Personal union

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A personal union is a relationship of two or more entities that are considered separate, sovereign states, which, through established law, share the same person as their respective head of state. It is not to be confused with a federation, which internationally is considered as a single state.

Personal unions can arise for very different reasons, ranging from near coincidence (a princess who is already married to a king becomes pregnant, and their child inherits the crown of both countries) to virtual annexation (where a personal union sometimes was seen as a means of preventing uprisings). They can also be codified (the constitutions of the states clearly express that they shall share the same person as head of state), or non-codified (in which case they can easily be broken by e.g. different succession rules).

Because presidents of republics are ordinarily chosen from within the citizens of the state in question, personal unions are almost entirely a phenomenon of monarchies, and sometimes the term dual monarchy is used to signify a personal union between two monarchies. With the decline of their number during the 20th century, personal unions have become quite uncommon. Where they do exist is most notably between the Commonwealth Realms, where, beyond the United Kingdom, the Governor-General is the vice-regal representative of the Monarch.

There is a somewhat grey area between personal unions and federations, and the one has regularly grown into the other. This article is an attempt at listing some historical and contemporary personal unions.

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[edit] Andorra

  • Partial personal union with France since 1607 (the French president, and formerly the king of France, is one of the Heads of State in Andorra, the other co-head of state is the Bishop of La Seu d'Urgell, Catalonia, Spain.)

[edit] Bohemia

  • Personal union with Poland 1003 - 1004 (Bohemia occupied by Poles)
  • Personal union with Poland 1300 - 1306 and Hungary 1301 - 1305 (Wenceslas II and Wenceslas III)
  • Personal union with Luxembourg 1313 - 1378 and 1383 - 1388
  • Personal union with Hungary 1419-1439 (Sigismund of Luxemburg and his son in law) and 1490 - 1526 (Jagellon dynasty)
  • Personal union with Austria and Hungary 1526 - 1918 (except years 1619 - 1620)

[edit] Brandenburg

[edit] Commonwealth Realms (current and former)

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The assumption is made in this section that Commonwealth Realms came into personal union with the United Kingdom at the time they were given complete freedom to legislate for themselves. Other possible dates that personal union could claim to have come about are:

  • when colonies were granted Dominion status: Canada in 1867, Australia in 1901, New Zealand in 1907, South Africa in 1910
  • when the Governor became a Governor-General: as above for all except New Zealand (1917)
  • informally, as a result of the Balfour Declaration 1926
  • implicitly, as a result of the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927
  • when a High Commissioner was appointed to represent the British Government instead of the Governor or Governor-General[1]: Canada 1928, South Africa 1930, Australia 1931-6, New Zealand 1939, Irish Free State 1939. It appears that the Governor-General of the Irish Free State stopped representing the British government in 1928 but that an alternative official was not appointed until 1939.
  • with the Statute of Westminster 1931
  • when it was inadvertently demonstrated by the Irish Free State that succession laws could be different in each dominion (the abdication of Edward VIII, 1936)
  • when a country gained both the power to make laws with extraterritorial effect and the power to change their constitution (this is the assumption used below): South Africa and the Irish Free State with the Statute of Westminster, New Zealand in 1947, Canada in 1982, Australia in 1986
  • when the power of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to make laws for the Commonwealth Realm in question was removed: Canada in 1982, Australia in 1986, New Zealand in 1986
  • when the right of appeal to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was removed: Canada in 1949, Australia in 1986, New Zealand (but not the Cook Islands, Niue or Tokelau) in 2004

[edit] Antigua and Barbuda

[edit] Australia

  • Since 1941, upon the ratification of the Westminster Statute in 1942 - which ended the British Parliament's ability to legislate for Australia. The Australia Act of 1986, amongst other things, removed the Privy Council as the last court of Appeal in the Australian Judicial System. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom serves, independently, as Queen of Australia, through her Vice-Regal Representative, the Governor-General, nominated by the Prime Minister.

[edit] Bahamas

[edit] Barbados

[edit] Belize

[edit] Canada

[edit] Ceylon

[edit] Fiji

[edit] Gambia

[edit] Ghana

[edit] Grenada

[edit] Guyana

[edit] India

  • From 1947, when it became a sovereign Commonwealth Realm to 1950 when it became a republic.

[edit] Ireland

[edit] Jamaica

[edit] Kenya

[edit] Malawi

[edit] Malta

[edit] Mauritius

[edit] New Zealand

[edit] Nigeria

[edit] Pakistan

[edit] Papua New Guinea

[edit] Saint Kitts and Nevis

[edit] Saint Lucia

[edit] Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

[edit] Sierra Leone

[edit] Solomon Islands

[edit] South Africa

[edit] Tanganyika

[edit] Trinidad and Tobago

[edit] Tuvalu

[edit] Uganda

[edit] United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

[edit] Congo Free State

  • Personal union with Belgium from 1885 to 1908, when it became a Belgian colony.

[edit] Croatia

  • Personal union with Hungary from 1102 to 1918, interrupted by Ottoman rule.

[edit] Denmark

[edit] England

The actual situation was slightly more complex with the Dutch provinces Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht, Gelderland and Overijssel entering into personal union in 1689 and Drenthe in 1696. Only 2 Dutch provinces never entered into the personal union: Friesland and Groningen.

[edit] Finland

[edit] France

  • Personal union with the Duchy of Brittany from 1491, when Duchess Anne of Brittany married King Charles VIII of France under duress, to 1532 when the Duchy of Brittany was formally annexed to the Kingdom of France.
  • Partial personal union with Andorra since 1607 (the French president is one of the Heads of State in Andorra)

[edit] Great Britain

[edit] Hanover

[edit] Holy Roman Empire

[edit] Hungary

  • Personal union with Croatia from 1102 to 1918.
  • Personal union with Poland from 1370 to 1382 under the reign of Louis the Great. This period in Polish history is sometimes known as the Andegawen Poland. Louis inherited the Polish throne from his maternal uncle Casimir III. After Louis' death the Polish nobles (the szlachta) decided to end the personal union, since they didn't want to be governed from Hungary, and chose Louis' younger daughter Jadwiga as their new ruler, while Hungary was inherited by his elder daughter Mary. Personal union with Poland in the second time from 1440 to 1444.
  • Personal union with Bohemia from 1419 to 1439 and from 1490 to 1918
  • Personal union with the Holy Roman Empire from 1410 to 1439 and from 1526 to 1806 (except 1608-1612)
  • Personal union with Austria from 1867 to 1918 (the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary) under the reigns of Franz Joseph and Charles IV (in fact it was rather a dynastic union, not a personal union.)

[edit] Iceland

  • Personal union with Denmark from 1918 to 1944 until the country became republic and excluded the Danish throne.

[edit] Ireland

[edit] Lithuania

[edit] Luxembourg

[edit] The Netherlands

[edit] Norway

[edit] Poland

[edit] Poland-Lithuania

[edit] Portugal

[edit] Romania

[edit] Schleswig and Holstein

Duchies with peculiar rules for succession.

[edit] Scotland

[edit] Spain

[edit] Sweden

Main article: Unions of Sweden

[edit] United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

  • Personal union with Hanover from 1801 to 1837 when the ascension of Queen Victoria to the British Crown took place in 1837 (as women were not eligible to be monarchs of Hanover)

[edit] Vatican City / Holy See

  • Technically speaking, the Vatican City and the Holy See form a personal union in the sense that they are two separate sovereign entities under international law and administered by separate organs, with the Pope as the head of both. For the Vatican City, it is governed by the Pope through the Governor of Vatican City appointed by him.

[edit] See also