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Order of the Companions of Honour

Commonwealth order


Commonwealth order

FieldValue
titleOrder of the
Companions of Honour
imageCHCompanionofHonour.jpg
image_size150px
captionBadge and ribbon of the order
awarded_byCharles III
typeOrder
established4 June 1917
mottoIn Action Faithful and in Honour Clear
eligibilityAll living citizens of the Commonwealth realms
criteriaNationally important service
statusCurrently constituted
founderGeorge V
head_titleSovereign
headCharles III
gradesMember (CH)
date1917
image2Order of the Companions of Honour Ribbon.gif
image_size2100px
caption2Ribbon bar of the order

Companions of Honour

The Order of the Companions of Honour is an order of the Commonwealth realms. It was founded on 4 June 1917 by King George V as a reward for outstanding achievements. It was founded on the same date as the Order of the British Empire.

The order was originally intended to be conferred upon a limited number of persons for whom this special distinction seemed to be the most appropriate form of recognition, constituting an honour dissociated from either the acceptance of title or the classification of merit. It is now described as being "awarded for having a major contribution to the arts, science, medicine, or government lasting over a long period of time". The first recipients of the order were all decorated for "services in connection with the war" and were listed in The London Gazette.

Composition

The order consists of the monarch of the Commonwealth realms, who is the Sovereign of the Order of the Companions of Honour, and a maximum of 65 members. Additionally, foreigners or Commonwealth citizens from outside the Commonwealth realms may be added as honorary members. Members are organised into a single class and are appointed by the monarch of the Commonwealth realms in their capacity as sovereign of the order. While membership of the order confers no title or precedence, those inducted into the order are entitled to use the post-nominal letters CH.

Appointments to the order are generally made on the advice of prime ministers of the Commonwealth realms. Originally, the order was limited to 50 ordinary members, but in 1943 it was enlarged to 65, with a quota of 45 members for the United Kingdom, seven for Australia, two each for New Zealand and South Africa, and nine for India, Burma, and the other British colonies. The quota numbers were altered in 1970 to 47 for the United Kingdom, seven for Australia, two for New Zealand, and nine for other Commonwealth realms. The quota was adjusted again in 1975 by adding two places to the New Zealand quota and reducing the nine for the other countries to seven.

Whilst still able to nominate candidates to the order, the Cabinet of Australia has effectively stopped the allocation of this award to that country's citizens in preference to other Australian honours. The last Australian member, Doug Anthony, former Deputy Prime Minister of Australia, died on 20 December 2020. Companions from other Commonwealth realms continue to be appointed: Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, a New Zealand soprano, was given the award in 2018 and Canadian author Margaret Atwood was given the award in 2019.

Lord Coe represented the Order at the 2023 Coronation.

Insignia

The insignia of the order is an oval medallion, surmounted by a royal crown (but, until recently, surmounted by an imperial crown), and with a rectangular panel within, depicting on it an oak tree, a shield with the Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom hanging from one branch, and, on the left, a mounted knight in armour. The insignia's blue border bears in gold letters the motto "in action faithful and in honour clear", Alexander Pope's description (in iambic pentameter) in his Epistle to Mr Addison of James Craggs the Younger, later used on Craggs's monument in Westminster Abbey. Men wear the badge on a neck ribbon (red with golden border threads) and women on a bow at the left shoulder.

Current members

Sovereign

NameYear of appointmentPresent age
King Charles III (ex officio)Sovereign since 2022

Royal Companion

NameYear of appointmentPresent ageNotes
Catherine, Princess of Wales2024First Royal Companion

