• 14 November 1960: Al-Karim
Aga Khan IV, United Kingdom • 24 November 1960:
Louis Joxe, former Minister of Justice, France • 5 December 1960:
José Finat y Escrivá de Romaní, former mayor of Madrid, Spain • 20 December 1960:
Edward Chilton, Air Marshal, United Kingdom • 20 December 1960: Harvey F. Alness, Major, United States • 20 December 1960:
Austregésilo de Athayde, Brazilian journalist • 20 December 1960:
Naval School, Brazil • 20 January 1961: General , former Privy Councilor, Thailand • 20 January 1961: Commodore , Royal Navy, Thailand • 20 January 1961: General Ammuay Chaya Rochana, Thailand • 25 February 1961: Hua-Cheng Wang, China • 28 February 1961:
Sarah Kubitschek, former first lady of Brazil • 28 February 1961: , former governor of Guanabara, Brazil • 28 February 1961: , former Minister of War, Brazil • 28 February 1961: , former diplomat, Brazil • 28 February 1961:
Vitorino de Brito Freire, former deputy, Brazil • 28 February 1961: Jorge da Silva Leite, Admiral, Brazil • 28 February 1961: Júlio F. Guillén, former diplomat, Brazil • 9 March 1961: , former Member, Royal Spanish Academy • 9 March 1961: Manuel F. Gran Gilledo, former diplomat, Cuba • 9 March 1961: Ugo Ferruta, former diplomat, Italy • 9 March 1961:
Charles Burke Elbrick, former ambassador of United States • 9 March 1961: G. Anderson, Vice-Admiral, United States • 9 March 1961: Júlio Casas Araujo, former ambassador of Uruguay • 9 March 1961:
Alexis Aminoff, former ambassador of Sweden • 9 March 1961: Justino Sanson Balladares, former ambassador of Nicaragua • 9 March 1961: Emilio Saavedra Balmaceda, former diplomat, Chile • 9 March 1961: Louis Barthélemy, former Captain, Navy, France • 9 March 1961: , former ambassador of Italy • 9 March 1961: Ciriano Cuenca, Rear Admiral, Argentina • 9 March 1961: Alfonso Colomina Boti, Naval Captain, Spain • 9 March 1961: Júlio E. Braceno, former ambassador of Panama • 9 March 1961: Pascual Cervera y Cervera, former Vice Admiral, Spain • 9 March 1961: Yuso Isono, former ambassador of Japan • 9 March 1961: Sérgio Fernandes Lorrain, former ambassador of Chile • 9 March 1961: Hugo Hergel, former ambassador of Denmark • 9 March 1961: Bernard de Menthon, former ambassador of France • 9 March 1961: José António Bermudez Milla, former ambassador of Honduras • 9 March 1961:
Sir Charles Madden, 2nd Baronet, former Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet Navy, United Kingdom • 9 March 1961: Ernesto Pablo Mairal, former ambassador of Argentina • 9 March 1961:
José Ibáñez Martín, former Minister of National Education, Spain • 9 March 1961:
Gerhard Wagner, Rear Admiral, Germany • 9 March 1961: Tarik-Emin Yenisey, former ambassador of Turkey • 9 March 1961: , former ambassador of Mexico • 9 March 1961: Tom Elink Schuurman, former ambassador of Netherlands • 9 March 1961: , former diplomat, Germany • 9 March 1961: Hector Escobar Serrano, former ambassador of Argentina • 11 April 1961: , former diplomat, Spain • 22 April 1961:
Charles Lucet, former diplomat, France • 16 May 1961: Victor Von Zahn Stranik, former ambassador of Germany • 14 February 1962:
Carlos Arias Navarro, former prime minister of Spain • 14 February 1962:
Adolfo Martín-Gamero, former Minister, Spain • 14 February 1962: Santiago Ruiz Tabanera, former diplomat, Spain • 14 February 1962: Fernando Fuentes de Villavicencio, General, Spain • 14 February 1962: Javier Laviña Berenguer, Colonel, Spain • 14 February 1962: , Marques of Valdavia, Spain • 14 February 1962: Luiz Alvarez de Estrada y Luque, Baron, Spain • 14 February 1962:
José Navarro, Count of Casa Loja, Spanish Olympian • 17 May 1962: Cardinal
Arcadio Larraona Saralegui, Prefect Emeritus, Congregation of Rites • 15 June 1962: Vicente Puyal Gil, former politician, Spain • 19 July 1962:
Ademar de Barros, former governor of São Paulo, Brazil • 5 September 1962: Rafael Morales Hernández, former diplomat, Spain • 8 September 1962: , former politician, Spain • 15 September 1962: , Spanish soldier and writer • 30 October 1962: Clemente Araoz, former diplomat, Peru • 13 November 1962: Javier Ramirez Cardona, former diplomat, Colombia • 14 December 1962: José Miguel Ruiz y Morales, Spanish doctor • 25 January 1963: Antero de Ussía y Murúa, former diplomat, Spain • 26 April 1963:
Carlos Jiménez Díaz, Spanish physician • 3 June 1963: Cardinal Raúl Silva Henríquez, Bishop of Colombo • 26 June 1963: Rafael Rubio Freire Duarte, former diplomat, Spain • 10 December 1963:
Gerald Wellesley, Prince of Waterloo, Belgium • 9 January 1964:
Alberto Prebisch, former mayor of Buenos Aires, Argentina • 2 March 1964:
Juracy Magalhães, former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 16 March 1964:
José Solís Ruiz, former Minister, Spain • 16 March 1964:
Manuel Fraga, former minister of interior, Spain • 27 April 1964: Joseph Harfouche, former ambassador of Lebanon • 11 May 1964: Luis Gonzalez Barros, former ambassador of Colombia • 4 July 1964: Edmond de Beauverger, former ambassador of France • 29 July 1964: Leopoldo Boado y Endeiza, former Admiral, Spain • 28 September 1964:
Manuel Aznar Zubigaray, former diplomat, Spain • 28 September 1964: Rafael Fernandez de Bobadilla, former Admiral, Spain • 28 September 1964: Faustino Ruiz Gonzãlez, former Admiral, Spain • 6 October 1964: , former Procurator of Courts, Spain • 4 November 1964: Remigio Grillo, former ambassador of Italy • 6 November 1964: António Villacieros y Benito, former diplomat, Spain • 12 December 1964: Félix Iturriaga y Codes, former diplomat, Spain • 12 December 1964: , former diplomat, Peru • 30 February 1965: , former diplomat, France • 3 February 1965:
Aurélio de Lira Tavares, former Member of Military Junta, Brazil • 9 February 1965: Pedro Chaná Cariola, former ambassador, Chile • 5 June 1965: , former Minister of Health, Brazil • 5 June 1965: Cardinal
Fernando Cento, former Major Penitentiary of Apostolic Penitentiary • 9 June 1965:
Pedro Nieto Antúnez, former Minister of Navy, Italy • 21 July 1965: , former senator, Italy • 13 August 1965:
Hans-Christoph Seebohm, former Vice-Chancellor, West Germany • 7 September 1965:
Bernardo Mattarella, former Minister of Foreign trade, Italy • 7 September 1965: , former diplomat, Spain • 7 September 1965: José Garcia Usano, former diplomat, Spain • 7 September 1965: Luis Peralta Espana, former diplomat, Spain • 7 September 1965: Faustino Armijo y Gallardo, former diplomat, Spain • 7 September 1965: , former diplomat, Spain • 13 October 1965: Cardinal
Angelo Dell'Acqua, former Vicar General of Rome • 13 November 1965: Octacílio Terra Ururahy, former General, Brazil • 17 January 1966:
Juarez Távora, former Minister of Transport, Brazil • 8 March 1966:
Sergio Corrêa da Costa, former diplomat, Brazil • 8 March 1966: Miguel Ángel Pardo Marchena, former diplomat, Dominican Republic • 21 March 1966: , former State Secretary, Germany • 21 March 1966: , former diplomat, Spain • 21 March 1966: Esteban Rodriguez Landaeta, former ambassador of Venezuela • 25 June 1966: , former diplomat, Brazil • 1 July 1966: , former diplomat, Italy • 6 July 1966:
Georges Cabanier, former Grand Chancellor, Legion of Honour, France • 26 July 1966:
Federico Silva Muñoz, former Minister of Public Works, Spain • 9 September 1966:
Marcel-Henri Jaspar, former ambassador of Belgium • 13 October 1966: Paulo Leão de Moura, former diplomat, Brazil • 21 October 1966: Cardinal
Antonio Samorè, former Librarian, Holy Roman Church • 10 November 1966: Cardinal
Giovanni Nasalli Rocca di Corneliano, Archbishop of Bologna • 6 December 1966:
Ivan Matteo Lombardo, former Minister of Foreign trade, Italy • 6 December 1966: Cardinal
Fernando Quiroga Palacios, Archbishop of Santiago de Compostela • 20 December 1966: Jorge de Paço Mattoso Maia, First Lieutenant, Brazil • 21 December 1966:
Giovanni Panico, former Nuncio, Vatican City • 28 January 1967:
Erik Dons, former ambassador of Norway • 16 February 1967: Cesáreo Juste Cadierno, former diplomat, Spain • 16 February 1967: , former diplomat, Spain • 16 February 1967:
Fernando Olivié González-Pumariega, former diplomat, Spain • 28 February 1967:
Adalberto Pereira dos Santos, former Vice President of Brazil • 28 February 1967: , former politician, Argentina • 28 February 1967: Décio Palmeiro de Escobar, General, Brazil • 4 April 1967:
Arnaldo Forlani, former prime minister of Italy • 4 April 1967: , former deputy, Italy • 9 May 1967: Ernesto Giuriatti, Admiral, Italy • 24 June 1967: António Mauro, Monsignor, Vatican City • 4 July 1967: , former diplomat, Brazil • 24 July 1967: , former senator, Brazil • 27 July 1967:
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, former Shah of Iran • 29 July 1967:
Maximilian von Fürstenberg, former Prefect, Congregation for Oriental Churches • 12 August 1967: , former Minister of Transport, Brazil • 31 August 1967: Kinya Niizeki, former diplomat, Japan • 23 October 1967: Marquês Raimondo Giustiniani, former ambassador of Italy • 23 October 1967: Juan Carlos Risso Sieura, former ambassador of Uruguay • 26 January 1968: , former Procurator of Courts, Spain • 26 January 1968: Vicente Urcuyo Rodriguez, former ambassador of Nicaragua • 2 February 1968: Yasusuke Katsumo, former ambassador of Japan • 2 February 1968: , former attorney general, Brazil • 2 February 1968:
Abreu Sodré, former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 18 March 1968: Robero Incer Barquero, former president, Central Bank of Nicaragua • 9 April 1968: Ignácio Silva Sucre, former ambassador of Venezuela • 1 May 1968: Ottone Grisogono, former diplomat, Italy • 1 May 1968: Gaston De Schepper, former diplomat, Belgium • 6 June 1968:
Infanta Pilar, Duchess of Badajoz, Spain • 6 June 1968: , former mayor of Curitiba, Brazil • 6 June 1968: J. A. Ranitz, former ambassador of Netherlands • 30 June 1968: Cristian Tattenbach, former president of National Assembly, Costa Rica • 11 July 1968:
Bruno Heck, former minister of family affairs, Germany • 22 July 1968: Edwin Swain Miller, Rear Admiral, United States • 26 July 1968:
Julien Cain, former diplomat, France • 19 August 1968: G.E. do Nascimentoe Silva, former diplomat, Brazil • 19 August 1968: Carlos Sylvestre de Ouru Preto, former diplomat, Brazil • 1 February 1969:
Hervé Alphand, former diplomat, France • 31 March 1969: , former diplomat, Germany • 31 March 1969: , former diplomat, Germany • 31 March 1969: Vasco Tristão Letião da Cunha, former ambassador of Brazil • 1 May 1969:
Rudolph Hiemstra, former Commandant General, Defence Forces, South Africa • 1 May 1969:
Luis Edgardo Mercado Jarrín, former prime minister of Peru • 23 May 1969: Humberto Arguello Tefel, former diplomat, Nicaragua • 23 May 1969: Leandro Marín Abaunza, former diplomat, Nicaragua • 23 May 1969: Efraim Castilho Borges, former ambassador of Nicaragua • 28 May 1969: , former ambassador of Peru • 20 August 1969: Estela Ramualdez Sulit, former ambassador of Philippines • 22 September 1969:
Ángel Sagaz Zubelzu, former ambassador of Spain • 14 February 1970: Joseph Sigal, former Consul, United States • 2 March 1970:
Diego Uribe Vargas, former minister of foreign affairs, Colombia • 3 April 1970: Guilherme Sevilla Sacasa, former ambassador of Nicaragua • 21 May 1970: Enrique Lleras Restrepo, former ambassador of Colombia • 21 May 1970: Gerard Eliza van Ittersum, former ambassador of Germany • 10 July 1970: , former Minister of Health, Brazil • 10 July 1970: , former governor of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil • 10 July 1970: , former senator, Brazil • 10 July 1970: Adolpho Justo Bezerra de Menezes, former ambassador of Brazil • 10 July 1970:
Jean Dupong, former president of Council of State, Luxembourg • 10 July 1970: , former politician, Spain • 10 July 1970:
Gregorio López-Bravo, former minister of foreign affairs, Spain • 10 July 1970: María del Carmen Cotoner y Cotoner, Duke of Amalfi, Spain • 10 July 1970: Gabriel Fernandez de Valderrama Moreno, former diplomat, Spain • 10 August 1970: , former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 16 September 1970:
Édouard Bonnefous, former Minister of Commerce, France • 26 February 1971: Pedro Calmon, former Minister of Education, Brazil • 2 March 1971:
Jarbas Passarinho, former Minister of Education, Brazil • 2 March 1971:
Israel Pinheiro, former governor of Minas Gerais, Brazil • 2 March 1971:
Alacid Nunes, former governor of Pará, Brazil • 6 March 1971: Morinosuke Kajima, former senator, Japan • 31 May 1971: Petko Iliev, former diplomat, Bulgaria • 20 August 1971: Sadi J. Kavur, former ambassador of Turkey • 9 September 1971:
Gonzalo Facio Segreda, former minister of foreign affairs, Costa Rica • 19 January 1972: Nicolas Perazzo, former ambassador of Venezuela • 15 March 1972:
Henry Hopkinson, 1st Baron Colyton, former diplomat, United Kingdom • 11 April 1972: Ernesto Torres Diaz, former ambassador of Colombia • 11 April 1972: Phairot Jayanam, former ambassador of Thailand • 11 April 1972: , former Minister of National Defence, Colombia • 21 May 1972:
Humberto Sousa Medeiros, former Archbishop of Boston, United Kingdom • 25 July 1972: , former president of Senate, Brazil • 25 July 1972: , former president of Chamber of Deputies, Brazil • 25 July 1972: , former president of Federal Supreme Court, Brazil • 25 July 1972: , former Federal Deputy, Brazil • 25 July 1972: , former deputy governor of Bahia, Brazil • 25 July 1972: Egberto da Silva Mafra, former diplomat, Brazil • 25 July 1972:
Jorge D’Escragnolle Taunay, former diplomat, Brazil • 25 July 1972: Alarico da Silveira Junior, former diplomat, Brazil • 31 July 1972: António José Rodrigues Filho, former diplomat, Brazil • 28 August 1972: Duca Gerrit Eduard Middelburg, former ambassador of Netherlands • 7 November 1972: , former Chief of Staff, Federal District, Brazil • 7 November 1972: Pedro de Magalhães Padilha, former diplomat, Brazil • 19 December 1972: Alejandro Gallinal Heber, former ambassador of Uruguay • 19 December 1972: Wladimir Murtinho, former diplomat, Brazil • 8 March 1973: , former minister of army, Brazil • 28 March 1973: Jose Luis Cardona Cooper, former ambassador of Costa Rica • 28 March 1973: José António Giminez Arnan, former ambassador of Spain • 28 March 1973: Roman Ortega, former ambassador of Costa Rica • 11 April 1973: Carlos Borda Mendonza, former ambassador of Colombia • 25 April 1973: Pierre Emile Debillote, former diplomat, France • 26 July 1973: André Teixeira de Mesquita, former diplomat, Brazil • 26 July 1973: , former ambassador of Brazil • 26 September 1973:
Hugo Biermann, former Chief of Defence Staff, South Africa • 26 September 1973:
Werndly van der Riet, former Chief of Defence Staff, South Africa • 16 November 1973: Emilio Calderon Puig, former ambassador of Mexico • 2 December 1973: Hildegard Muller, former diplomat, South Africa • 14 January 1974: , former diplomat, Spain • 14 January 1974: , former ambassador of Spain • 12 February 1974: , former diplomat, Spain • 15 April 1974: Eduardo de Guzmán, former diplomat, Spain • 23 April 1974: Pablo M. del Pino, former Consul, Argentina • 23 April 1974:
Licinio de la Fuente, former Minister of Labour, Spain • 11 July 1974: , former Minister, Venezuela • 12 February 1975: Shusaku Wada, former ambassador of Japan • 28 February 1975:
Abdou Diouf, former president of Senegal (then Prime Minister) • 28 February 1975:
Assane Seck, former minister of foreign affairs, Senegal • 28 February 1975: , former Minister of Information, Senegal • 28 February 1975: Henri Arphang Senghor, former ambassador of Senegal • 17 April 1975: , former ambassador of Germany • 17 April 1975: Ramon Martin Herrero, former ambassador of Spain • 16 May 1975: , former diplomat, Sweden • 16 May 1975:
Gunnar Dryselius, former ambassador of Sweden • 28 May 1975:
Kenneth Kaunda, former president of Zambia • 21 October 1975:
Maurice Couve de Murville, former prime minister of France • 21 October 1975:
Yvon Bourges, former minister of defence, France • 21 October 1975:
Jean Sauvagnargues, former minister of foreign affairs, France • 21 October 1975:
Michel Poniatowski, former minister of interior, France • 21 October 1975: , former minister of foreign trade, France • 21 October 1975:
Paul Dijoud, former diplomat, France (later Minister of State, France) • 21 October 1975:
Manea Mănescu, former prime minister of Romania • 21 October 1975:
Ștefan Voitec, former president of Great National Assembly, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former vice president of State Council, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former deputy prime minister, Romania • 21 October 1975:
George Macovescu, former minister of foreign affairs, Romania • 21 October 1975:
Ștefan Andrei, former minister of foreign affairs, Romania • 21 October 1975:
Emil Bobu, former minister of interior, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former Minister of Electricity, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former minister of agriculture, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former Minister of Justice • 21 October 1975: , former Minister of Tourism, Romania • 21 October 1975:
Ioan Ioniță, former minister of armed forces, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former Minister, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former diplomat, Romania • 21 October 1975: Ion Patan, former diplomat, Romania • 21 October 1975: Marin Iliescu, former ambassador of Romania • 21 October 1975: Aurel Duma, former diplomat, Romania • 21 October 1975: , former diplomat, Romania • 22 October 1975: Ioan Avram, former diplomat, Romania • 1 July 1976: Masuo Yanagi, former chairman, Mitsui Bank, Japan • 10 July 1976:
Wojciech Jaruzelski, former president of Poland • 10 July 1976:
Edward Babiuch, former prime minister of Poland • 10 July 1976:
Józef Tejchma, former deputy prime minister, Poland • 10 July 1976: , former deputy prime minister, Poland • 10 July 1976:
Mieczysław Jagielski, former deputy prime minister, Poland • 10 July 1976:
Stefan Olszowski, former minister of foreign affairs, Poland • 10 July 1976: , former Member of Sejm, Poland • 28 July 1976:
