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Page "Coat of arms of Western Australia" ¶ 36
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Royal and Warrant
In 1982 Aston Martin was granted a Royal Warrant of Appointment by the Prince of Wales.
The 1662 prayer book was printed only two years after the restoration of the monarchy, following the Savoy Conference between representative Presbyterians and twelve bishops which was convened by Royal Warrant to " advise upon and review the Book of Common Prayer ".
* Conductor ( Army ), a senior Warrant Officer appointment in the Royal Logistic Corps and its predecessors
Because Guest's children are adopted, they cannot inherit the family barony under the terms of the letters patent that created it, though a 2004 Royal Warrant addressing the style of a peer's adopted children states that they can use courtesy titles.
The Coat of arms of Gibraltar | arms granted to the city of Gibraltar by a Royal Warrant passed in Toledo, Spain | Toledo on 10 July 1502 by Isabella I of Castile
* 1502 10 July – By a Royal Warrant passed in Toledo by Isabella I of Castile, Gibraltar was granted its coat of arms: " An escutcheon on which the upper two thirds shall be a white field and on the said field set a red castle, and below the said castle, on the other third of the escutcheon, which must be a red field in which there must be a white line between the castle and the said red field, there shall be a golden key which hangs by a chain from the said castle, as are here figured ".
* 1504 – Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand issue a Royal Warrant for the construction of a Royal Chapel ( Capilla Real ) to be built.
Category: British Royal Warrant holders
The first coat of arms was granted by King George V by Royal Warrant on 17 September 1910.
* Chief of the Air Staff's Warrant Officer, the senior warrant officer of the Royal Air Force
* Station Warrant Officer, the senior Warrant Officer on a British Royal Air Force station ( base )
* Warrant Officer of the Navy, the most senior non commissioned officer rank in the Royal Australian Navy ( RAN )
* List of Royal Warrant holders of the British Royal Family
* Royal Warrant, a warrant that enables suppliers to advertise that they supply goods / service to a royal family
* Royal Warrant ( Thailand ), a warrant that enables suppliers to advertise that they supply goods / service to the King of Thailand
* Royal Warrant of Precedence, British monarchy protocol to determine nobility / gentry order of rank
Warrant officer is a rank between flight sergeant and pilot officer in the Royal Air Force.
The insignia of the three ranks are: a crown for a WO2 ; the ( Australian ) Commonwealth Coat of Arms ( changed from the Royal Coat of Arms in 1976 ) for a WO1 ; and the Commonwealth Coat of Arms surrounded by a laurel wreath for the Warrant Officer.
The Royal Australian Navy rank of Warrant Officer ( WO ) is the Navy's only rank appointed by warrant and is equivalent to the Army's WO1 ( the equivalent of the Army's WO2 rank is a Chief Petty Officer ).
The Royal Australian Air Force rank of Warrant Officer ( WOFF ) is the Air Force's only rank appointed by warrant and is equivalent to both the Army's WO1 and the Navy's WO ( the equivalent of the Army's WO2 is a Flight Sergeant ).
* May 26 – Two regular companies of field artillery, each 100 men strong, are raised at Woolwich by Royal Warrant of King George I of Great Britain.
In the 1880s, Prince Edward ( later Edward VII ) purchased his country seat of Sandringham House in Norfolk and asked Thomas Crapper & Co. to supply the plumbing, including thirty lavatories with cedarwood seats and enclosures, thus giving Crapper his first Royal Warrant.

