Monarchy in Manitoba

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
King in Right of Manitoba
Provincial
Incumbent
Charles III
King of Canada

since 8 September 2022
Details
StyleHis Majesty
First monarchVictoria
Formation15 July 1870

By the arrangements of the

lieutenant governor of Manitoba,[1] whose direct participation in governance is limited by the conventional stipulations of constitutional monarchy.[5]

Constitutional role

The role of the Crown is both legal and practical; it functions in

Manitoba Act and continued an unbroken line of monarchical government extending back to the early 17th century.[1] However, though Manitoba has a separate government headed by the King, as a province, Manitoba is not itself a kingdom.[10]

Government House in Winnipeg is owned by the sovereign in his capacity as King in Right of Manitoba and used as an official residence by both the lieutenant governor and the sovereign.[11] The lieutenant governor and Canadian royalty also have use of the Lieutenant Governor's Reception Room in the Manitoba Legislative Building.

Royal associations

Victoria Beach, on Lake Winnipeg, named for Queen Victoria

Those in the Royal Family

Royal Charter, received a royal prefix, and/or been honoured with the patronage of a member of the Royal Family. Examples include the Court of King's Bench of Manitoba, the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair, which was under the patronage of Queen Elizabeth II,[14] and the Royal Lake of the Woods Yacht Club, which received its royal prefix from King George V in 1924. At the various levels of education within Alberta, there also exist a number of scholarships and academic awards either established by or named for royal persons.[15]

The main symbol of the monarchy is the sovereign himself, his image (in portrait or effigy) thus being used to signify government authority.

royal cypher or crown may also illustrate the monarchy as the locus of authority, without referring to any specific monarch. Additionally, though the monarch does not form a part of the constitutions of Manitoba's honours, they do stem from the Crown as the fount of honour
, and so bear on the insignia symbols of the sovereign.

Winnipeg Arena portraits of Queen Elizabeth II

Three large portraits of Queen

.

Twenty-one years later,

Also painted by Burch, using oil on plywood,[17] the final iteration, five by seven metres (16.4 by 23 feet) in size, depicts the Queen in the gown she wore for the 1977 opening of the federal parliament, with her insignia of the Sovereign of the Order of Canada and Sovereign of the Order of Military Merit and, on her head, the Grand Duchess Vladimir Tiara. After it was installed the following year, when the Winnipeg Jets, housed in Winnipeg Arena, became a National Hockey League team,[17] Jets players were known to try to hit the painting with pucks during practice.[19]

When the Jets left the city for Phoenix, Arizona, in 1996, the portrait remained in the arena for another three years, thereafter being purchased by Syd Davy, President of the Royal Commonwealth Society,[18] and then Vancouver-based singer-songwriter Tim Lawson, who put it in storage in Whitby, Ontario.[18] The present owner, Ron D'Errico, has willed it to Brent Fitz; though, D'Errico would like to see it installed at the Canada Life Centre, where the Jets now play;[20] the corporate ownership has not been receptive.[17] It was put on display outside the Canada Life Centre when Winnipeg hosted the 2016 Heritage Classic[17] and at Polo Park mall, near where Winnipeg Arena used to stand, as a form of tribute following the death of Elizabeth II in 2022.[21]

History

Rupert's Land to Confederation

King Charles II in 1675

King Charles II in 1670 founded the Hudson's Bay Company by a royal charter[22] that applied to the entire Hudson's Bay drainage basin, including the entirety of what is today Manitoba.[23] The King gave governorship of the company to his cousin, Prince Rupert of the Rhine, and the territory came to be known as Rupert's Land.

When, in 1869, the newly

francophone Métis who comprised the Red River Colony,[25] became concerned that their way of life would be threatened by increased Canadian migration, including possible confiscation of their farmland, to which they had only a tenuous right of occupancy.[26] Louis Riel emerged as a Métis leader who asserted he and the Métis were loyal subjects of Queen Victoria,[27] the then-reigning monarch of the UK and, consequently, Canada. (The Red River Colony's provisional government celebrated Victoria's birthday with a show of skill at the militia's drill.[28][29]) However, tensions within the Métis community and with the Lieutenant Governor of the North-West Territories' Canadian government-appointed designate, William McDougal, led to the Red River Rebellion, in which Fort Garry
was taken by Riel.

The Queen's Canadian representative, Governor General the Lord Lisgar, was advised by his Prime Minister, John A. Macdonald, to proclaim, on 6 December, an amnesty for all in the Red River area who would lay down their arms.[30][31] Though the offer was ignored, negotiations between Riel's provisional government and the Canadian Cabinet continued and, on 12 May 1870, Lisgar granted royal assent to the Canadian parliament's Manitoba Act, 1870, creating an area around WInnipeg as the province of Manitoba.[32]

In the aftermath of the Red River Rebellion, Lisgar's viceregal successor, the Earl of Dufferin, prevented the execution of Ambroise Lépine, a supporter of Riel who had executed Thomas Scott. Although Scott had been the son a tenant on Dufferin's estate in Northern Ireland, Dufferin heeded appeals from francophones in Quebec who were sympathetic to the Métis and redcued Lépine's sentence to two years in jail.[33]

20th century

In 1912,[34] parts were put in the jurisdiction of the Crown in Right of Manitoba, to form the province's current borders.