Members

Main article: List of members of the Order of the Companions of Honour

Member numberNameKnown forYear of appointmentPresent age
1-(270)Kenneth Baker, Baron Baker of DorkingSecretary of State for the Home Department1992
2-(278)Tom King, Baron King of BridgwaterSecretary of State for Defence
3-(282)Dame Janet BakerOpera singer1993
4-(287)David Owen, Baron OwenSecretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs1994
5-(289)Sir David AttenboroughTelevision broadcaster and conservationist1995
6-(291)Douglas Hurd, Baron Hurd of WestwellSecretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs and Secretary of State for the Home Department
7-(294)David HockneyArtist1997
8-(296)Michael Heseltine, Baron HeseltineDeputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Secretary of State for Defence
9-(297)Chris Patten, Baron Patten of BarnesGovernor of Hong Kong, Chairman of the BBC Trust, and Chancellor of the University of Oxford
10-(299)Sir John MajorPrime Minister of the United Kingdom1998
11-(300)Bridget RileyArtist
12-(305)General John de ChastelainChief of the Defence Staff (Canada) and Chairman of the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning
13-(317)Dan McKenzieGeophysicist2003
14-(318)David Hannay, Baron Hannay of ChiswickPermanent Representative to the United Nations
15-(320)Dame Judi DenchActress2005
16-(321)Sir Ian McKellenActor2007
17-(323)Michael Howard, Baron Howard of LympneLeader of His Majesty's Most Loyal Opposition and Secretary of State for the Home Department2011
18-(324)George Young, Baron Young of CookhamParliamentary Secretary to the Treasury and Leader of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom2012
19-(325)Sebastian Coe, Baron CoePresident of World Athletics and Chairman of the British Olympic Association
20-(327)Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron StrathclydeLeader of the House of Lords and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster2013
21-(329)Sir Nicholas SerotaCurator and Director of the Tate
22-(331)Onora O'Neill, Baroness O'Neill of BengarvePresident of the British Academy83
23-(333)Kenneth Clarke, Baron Clarke of NottinghamLord High Chancellor of Great Britain, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Secretary of State for the Home Department85
24-(336)Lady Mary PetersOlympic gold medallist and Lord Lieutenant of Belfast2015
25-(339)Harry Woolf, Baron WoolfLord Chief Justice of England and Wales
26-(341)Sir Roy StrongDirector of the Victoria and Albert Museum and National Portrait Gallery, London2016
27-(343)Robert Smith, Baron Smith of KelvinGovernor of the British Broadcasting Corporation
28-(344)Valerie Amos, Baroness AmosUnited Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Leader of the House of Lords and Secretary of State for International Development
29-(345)George OsborneChancellor of the Exchequer and First Secretary of State
30-(347)Sir Richard EyreDirector
31-(348)Dame Evelyn GlennieMusician
32-(349)Sir Alec JeffreysGeneticist
33-(353)Sir Mark ElderConductor2017
34-(355)Sir Paul McCartneyMusician
35-(356)J. K. RowlingAuthor
36-(358)Delia SmithCook and author
37-(359)Nicholas Stern, Baron Stern of BrentfordPresident of the British Academy and Chief Economist of the World Bank
38-(361)Melvyn Bragg, Baron BraggBroadcaster and Chancellor of the University of Leeds
39-(362)Lady Antonia FraserAuthor
40-(363)Margaret MacMillanHistorian, author and Provost of Trinity College, Toronto
41-(364)Richard HendersonBiologist2018
42-(365)Dame Kiri Te KanawaOpera singer
43-(366)Margaret AtwoodAuthor
44-(367)Patrick McLoughlin, Baron McLoughlinChancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Secretary of State for Transport2019
45-(368)Sir Elton JohnMusician
46-(369)Sir Keith ThomasHistorian and President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford
47-(370)Sir Paul SmithFashion designer2020
48-(371)Sir David ChipperfieldArchitect
49-(372)Sir Paul NurseGeneticist and Nobel Laureate2021
50-(374)Sir Quentin BlakeIllustrator2022
51-(375)Sir Salman RushdieAuthor
52-(376)Dame Marina WarnerAuthor
53-(377)Sir Michael MarmotAcademic
54-(379)Sir Bill CashShadow Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs and Shadow Attorney General for England and Wales2023
55-(380)Sir John BellPresident of the Office for Strategic Coordination of Health Research
56-(381)Ian McEwanAuthor
57-(382)Dame Anna WintourMedia executive
58-(383)Dame Shirley BasseySinger
59-(385)Gordon BrownPrime Minister of the United Kingdom2024
60-(386)Sir Kazuo IshiguroNovelist and screenwriter
61-(387)Dame Jocelyn Bell BurnellPhysicist2025
62-(388)Sir Antony GormleySculptor
63-Vacant following the death of Norman Tebbit, Baron Tebbit, on 7 July 2025
64-Vacant following the death of Dame Stephanie Shirley, on 9 August 2025
65-Vacant following the death of Menzies Campbell, Baron Campbell of Pittenweem, on 26 September 2025

Honorary Members

Member numberNameKnown forYear of appointmentPresent age
1-(261)Amartya SenEconomist2000

Notes

References

References

  1. "The Monarch of the Today > Queen Ann arbor to the new one w public > Honours > Companions of Honour". Royal.gov.uk.
  2. (25 August 1917). "A New Order". [[The Times]].
  3. (22 August 2016). "The honours system: Types of honours and awards". UK Government.
  4. {{London Gazette. (24 August 1917)
  5. McCreery, Christopher. (2005a). "The Canadian Honours System". Dundurn Press.
  6. Rayment, Leigh. "Companions of Honour".
  7. (20 December 2020). "Doug Anthony, former Nationals leader and deputy prime minister, dies aged 90". ABC News.
  8. (5 May 2023). "Coronation order of service in full". BBC News.
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