Nikola Ljubičić, former president of Serbia, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Dragoslav Marković, former president of Serbia, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Raif Dizdarević, former president of Presidency, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Džemal Bijedić, former president of Federal Executive Council, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Kiro Gligorov, former president of Federal Assembly, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976: , former president of People's Assembly, Serbia, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Vladimir Bakarić, former Member of Presidency, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Miloš Minić, former minister of foreign affairs, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976: Emil Ludviger, former Member of Executive Council, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Jakov Blažević, former president of Executive Council, Croatia, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Živorad Kovačević, former diplomat, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976: Petar Zečević, former diplomat, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976: , former diplomat, Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976: Milan Stojakovic, former ambassador of Yugoslavia • 28 July 1976:
Peko Dapčević, former Chief of Staff, Yugoslavia • 11 August 1976: Trpe Jakovlevski, former diplomat, Yugoslavia • 22 September 1976:
Adolf Bredo Stabell, former ambassador of Norway • 6 December 1976: Bernard Durand, former Counsellor, France • 17 March 1977: Joaquim Bernal, former ambassador of Mexico • 20 May 1977: Nobuo Okuchi, former ambassador of Japan • 20 May 1977: Roberto Assumpção, former ambassador of Brazil • 20 May 1977: , former ambassador of East Germany • 5 July 1977: Nenko Draganov Tchendov, former ambassador of Bulgaria • 7 July 1977: , former Minister of Power, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Reinaldo Figueredo Planchart, former Minister, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Guido Grooscors, former minister of interior, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Jorge Gomez Mantellini, former governor of Caracas, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: German Nava Carrillo, former diplomat, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Román Valencia, former diplomat, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Jesus A. Ponce, former diplomat, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Gonzalo Plata, former diplomat, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Francisco Armando Guedez, former diplomat, Venezuela • 7 July 1977: Ney Pulgar, former diplomat, Venezuela • 1 September 1977: Francisco Astray Rodriguez, former ambassador of Cuba • 20 December 1977:
Ramiro Saraiva Guerreiro, former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former Minister of Justice, Brazil • 20 December 1977:
João Paulo dos Reis Veloso, former Minister of Planning, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former Minister of Health, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former Judge of Federal Supreme Court, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former governor of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil • 20 December 1977:
Paulo Egydio Martins, former governor of São Paulo, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former governor of Federal District, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former ambassador of Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former diplomat, Brazil • 20 December 1977: Armindo Branco Mendes Cadaxa, former diplomat, Brazil • 20 December 1977: João Paulo da Silva Paranhos do Rio Branco, former diplomat, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former diplomat, Brazil • 20 December 1977: , former diplomat, Brazil • 20 December 1977: Paulo Cabral de Mello, former diplomat, Brazil • 3 March 1978: Amir Shilaty, former ambassador of Iran • 20 April 1978:
Andrés Reguera, former Minister of Information, Spain • 20 April 1978: , former diplomat, Spain • 20 April 1978: Miguel Solano Aza, former diplomat, Spain • 20 April 1978: Antonio Elías Martinena, former diplomat, Spain • 20 April 1978: Pablo de Churruca y de la Plaza, Marqués de San Felices, Spain • 5 May 1978:
Janko Smole, former Minister of Finance, Yugoslavia • 5 May 1978: Anton Lah, former diplomat, Yugoslavia • 19 May 1978:
Hans-Jürgen Wischnewski, former Minister of Economic Cooperation, Germany • 19 May 1978:
Manfred Schüler, former Head of Chancellery, Germany • 19 May 1978:
Josef Ertl, former minister of agriculture, Germany • 19 May 1978:
Henning Schwarz, former Minister-President of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany • 19 May 1978: , former minister of agriculture, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany • 19 May 1978:
Günther van Well, former Secretary of State, Germany • 19 May 1978:
Peter Hermes, former diplomat, Germany • 19 May 1978: Frank Paul, former diplomat, Germany • 19 May 1978: , former diplomat, Germany • 19 May 1978: , former Government Spokesperson, Germany • 30 August 1978: Fernando Rodríguez-Porrero y de Chávarri, former ambassador of Spain • 30 August 1978:
Ingvald Smith-Kielland, former Court Marshal, Norway • 30 August 1978:
Georg Kristiansen, former diplomat, Norway • 30 August 1978:
Leif Edwardsen, former ambassador of Norway • 30 August 1978:
Tore Bøgh, former ambassador of Norway • 30 August 1978: , former Royal Physician, Norway • 7 September 1978:
Árpád Szenes, Hungarian painter • 28 December 1978:
João Figueiredo, former president of Brazil • 28 December 1978: , former Minister of Labour, Brazil • 28 December 1978:
Golbery do Couto e Silva, former Chief of Staff of Presidency, Brazil • 28 December 1978: , former minister of air force, Brazil • 28 December 1978: , former Minister of Navy, Brazil • 28 December 1978: Eduardo Moreira Hosannah, former ambassador of Brazil • 5 January 1979: , former minister of defence, Colombia • 18 April 1979:
Américo Ghioldi, former ambassador of Argentina • 18 May 1979:
John Wilson, 2nd Baron Moran, former ambassador of United Kingdom • 31 May 1979:
Frigyes Puja, former minister of foreign affairs, Hungary • 31 May 1979: Ferenc Simon, former diplomat, Hungary • 31 May 1979:
János Nagy, former diplomat, Hungary • 31 May 1979: József Birë, former diplomat, Hungary • 31 May 1979: Ferenc Csaba, former diplomat, Hungary • 31 May 1979:
Lyudmila Zhivkova, former politician, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979:
Petar Mladenov, former president of Bulgaria • 31 May 1979:
Grisha Filipov, former prime minister of Bulgaria • 31 May 1979:
Andrey Lukanov, former prime minister of Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: , former deputy chairman, State Council, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: Nikolay Manolov, former diplomat, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: Groudi Jelev, former diplomat, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: Grigor Stoytchkov, former diplomat, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: Ilia Kachev, former diplomat, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: Ognyan Donev, former diplomat, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: Boris Tsvetkov, former diplomat, Bulgaria • 31 May 1979: Dimitar Traykov, former ambassador of Bulgaria • 31 May 1979:
Christo Christov, Bulgarian film personality • 30 June 1979: Jorge Del Campo Vidal, former ambassador of Peru • 13 July 1979:
Géraud Michel de Pierredon, former diplomat, France • 28 July 1979: Luis Rodríguez, former ambassador of Venezuela • 14 August 1979:
Fortune FitzRoy, Duchess of Grafton, former Mistress of Robes, United Kingdom • 14 August 1979:
Philip Moore, Baron Moore of Wolvercote, former Private Secretary to Queen, United Kingdom • 1 September 1979: Kevin Rush, former ambassador of Ireland • 3 September 1979: , former ambassador of Poland • 14 September 1979: Charles Delgado, former ambassador of Senegal • 13 October 1979: Pierluigi Alverá, former ambassador of Italy • 15 October 1979:
Angelo Felici, President Emeritus, Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei • 9 January 1980:
Hassan Ali, former Minister of Economy, Iran • 30 June 1980: J. L. R. Huydecoper van Nigtevecht, former ambassador of Netherlands • 30 June 1980: Joseph Missanda, former ambassador of Gabon • 5 August 1980: Tómas Þorvaldsson, Icelandic fishing industry leader • 5 August 1980: Þórhallur Ásgeirsson, former diplomat, Iceland • 19 November 1980:
Gianni De Michelis, former deputy prime minister, Italy • 19 November 1980:
Giuseppe Zamberletti, former Minister of Civil Protection, Italy • 19 November 1980:
Piergiorgio Bressani, former Secretary, Council of Ministers, Italy • 19 November 1980: , former secretary-general, Foreign Ministry, Italy • 19 November 1980:
Cesidio Guazzaroni, former European Commissioner • 19 November 1980: Walter Gardini, former diplomat, Italy • 19 November 1980:
Maurizio Bucci, former diplomat, Italy • 19 November 1980: Carlo Calenda, former diplomat, Italy • 19 November 1980: Mário Magliano, former ambassador of Italy • 26 November 1980: Moriki Tani, former ambassador of Japan • 26 November 1980: Michel Mouzas, former ambassador of Greece • 5 December 1980:
Johan Jørgen Holst, former minister of foreign affairs, Norway • 5 December 1980:
Knut Frydenlund, former minister of foreign affairs, Norway • 5 December 1980:
Odd Grønvold, former Grand Chamberlain, Norway • 5 December 1980:
Magne Hagen, former private secretary to king, Norway • 5 December 1980:
Eivinn Berg, former state secretary, Foreign Ministry, Norway • 5 December 1980:
Sverre B. Hamre, former chief of defence, Norway • 5 December 1980: , former chief of armed forces, Norway • 5 December 1980:
Kjell Rasmussen, former diplomat, Norway • 23 December 1980: Jesco von Puttkamer, former ambassador of Germany • 19 January 1981:
Louis A. Lerner, former diplomat, United States • 19 January 1981: Dimitar Traykov, former ambassador of Bulgaria • 23 January 1981:
Virginio Rognoni, former minister of defence, Italy • 23 January 1981:
Antonio Maccanico, former minister of regional affairs, Italy • 23 January 1981:
Lelio Lagorio, former minister of defence, Italy • 23 January 1981: Arnaldo Esquillante, former diplomat, Italy • 28 January 1981: Chung Tai Kim, former ambassador of South Korea • 7 August 1981: Ahmed Abdul Mabi Macki, former minister of national economy, Oman • 7 August 1981: Karel Coeckx, former ambassador of Belgium • 7 August 1981:
Corsino Fortes, former ambassador of Cape Verde • 7 August 1981: Mariano Tirado, former ambassador of Venezuela • 7 August 1981: Robert Six, former ambassador of Belgium • 22 September 1981:
Dulce Figueiredo, former first lady of Brazil • 22 September 1981: Jorge Carlos Ribeiro, former diplomat, Brazil • 22 September 1981: João Carlos Pessoa Fragoso, former diplomat, Brazil • 22 September 1981: Orlando Soares Carbonar, former diplomat, Brazil • 22 September 1981: Ivan Velloso da Silveira Batalha, former diplomat, Brazil • 22 September 1981: Adolpho Corrêa de Sá e Benevides, former diplomat, Brazil • 19 October 1981:
Raniero Vanni d'Archirafi, former diplomat, Italy • 22 October 1981: Dimitris Heraclides, former ambassador of Greece • 26 October 1981: Benkaram Mohammed Darweefsh, former ambassador of Greece • 28 October 1981:
Petros Molyviatis, former minister of foreign affairs, Greece • 28 October 1981: Adamantios Vacalopoulos, former diplomat, Greece • 28 October 1981: Alexandre Raphael, former diplomat, Greece • 28 October 1981: Emmanuel Spyridakis, former ambassador of Greece • 28 October 1981: Aristotelis Frydas, former diplomat, Greece • 11 November 1981: , former minister of aeronautics, Brazil • 25 November 1981:
Juan José Rosón, former minister of interior, Spain • 27 April 1982:
Gaston Thorn, former prime minister of Luxembourg • 26 June 1982: Jean-François de Liedekerke, former ambassador of Belgium • 26 June 1982: , former diplomat, Belgium • 16 August 1982: , former ambassador of Algeria • 7 September 1982:
Paulo Maluf, former governor of São Paulo, Brazil • 15 November 1982: Ahmed Maher El Sayed, former ambassador of Egypt • 10 December 1982:
Jean-Luc Dehaene, former prime minister of Belgium • 10 December 1982:
Philippe Maystadt, former deputy prime minister, Belgium • 10 December 1982:
Alfred Vreven, former minister of defence, Belgium • 10 December 1982: Albert Debeche, former Chief of Defence, Belgium • 10 December 1982: , former secretary-general, Foreign Ministry, Belgium • 10 December 1982: José Charlier, former diplomat, Belgium • 10 December 1982: Joseph Trouveroy, former diplomat, Belgium • 10 December 1982: Willy Tielemans, former diplomat, Belgium • 10 December 1982: Prosper Thuysbaert, former diplomat, Belgium • 10 December 1982:
Gilbert Declercq, Belgian artist • 5 May 1983: , former Minister of Urban Development, Hungary • 5 May 1983: , former deputy foreign minister, Hungary • 5 May 1983: Tibor Melega, former deputy trade minister, Hungary • 5 May 1983: Zsolt Bajnok, former diplomat, Hungary • 5 May 1983: László Rosta, former diplomat, Hungary • 5 May 1983: Ede Gazdik, former ambassador of Hungary • 5 May 1983: Ferenc Farago, former diplomat, Hungary • 16 May 1983: Bailio Fra'Hubert Pallavicini, Italian noble • 18 May 1983: , former Minister of Navy, Brazil • 30 July 1983: Yutaka Tamura, former ambassador of Japan • 16 August 1983:
Jean-Marie Piret, former Principal Private Secretary to King, Belgium • 16 August 1983: Guiseppe Arturo Nigra, former ambassador of Italy • 16 August 1983: Giacomo Profili, former ambassador of Italy • 19 August 1983:
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, former secretary-general, United Nations • 19 August 1983: Saied Abdel Kader Hamza, former diplomat, Egypt • 19 August 1983: Gamal Mansour, former diplomat, Egypt • 19 August 1983: Mohamed El-Sayed El, former diplomat, Egypt • 19 August 1983: Mahmond Amin Fathi, former diplomat, Egypt • 19 August 1983: Mokhless Gobba, former diplomat, Egypt • 19 August 1983: Mohamed Abdel Hamid Raduan, former diplomat, Egypt • 19 August 1983: Yehia Refaat, former diplomat, Egypt • 22 August 1983:
Karolos Papoulias, former president of Greece (then Minister) • 22 August 1983:
Menios Koutsogiorgas, former minister of interior, Greece • 22 August 1983: Pausanias Zakolikos, former deputy minister of national defence, Greece • 22 August 1983:
Yannis Kapsis, former deputy minister of foreign affairs, Greece • 22 August 1983:
