List of titles and honours of the British Monarch




This list of titles and honours of the British monarch details the current and former titles of the sovereign of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and its predecessor states.
The present United Kingdom was formed in 1922 when the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, which had been formed in 1801 from the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland, was partitioned to create the Irish Free State. The Kingdom of Great Britain was itself formed in 1707 from the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland. England and Scotland had been in a personal union since 1603, while Ireland had been in a personal union with the Kingdom of England since the elevation of the Lordship of Ireland to the status of a kingdom in 1542. Wales was gradually conquered by England in the Middle Ages, beginning with the Norman invasion of Wales and concluding with the conquests of Edward I in 1277–83. Wales was legally incorporated into England between 1535 and 1542 by King Henry VIII.
The medieval monarchs of England also controlled large parts of France, particularly under the Angevin kings. Several of the listed titles are therefore French, many held as fiefs of the French Crown rather than independently. Also represented is the English claim to the France, maintained for over 400 years before being dropped after the French Revolution.
While the English claim to France was not seriously pursued after the Middle Ages, later monarchs did hold foreign titles. When William III became King alongside his wife Mary II, he maintained his Dutch titles. The Georgian kings ruled as Electors and Kings of Hanover, as well as holding the office of Arch-Treasurer of the Holy Roman Empire. These titles lapsed when Queen Victoria succeeded to the throne.
While the British Empire only gave the monarch one significant new title, that of Emperor of India, its transformation into the Commonwealth of Nations and decolonisation created many new independent states, each with a separate monarchy. Of the thirty-two realms Elizabeth II became queen of on her accession in 1952, only sixteen retain her as their monarch. All current and former Commonwealth realms are listed below.

Titles held by the monarch of the United Kingdom

Kingdoms

These kingdoms are independent of the British Crown, but are held in personal union with the United Kingdom and follow the same rules of succession.
KingdomRoyal standard / national flagDate established
Canada1985
Australia1973
New Zealand1974
Jamaica1962
Barbados1966
The Bahamas1973
Grenada1974
Papua New Guinea1975
Solomon Islands1978
Tuvalu1978
Saint Lucia1979
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines1979
Belize1981
Antigua and Barbuda1981
Saint Kitts and Nevis1983

Customary titles

These titles are used by custom in their respective areas, but are not formally held by the monarch.
TitleImageSinceNotes
Duke of Lancaster1413Used in historic Lancashire to reflect the ownership of the Duchy of Lancaster by the monarch separately from the Crown Estate.
Duke of Normandy 1259Used on the Channel Islands to reflect their status as the remnants of the Duchy of Normandy controlled by the Kings of England between 1066 and 1259. The role of monarch of the islands is separate from that of the United Kingdom, but there is no specific title for their sovereign.

Titles formerly held by British monarchs

The following titles include those held by the monarchs of the predecessor kingdoms to the United Kingdom, and titles formerly used but now abolished.

Kingdoms, empires and equivalent

TitleCoat of armsDate formedDate abolishedNotes
King/Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland18011922Partitioned into the Irish Free State and United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
King/Queen of Great Britain17071801Merged with Ireland to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
King/Queen of England9271707Merged with Scotland to form Great Britain.
King/Queen of Scotland8431707Merged with England to form Great Britain.
King/Queen of Ireland15421801Merged with Great Britain to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
King/Queen of France1422 1453 Claimed from 1340–60 and 1369–1801 by the Kings of England and their successors. Henry VI disputedly ruled France as Henry II of France but was ultimately defeated by Charles VII of France as part of culmination of the Hundred Years' War.
Stadtholder of Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht, Gelderland and Overijssel16891702William III had held the office of Stadholder as leader of the Dutch Republic since 1672.
King of Hanover18141837successor to the Electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Held by the Kings of the United Kingdom from 1814 to 1837. Male-preference Semi-Salic law prevents Queen Victoria from inheriting the Kingdom.
Emperor/Empress of India18761948Created for Queen Victoria and abandoned by George VI.

Principalities

Duchies

TitleCoat of ArmsDate acquiredDate lostNotes
Duke of Aquitaine1154 jure uxoris
1189 suo jure
1451Gained by the marriage of Duchess Eleanor of Aquitaine to King Henry II in 1154 and subsequently inherited by Richard I in his own right. Lost by Henry VI during the closing phases of the Hundred Years' War.
Duke of Normandy
10661259Duke William II of Normandy conquered England in 1066. Henry III renounced his claim to Normandy in the Treaty of Paris.

Electorates

These Kingdoms were independent of the British Crown, but were held in personal union with the United Kingdom and followed the same rules of succession. Monarchies listed under 'Queen' only had Elizabeth II as their sovereign, and thus never had a reigning king. Dates indicate the year the monarchy was formed and the year of its dissolution.
The following are the titles usually granted to the heir apparent, though most must be granted by the monarch and are not assumed automatically. Other titles have seen sporadic use, such as Edward III granting his heir Edward, the Black Prince the title Prince of Aquitaine.

Principalities