Royal warrant of appointment

Royal warrants of appointment have been issued for centuries to tradespeople who supply goods or services to a royal court or certain royal personages. The royal warrant enables the supplier to advertise the fact that they supply to the issuer of the royal warrant, so lending prestige to the supplier. Royal families of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Denmark and Sweden, among others, allow tradesmen to advertise royal patronage.

Suppliers having a royal warrant charge for the goods and services supplied; a royal warrant does not imply that suppliers provide goods or services free of charge. Royal warrants are typically advertised on company hoardings, letter-heads and products by displaying the coat of arms or the heraldic badge of the royal personage issuing the royal warrant. Warrants granted by members of the British royal family usually include the phrase "By Appointment to…" followed by the title and name of the royal customer, and then what goods are provided; no other details of what is supplied may be given.

Purveyors for current households

Australia

Royal warrant holders of the Court of Australia

Belgium

Royal warrant holders of the Court of Belgium

See Fournisseur breveté de la Cour de Belgique (French).

Denmark

Purveyors to the Royal Danish Court

.

Japan

Purveyors to the Japanese Imperial Household Agency; after World War II, the permission system was abolished, but purveyors still exist today.

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Monaco

High Patronage of the Monaco Royal Family

Netherlands

Purveyors to the Nederlandish Court

The status 'purveyor to the court' (hofleverancier) is awarded to small and medium sized businesses that have existed for at least 100 years, and who have a good reputation regionally.[1] They need not actually supply goods to the court. The status is renewable every 25 years. At present there are at least 387 companies who can hold this status.[2]

For large, multinational enterprises and for non-governmental organizations the use of the designation koninklijke or royal can be awarded.[3] These enterprises are also allowed to incorporate a crown in their logo. Examples are KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, KPN, Royal Dutch Shell, Royal Philips Electronics, and Royal Vopak.

Thailand

.

United Kingdom

.

Historical reigning households

Austria-Hungary

See K.u.k. Hoflieferant (German)
Wappen Kaisertum Österreich 1815: Purveyors to the Imperial and Royal Court were allowed to display the double-headed eagle

.

Imperial eagle displayed at the store of the purveyor Rudolf Waniek, in Vienna
Imperial and royal warrant of appointment issued to Johann Backhausen on November 8, 1888

.

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Bavaria

Purveyors to the Court of Bavaria

See Liste bayerischer Hoflieferanten (German).

Brazil

Purveyors to the Brazilian Imperial Family

France

Purveyors to the Court of France

Italy

Purveyors to the Italian Royal Family

Ottoman Empire

Purveyors to the sultans of the Ottoman Empire

Portugal

Purveyors to the Portuguese Royal Family

Prussia

Purveyors to the Court of Prussia

See Liste preußischer Hoflieferanten (German).

Romania

Purveyors to the Romanian Royal House

The wording reads: Purveyor to the Romanian Royal House, used since 2003 (and probably between 1923–1947)

.

Russia

Purveyors to the Russian Imperial Family

Yugoslavia

Royal Warrant Holders of the Yugoslav court

References

External links