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Royal Warrant

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Royal Warrants
Coat of Arms of Queen Elizabeth II as issued in England, Wales and Northern Ireland
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Coat of Arms of Queen Elizabeth II as issued in England, Wales and Northern Ireland

Coat of Arms of Queen Elizabeth II as issued in Scotland
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Coat of Arms of Queen Elizabeth II as issued in Scotland

Coat of Arms of the Duke of Edinburgh
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Coat of Arms of the Duke of Edinburgh

Royal Warrant awarded by Elizabeth II to Jenners, a department store in Edinburgh
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Royal Warrant awarded by Elizabeth II to Jenners, a department store in Edinburgh

In the United Kingdom, a Royal Warrant of Appointment is a grant made by senior members of the British Royal Family to companies or tradespeople who supply goods and services to individuals in the family. The warrant enables the supplier to advertise the fact that they supply to the royal family, so lending cachet to the supplier. Several other royal families allow tradesmen to advertise royal patronage, including the ruling dynasties of the Netherlands, Denmark, and Sweden.

Some 800 individuals and companies - including a few non-UK companies - hold more than 1,100 warrants to the British royal family. Suppliers must have had a trading relationship with an individual in the family for at least five years before they can be considered for a warrant. Warrants are awarded at the discretion of the Lord Chamberlain, acting as the chairman of the Royal Household Tradesmen's Warrants Committee. Warrants are awarded for renewable terms of five years, though they can be revoked at any time; some warrants have been held for more than 100 years.

Suppliers continue to charge for their goods and services - a warrant does not imply that they provide goods and services free of charge. The warrant is typically advertised on company hordings, letter-heads and products by displaying the coat of arms or badge of the individual member of the family on whose behalf the warrant has been given. Underneath the coat of arms will usually appear the phrase "By Appointment to..." followed by the title and name of the purchaser, and then what goods are provided.

Purveyors to the The following is a list of some companies that provide, or have provided, goods to the British royal family:

Imperial and Royal Purveyors to the Court (

Purveyors to the Belgian royal family

Purveyors to the Danish royal family (Kongelig Hofleverandør)

Purveyors to the Dutch royal family

Purveyors to the Swedish royal family

Purveyors to the Japanese Imperial Household Agency

After the WWII, the permission system is abolished.but purveyors is exist now.

Purveyors to the former French imperial family

Purveyors to the former Portuguese royal family

Purveyors to the former Romanian royal family

Purveyors to the former Prussian royal family

Purveyors to the former Bavarian royal family

Purveyors to the former Italian royal family

Purveyors to the former Russian imperial family

External links

 


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