King George VI and Queen Elizabethh in Winnipeg, 1939
Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee Medal (Manitoba)

Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, presided over the celebrations of the centennial of Manitoba's entry into Confederation in 1970.[35][36]

21st century

In 2022, Manitoba instituted a

provincial Platinum Jubilee medal to mark the Queen's seventy years on the Canadian throne; the first time in Canada's history that a royal occasion was commemorated on provincial medals.[37]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Victoria (12 May 1870), Manitoba Act, 1870, 6, Westminster: Queen's Printer, retrieved 16 June 2009
  2. ^ Elizabeth II (9 June 2005), The Manitoba Centennial Centre Corporation Act, 1, Winnipeg: Queen's Printer for Manitoba, retrieved 1 July 2009
  3. ^ Elizabeth II (21 March 2002), Manitoba Claim Settlements Implementation Act, 2.b, Ottawa: Queen's Printer for Canada, retrieved 1 July 2009
  4. ^ Department of Canadian Heritage (2009), Canada-Manitoba Agreement on French Language Services (PDF), Ottawa: Queen's Printer for Canada, p. 2, retrieved 1 July 2009
  5. ^ , retrieved 21 June 2009
  6. ^ Cox, Noel (September 2002). "Black v Chrétien: Suing a Minister of the Crown for Abuse of Power, Misfeasance in Public Office and Negligence". Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law. 9 (3). Perth: Murdoch University: 12. Retrieved 17 May 2009.
  7. ISBN 978-1-100-11096-7, archived from the original
    on 18 March 2010, retrieved 17 May 2009
  8. ^ Roberts, Edward (2009). "Ensuring Constitutional Wisdom During Unconventional Times" (PDF). Canadian Parliamentary Review. 23 (1). Ottawa: Commonwealth Parliamentary Association: 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2009.
  9. ^ MacLeod 2008, p. 20.
  10. ^ MacLeod 2008, p. XIV.
  11. ^ Palmer, Sean; Aimers, John (2002), The Cost of Canada's Constitutional Monarchy: $1.10 per Canadian (2 ed.), Toronto: Monarchist League of Canada, archived from the original on 19 June 2008, retrieved 15 May 2009
  12. ^ Kirbyson, Geoff (2 June 2008), "Prince Edward begins Winnipeg visit", Vancouver Sun, archived from the original on 9 May 2012, retrieved 2 July 2009
  13. ^ "Provincial Exhibition of Manitoba > Our History". The Provincial Exhibition of Manitoba. Retrieved 2 July 2009.
  14. ^ Department of Canadian Heritage. "2010 Royal Tour > Itinerary for 2010 Royal Tour of Canada". Queen's Printer for Canada. Archived from the original on 19 June 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h the winnipeg arena’s royal quandary: if the queen herself walked in, would she know who it was?, Puckstruck, 22 April 2018, retrieved 25 March 2023
  16. ^ a b c Queen portrait that hung in old Winnipeg Jets arena coming home, CBC News, 26 February 2015, retrieved 25 March 2023
  17. ^ Lambert, Steve (9 September 2022), Plans underway to display massive painting of Queen Elizabeth from old Winnipeg Arena, Global News, retrieved 25 March 2023
  18. ^ McKendrick, Devon (9 September 2022), Winnipeg Arena's famed Queen Elizabeth II portrait returning to public view, CTV News, retrieved 25 March 2023
  19. ^ Unger, Danton (16 September 2022), Iconic portrait of Queen Elizabeth II on display at Winnipeg mall, CTV News, retrieved 25 March 2023
  20. ^ Royal Charter of the Hudson's Bay Companyp, Hudson's Bay Company, retrieved 3 January 2017
  21. ^ Natural Resouces Canada (1985), The National Atlas of Canada (5th ed.), Queen's Printer for Canada, archived from the original on 4 March 2011, retrieved 24 November 2010
  22. ^ Rupert's Land and North-Western Territory Order . 23 June 1870 – via Wikisource.
  23. OCLC 5035707
  24. ^ Richot, Noël-Joseph, Dictionary of Canadian Biography, archived from the original on 23 April 2021, retrieved 20 May 2015
  25. ^ Riel, Louis, Dictionary of Canadian Biography, archived from the original on 12 December 2017, retrieved 7 December 2017
  26. ^ Red River Métis Genealogies, Red River Responders: Patriotes/Military/Settlement Guard 1869–1870, Mothers of the Resistance 1869-1870, retrieved 13 March 2024
  27. ^ "The Queen's Birth-Day", New Nation, p. 2, 27 May 1870
  28. ^ Library and Archives Canada (26 March 2015), Manitoba (1870), Queen's Printer for Canada, archived from the original on 2 June 2015, retrieved 10 May 2015
  29. ISSN 1920-9894
    .
  30. ^ Manitoba Act, 1870 . 12 May 1870 – via Wikisource.
  31. ^ Harris, Carolyn (22 September 2017), "Lord Dufferin", The Canadian Encyclopedia, Historica Canada, retrieved 13 March 2024
  32. ^ Manitoba Boundaries Extension Act, 1912, Solon, archived from the original on 11 November 2020, retrieved 3 October 2023
  33. ^ Office of the Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba. "History > Government House > The Royal Bedroom". Queen's Printer for Manitoba. Retrieved 2 July 2009.
  34. ^ Harris, Caroline (18 October 2013). "Princess Anne's visit strengthens bond with Kingston". Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  35. ^ "Manitoba Government Announces Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee Medal". Manitoba. 28 April 2022.

External links