For most of Queen鈥檚 181-year history, a queen has sat on the throne of Great Britain and the Commonwealth realms. For the university鈥檚 first 59 years it was Queen Victoria, the monarch who granted Queen鈥檚 Royal Charter in 1841. For the past 70 years, it has been Victoria鈥檚 great-great-granddaughter, Elizabeth.
Now, after generations, a king again has taken on the royal mantle. And Charles III has many connections to the university.
The new king, you see, is a Queen鈥檚 alumnus. King Charles III accepted an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the university during his 1991 visit to the campus with Diana, Princess of Wales.
During his convocation address, Charles suggested his 鈥渟econd-class degree from Cambridge鈥 wasn鈥檛 much of a recommendation for the Queen鈥檚 doctorate. He hoped a 1983 honorary doctorate from the University of Alberta, the only other Canadian university to have honoured the then prince, might mitigate 鈥渕y lack of appropriate qualifications.鈥
During that same visit, the future king unveiled a replica of the charter granted to the university by his then 22-year-old great-great-great-grandmother just four years into her reign. The replica had been donated to Queen鈥檚 by students for the university鈥檚 sesquicentennial anniversary and is on permanent display in the John Deutsch University Centre. While at the JDUC, according to the Queen鈥檚 Journal, Charles observed that 鈥淨ueen鈥檚 is one of the friendliest universities I鈥檝e been to in a long while.鈥
During his convocation address, he had many more kind words to say about the university named for his long-reigning forebear.
鈥淵ou have here an institution of world repute, with a spirit, a cohesiveness, and an envied reputation of both playing hard and working hard. All these, combined with the highest standards of scholarship and research, make Queen鈥檚 one of the most sought-after educational establishments in North America.鈥
And my alma mater, he might have added.
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