protestant
Reformation, particularly for his book the
Defence of the Seven
Sacraments. After Henry broke from the Roman Church,
Pope Paul III revoked the grant, but
Parliament passed a law authorising its continued use.
The Sovereign is known as "His Majesty" or "Her Majesty". The form
"Britannic Majesty" appears in international treaties and on
passports to differentiate the British monarch from foreign rulers.
The monarch chooses his or her
regnal
name, not necessarily his or her first name—
King George VI,
King Edward VII and
Queen Victoria did
not use their first names. The ordinal used for the monarch takes
into account only monarchs since the Norman conquest of England. If
only one monarch has used a particular name, no ordinal is used;
for example, Queen Victoria is not known as "Victoria I". The
question of whether numbering of ordinals is based on previous
English or Scottish monarchs was raised in 1953 when Scottish
nationalists challenged the Queen's use of "Elizabeth II", on the
grounds that there had never been an "Elizabeth I" in Scotland. In
MacCormick v.
Lord Advocate, the Scottish
Court of
Session
ruled against the plaintiffs, finding that the
Queen's title was a matter of her own choice and
prerogative. The Home Secretary told the House of Commons
that monarchs since the Act of Union had consistently used the
higher of the English and Scottish ordinals. The Prime Minister
confirmed this practice, but noted that "neither The Queen nor her
advisers could seek to bind their successors". According to
Debrett it was announced that
future monarchs would apply this policy. Traditionally, the
signature of the monarch includes their regnal name but not
ordinal, followed by the letter
R, which stands for
rex or
regina (
Latin for
king and
queen, respectively). The present
monarch's signature is "Elizabeth R". From 1877 until 1948 reigning
monarchs added the letter
I to their signatures, for
imperator or
imperatrix (
emperor or
empress in Latin), due to their status as
Emperor or Empress of India. For example,
Queen Victoria signed as "Victoria RI" from 1877.
Arms

The Royal Standard is the Sovereign's
official flag in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
A slightly different form of the Royal Standard is used in
Scotland.
The
Royal Coat
of Arms of the United Kingdom are "Quarterly, I and IV Gules
three lions passant guardant in pale Or [for England]; II Or a lion
rampant within a double tressure flory-counter-flory Gules [for
Scotland]; III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent [for Ireland]". The
supporters are
the lion and the
unicorn; the motto is "
Dieu et mon
droit" (
French for "God and my
Right"). In Scotland the monarch uses an alternative form of the
arms in which quarters I and IV represent Scotland, II England, and
III Ireland. The motto is "Nemo me impune lacessit" (
Latin for "No-one provokes me with impunity"); the
supporters are the unicorn and lion.
The monarch's official flag in the United Kingdom is the
Royal Standard, which depicts the Royal Arms.
It is flown only from buildings, vessels and vehicles in which the
Sovereign is present; elsewhere, the
Union
Flag is flown. The Royal Standard is never flown at half-mast
because there is always a sovereign: when one dies, his or her
successor becomes the sovereign instantly.
See also
Notes
- In terms of population and land area of the Earth
- e.g.
- Crown Appointments Act 1661 c.6
- s3. Constitutional Reform Act 2005
- Bagehot, p.9
- Brazier, p.312
- Waldron, pp.59–60
- (Subscription required)
- Bagehot, p.75
- In 1926, Lord Byng of
Vimy, Governor-General of Canada
(representing the British crown in the Dominion of
Canada), refused a request by the Prime
Minister of Canada to dissolve a minority parliament,
precipitating a constitutional crisis known as the
King-Byng
Affair.
- Crabbe, p.17
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.12–13 and 31
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.13–17
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.102–127
- Fraser, pp.30–46
- Fraser, pp.54–74
- Fraser, pp.77–78
- Fraser, pp.79–93
- Ashley, pp.595–597
- Fraser, pp.96–115
- Fraser, pp.118–130
- Fraser, pp.133–165
- Cannon and Griffiths, p.295; Fraser, pp.168–176
- Fraser, pp.179–189
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.194, 265, 309
- Ashley, pp.636–647 and Fraser, pp.190–211
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.1–12, 35
- Weir, pp.164–177
- Ashley, pp.390–395
- Ashley, pp.400–407 and Weir, pp.185–198
- Cannon and Griffiths, p.170
- Ashley, pp.407–409 and Cannon and Griffiths, pp.187, 196
- Ashley, pp.409–412
- Ashley, pp.549–552
- Ashley, pp.552–565
- Ashley, pp.567–575
- Fraser, pp.214–231
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.393–400
- Fraser, p.232
- Fraser, pp.242–245
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.439–440
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.447–448
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.460–469
- Ashley, pp.677–680
- Cannon and Griffiths, pp.530–550
- Fraser, pp.305–306
- Fraser, pp.314–333
- Justice Rouleau in O'Donohue v. Canada, 2003 CanLII 41404 (ON
S.C.)
- Zines, Leslie (2008). The High Court and the
Constitution, 5th ed. Annandale, New South Wales: Federation
Press. ISBN 9781862876910. p.314
- R v Foreign Secretary; Ex parte Indian Association, (1982). QB
892 at 928; as referenced in High Court of Australia: Sue v Hill HCA 30; 23 June 1999;
S179/1998 and B49/1998
- (Subscription required)
- (Subscription required)
- (Subscription required)
- (Subscription required)
- Fraser, p.180
- Royal Titles Bill. Hansard, 3 March 1953, vol. 512, col.
251
- Royal Style and Title. Hansard, 15
April 1953, vol. 514, col. 199
- 2008 edition, p.43
References
- Ashley, Mike (1998).
The Mammoth Book of British Kings and Queens. London:
Robinson. ISBN 1-84119-096-9
- Bagehot, Walter; edited by Paul
Smith (2001). The English Constitution. Cambridge
University Press.
- Brazier, Rodney (1997). Ministers of the Crown. Oxford
University Press.
- Brock, Michael (September 2004; online edition, January 2008).
"William IV (1765–1837)". Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography. Oxford University Press. Accessed 22 April
2008 (Subscription required)
- Cannon, John; Griffiths, Ralph (1988). The Oxford
Illustrated History of the British Monarchy. Oxford: Oxford
University Press. ISBN 0-19-822786-8
- Crabbe, V.C.R.A.C. (1994). Understanding Statutes.
Cavendish Publishing.
- Flanagan, M. T. (2004). "Mac
Murchada, Diarmait (c.1110–1171)" and Clare, Richard fitz Gilbert de, second earl of Pembroke
(c.1130–1176)". Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography. Oxford University Press. Accessed 14 October 2008
(Subscription required)
- Fraser, Antonia (Editor) (1975).
The Lives of the Kings & Queens of England. London:
Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-76911-1
- Ives, E. W. (September 2004; online edition, January 2008).
"Henry VIII (1491–1547)". Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography. Oxford University Press. Accessed 20 April
2008 (Subscription required)
- Matthew, H. C. G. (2004).
"Edward VIII (later Prince Edward, duke of Windsor)
(1894–1972)" and "George VI (1895–1952)". Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography. Oxford University Press. Accessed 14
October 2008 (Subscription required)
- Sayers, Jane E. (2004). "Adrian
IV (d. 1159)". Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography. Oxford University Press. Accessed 20 April 2008
(Subscription required)
- Waldron, Jeremy (1990). The Law. Routledge.
- Weir, Alison (1996).
Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy. (Revised
edition). London: Pimlico. ISBN 0-7126-7448-9
External links