New Zealand royal honours system


The New Zealand Royal Honours system, a system of orders, decorations and medals, recognises achievements of, or service by, New Zealanders or others in connection with New Zealand. Until 1975 New Zealand used the British honours system. Since then the country has introduced a number of uniquely New Zealand honours, and only the dynastic British honours continue in active use in New Zealand, with the exception of the Order of the Companions of Honour.
The Queen of New Zealand awards honours on ministerial advice. However, certain awards remain in the exclusive gift of the Queen.
The Honours Unit of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet administers the New Zealand honours system.

History

Since the beginning of settlement in the mid nineteenth century, British honours were awarded in New Zealand. In 1848, Governor George Grey received the first honour granted to a New Zealand resident, becoming a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath. For more than a hundred years the British honours system was used for New Zealand. In appropriate cases, this included peerages and baronetcies.
Bernard Freyberg, although not born in New Zealand and resident outside New Zealand for a considerable portion of his life, had significant connections with New Zealand, and was ennobled while serving as Governor-General of New Zealand in 1951. The current bearer of the title, Valerian Freyberg, 3rd Baron Freyberg, is based in the United Kingdom and is one of the 92 hereditary peers elected to sit in the House of Lords.
Arthur Porritt, a New Zealand-born physician, surgeon, statesman and athlete, became a baronet in 1963 and was appointed Governor-General of New Zealand in 1967, serving until 1972. He moved to live in England upon the expiry of his term as Governor-General, and was later ennobled in 1973. Porritt was resident in England at the time he was made a baronet and at the time he received his peerage. His son, Jonathon Porritt, is resident in England and is entitled to register his claim to his father's baronetcy. He has so far declined to do so, however.
In 1975, after a review of the system, two uniquely New Zealand honours were integrated into it: the Queen's Service Order, and its affiliated Medal. In 1987, the Order of New Zealand was instituted as the supreme New Zealand honour.
In 1996, Robin Cooke, a New Zealand judge, was awarded a life peerage. Following his ennoblement until his retirement at the age of 75, Lord Cooke sat in the British House of Lords as a Law Lord, and ex officio also in the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, which at that time was the highest authority in the New Zealand judicial system. Lord Cooke is the only Commonwealth judge from outside Britain to have attained this distinction. The discontinuance of appeals to the Privy Council from New Zealand in 2003 makes it unlikely that a similar honour will be granted in future on the strength of judicial services rendered in New Zealand.
A further review of the New Zealand Honours system in 1996 and 1997 resulted in the termination of awards of almost all British honours and the creation of a new five-level New Zealand Order of Merit to replace them. In 2000, Prime Minister Helen Clark announced that no further awards of knighthoods and damehoods would be made in the New Zealand Honours system.
In March 2009, Prime Minister John Key announced the restoration of knighthoods and damehoods to the New Zealand Honours system, with past recipients of the two highest grades of the New Zealand Order of Merit to be eligible to receive titles.

Orders and other honours

Complete nameRanks / LettersRibbonEstablishedFounderMottoAwarded to/forAssociated awardsRefs
The Most Noble Order of the GarterKG/LG23 April 1348Edward IIIHoni soit qui mal y pense Relating to England and Wales-
The Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the ThistleKT/LT29 May 1687James VII and IINemo me impune lacessit Relating to Scotland-
The Royal Victorian OrderGCVO,
KCVO/DCVO,
CVO,
LVO,
MVO
21 April 1896VictoriaVictoriaServices to the CrownThe Royal Victorian Medal, The Royal Victorian Chain
The Order of MeritOM23 June 1902Edward VIIFor meritMilitary, science, art, literature, culture-
Order of New ZealandONZ6 February 1987Elizabeth II-Outstanding service to the Crown and people of New Zealand in a civil or military capacity-
New Zealand Order of MeritGNZM,
KNZM/DNZM,
CNZM,
ONZM,
MNZM
30 May 1996Elizabeth II-Meritorious service to the Crown and the nation or who have become distinguished by their eminence, talents, contributions, or other merits-
Queen's Service OrderQSO13 March 1975Elizabeth IIFor service — Mō nga mahi nuiFor valuable voluntary service to the community or meritorious and faithful services to the Crown or similar services within the public sector, whether in elected or appointed officeQueen's Service Medal
Queen's Service MedalQSM13 March 1975Elizabeth IIFor service — Mō nga mahi nuiVoluntary service to the community or services to the Crown in the public sector, in elected or appointed office.New Zealand Antarctic Medal
New Zealand Antarctic MedalNZAM1 September 2006Elizabeth II-For outstanding contribution to exploration, scientific research, conservation, environmental protection, or knowledge of the Antarctic region; or in support of New Zealand’s objectives or operations, or both, in the Antarctic region.-
New Zealand Distinguished Service DecorationDSD14 May 2007Elizabeth II-Distinguished military service, by regular, territorial and reserve members of the New Zealand Defence Force-
New Zealand Memorial Cross12 September 1947George VI-Next of kin of New Zealand service personnel who, since September 1939, have been killed on active service or later die of wounds-