Royal and granting
In 1927 he was appointed a member of the multi-party Simon Commission, a Royal Commission set up to examine the possibility of granting self-rule to India.
With the granting of Royal Assent, the name was officially changed to Canada Day on October 27, 1982.
In 1856, the Royal Academy of Music awarded the first Mendelssohn Scholarship to the 14-year-old Sullivan, granting him a year's training at the academy.
The convention of granting dukedoms to senior members of the Royal Family was broken most recently in 1999, when The Prince Edward was created Earl of Wessex.
All laws in Canada are the monarch's and the sovereign is one of the three components of parliament — formally called the Queen-in-Parliament — but the monarch and viceroy do not participate in the legislative process save for the granting of Royal Assent, which is necessary for a bill to be enacted as law.
In his first act as King, Charles attempted to unify the House of Bourbon by granting the style of Royal Highness to his cousins of the House of Orléans, who had been deprived of this by Louis XVIII because of the former Duke of Orléans ' role in the death of Louis XVI.
With the granting of its Royal Charter in the same year, it took the name St Peter's College.
The granting of the Royal Assent to a supply bill is indicated with the words La Reyne remercie ses bons sujets, accepte leur benevolence, et ainsi le veult, translated as " The Queen thanks her good subjects, accepts their bounty, and wills it so.
Henry VIII introduced a new method of granting the Royal Assent.
As a result, the Royal Assent Act 1967 was passed, creating an additional form for the granting of the Royal Assent.
Thus, unlike the granting of Royal Assent by the Sovereign in person or by Royal Commissioners, the method created by the Royal Assent Act 1967 does not require both Houses to meet jointly for the purpose of receiving the notice of Royal Assent.
However, formally, this still remains the standard method, a fact that is recited by the wording of the Letters Patent for the appointment of the Royal Commissioners, and by the wording of the Letters Patent for the granting of the Royal Assent in writing under the 1967 Act ("... And forasmuch as We cannot at this time be present in the Higher House of Our said Parliament being the accustomed place for giving Our Royal Assent ...").
Under the Royal Assent Act 2002, however, the alternative practice of granting Assent in writing, with each House being notified separately, was introduced.
After 1765, the Royal Assent was at first signified by letter from the Secretary of State to the Governor, but during the Regency the practice began of granting Royal Assent by Order in Council, which continues to this day, though limited to exceptional cases since 1981.
The Royal Charter granting university status was awarded on 9 June 1966.
In 2010, the school and Westminster Abbey hosted an event to celebrate the 450th anniversary of the granting of the institution's Royal Charter.
In 1898, the Queen passed letters patent granting the children of the Duke and Duchess of York the style, Royal Highness.
With the spread of the town's popularity, and the granting with a ' Royal ' prefix in 1838 by Queen Victoria, ' Leamington Priors ' was renamed ' Royal Leamington Spa '.

Royal and Arms
* Royal Arms of England
The shield of the Royal Arms of New South Wales crowned with the St Edward's Crown is employed as the badge of the governor, appearing on the viceroy's flag and on other objects associated with the person or the office.
File: Royal Coat of Arms of Greece. svg | Hercules as heraldic supporters in the royal arms of Greece, in use 1863 – 1973.
* 1555 – The College of Arms was reincorporated by Royal charter signed by Queen Mary I of England and King Philip II of Spain.
* 1484 – The College of Arms was formally incorporated by Royal Charter signed by King Richard III of England.
* Royal Small Arms Factory
As Duke of Gloucester, Richard used the Royal Arms of England quartered with the Royal Arms of France, differenced by a label argent of three points ermine, on each point a canton gules.
Arms of King Richard I adopted towards the end of his reign, a version of the lion emblems or recognizance used on the shield of his grandfather Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou ( d. 1151 ), which became fixed during his reign as the Royal Arms of England: Gules, three lions passant guardant in pale or
Arms of the British Government ( a variation of the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom | Royal Arms )
The crest of the Royal Arms of Canada is employed as the badge of the governor general, appearing on the viceroy's flag and on other objects associated with the person or the office.
The circulating coins, excepting the two-pound coin, were redesigned in 2008, keeping the sizes and compositions unchanged, but introducing reverse designs that each depict a part of the Royal Shield of Arms and form the whole shield when they are placed together in the appropriate arrangement.
File: Royal Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Scotland. svg | Royal coat of arms of Scotland.
File: Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom. svg | Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom, in the version for use outwith Scotland.

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