Monarchy in New Brunswick and Co-promotion: Difference between pages

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'''Co-promotion''' is a [[marketing]] practice where a [[company]] in addition to its own, uses another company's [[sales force]] to promote the same [[brand]] or range of brands. The term is frequently confused with [[Co-marketing]].
{{Monarchy in Canada}}
'''[[Canada]]''' is a '''[[constitutional monarchy]]''' with [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] as the [[Queen regnant|reigning monarch]] since [[February 6]], [[1952]]. As such she is Canada's [[Head of State]], and officially called '''[[Monarchy in Canada|Queen of Canada]]'''. Due to Canada's federal nature, eleven legally distinct Crowns effectively exist in the country, with the Monarch being represented distinctly in each [[Provinces and territories of Canada|province]], as well as at the federal level.
 
In [[New Brunswick]], the Sovereign is represented by the [[Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick]], currently [[Herménégilde Chiasson]], since 2003.
 
== See also ==
==Constitutional monarchy in New Brunswick==
Under the Canadian constitutional monarchy system the [[Head of State|headship of state]] is not a part of either the federal or provincial jurisdictions; the Queen reigns impartially over the country as a whole, meaning the [[sovereignty]] of the provinces is passed on not by the Governor General or the [[Parliament of Canada|Canadian Parliament]], but through the Crown itself. Thus, New Brunswick has a separate government headed by the Queen; in legal nomenclature she is referred to as the Queen in Right of New Brunswick, to differentiate from the Queen in Right of Canada, though they are the same person. New Brunswick, however, as a province, is not itself a monarchy; it is under the sovereignty of the Canadian Crown.
:''See also: [[Monarchy in Canada#Provinces|Monarchy in Canada: Provinces]]''
 
[[Marketing co-operation]]
===Vice-regal===
:''Main article: [[Lieutenant-Governor (Canada)]]''
Because the Canadian Monarch does not reside in New Brunswick, a [[Lieutenant-Governors of New Brunswick|Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick]] serves as the Queen's representative in the province, carrying out all the Monarch's constitutional and ceremonial duties of state on her behalf.
 
==Royal connections==
===Royal designation and patronage===
{{see|List of Canadian organizations with royal patronage}}
 
===Armed forces===
 
[[Category:Marketing techniques]]
===Communities===
 
===Education===
Schools named for Canadian Sovereigns include:
 
Schools named for members of the Canadian Royal Family include:
 
==Places of interest==
*The [[Albert County, New Brunswick|County of Albert]] is named for Prince [[Albert, Prince Consort|Albert]], consort of Queen Victoria.
*The [[Charlotte County, New Brunswick|County of Charlotte]] is named for Queen [[Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz|Charlotte]], the consort of [[George III of the United Kingdom|George III]].
*The [[Victoria County, New Brunswick|County of Victoria]] is named for Queen [[Victoria of the United Kingdom|Victoria]].<ref>[http://www.canadianencyclopedia.ca/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0008358 ''The Canadian Encyclopedia'': Victoria]</ref>
*[[Kings County, New Brunswick|King's County]] and [[Queens County, New Brunswick|Queen's County]] are named for King George III and Queen Charlotte who reigned when New Brunswick became a province in 1784. Large paintings of these monarchs continue to adorn the walls of the [[Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick]]'s main chamber today.
 
==External links==
 
==References==
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