Grigoris Varfis, former president of Council, European Union • 22 August 1983: Georges Sekeris, former ambassador of Greece • 22 August 1983: , former diplomat, Greece • 22 August 1983: Dimitrios Maroudas, former diplomat, Greece • 22 August 1983: Dimitris Papaioannon, former diplomat, Greece • 2 September 1983:
Andrzej Maria Deskur, former president, Pontifical Academy of Immaculate Conception • 2 September 1983:
Paul Marcinkus, Pro-President Emeritus, Pontifical Commission • 2 September 1983:
Lucas Moreira Neves, former Prefect, Congregation for Bishops • 5 November 1983:
Richard L. Lawson, former deputy chief, U.S. Europe Command • 6 January 1984:
Julián Campo, former minister of public works, Spain • 6 January 1984:
Carlos Romero, former minister of agriculture, Food, Spain • 6 January 1984:
Miguel Boyer, former Minister of Economy, Commerce, Spain • 6 January 1984: Ramón Fernandez de Soignie, former ambassador of Spain • 6 January 1984:
Luis de Velasco Rami, former Secretary of State, Commerce, Spain • 6 January 1984:
Eduardo Sotillos, former Government Spokesperson, Spain • 6 January 1984:
Manuel Marín, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Spain • 17 January 1984:
Pentti Talvitie, former ambassador of Finland • 17 January 1984: Tómas A. Tómasson, former ambassador, Iceland • 17 January 1984:
Ingvi Sigurður Ingvarsson, former diplomat, Iceland • 17 January 1984: Einar Benediktsson, former ambassador, Iceland • 19 January 1984: Pedro Pablo Aguilar, former politician, Venezuela • 18 April 1984:
Herma Kirchschläger, former first lady of Austria • 18 April 1984:
Leopold Gratz, former president of National Council, Austria • 18 April 1984: , former Third President of National Council, Austria • 18 April 1984:
Peter Jankowitsch, former minister of foreign affairs, Austria • 18 April 1984:
Wilfried Haslauer, former governor of Salzburg, Austria • 18 April 1984: , former secretary-general, Foreign Ministry, Austria • 18 April 1984: Wolfgang Loibl, former Head of Presidential Chancellery, Austria • 18 April 1984: , former ambassador of Austria • 18 April 1984: Hans Nigisch, former diplomat, Austria • 18 April 1984: Kurt Zeleny, former diplomat, Austria • 18 April 1984: Robert Danzinger, former Director-General of Public Safety, Austria • 14 May 1984:
Joaquim Chissano, former president of Mozambique • 4 July 1984:
Joseph Luns, former secretary-general, NATO • 4 July 1984: Sinclair L. Melner, former deputy chair, NATO Military Committee • 4 July 1984:
Alfredo Karam, former Minister of Navy, Brazil • 4 July 1984: Lee Chong Chin, former ambassador of North Korea • 4 July 1984: Geoffrey Vincent Brady, former ambassador of Australia • 30 July 1984: André Corsino Tolentino, former ambassador of Cape Verde • 3 August 1984: , former ambassador of Peru • 13 August 1984: Napoleon Gimenez, former ambassador of Venezuela • 29 August 1984:
Emiel van Lennep, former secretary-general, OECD • 22 September 1984:
Narcís Serra, former deputy prime minister, Spain • 25 September 1984: Peter Udoh, former ambassador of Nigeria • 16 November 1984:
Lars-Erik Thunholm, former CEO, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken • 16 November 1984: , former Court Marshal, Denmark • 16 November 1984:
Uffe Ellemann-Jensen, former minister of foreign affairs, Denmark • 16 November 1984: Per Fergo, former ambassador of Denmark • 24 November 1984:
Ferdinand Lacina, former Minister of Finance, Austria • 24 November 1984:
Antoinette Sassou Nguesso, First Lady of Republic of the Congo • 12 December 1984:
Hans-Dietrich Genscher, former Vice-Chancellor of Germany • 12 December 1984:
Léon Kengo wa Dondo, former prime minister of Zaire • 12 December 1984:
Mpinga Kasenda, former prime minister of Zaire • 12 December 1984: Nyiwa Mobutu, former Minister, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Nzondomyo Adokpe Lingo, former president of National Assembly, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Umba-di Lutete, former minister of foreign affairs, Zaire • 12 December 1984:
Victor Nendaka Bika, former Minister of Finance, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Seti Yale, former Advisor to President, Zaire • 12 December 1984:
Mosambaye Singa Boyenge, former Chief of Armed Forces, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Bangala Oto-Wa-Ngama, former governor of Kinshasa • 12 December 1984: Bonsange, former diplomat, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Lengema Dulia, former diplomat, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Bomele Molinco Ikaki, former diplomat, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Lema Mvunda, former diplomat, Zaire • 12 December 1984: Bulambo, former ambassador of Zaire • 12 December 1984: Pay-Paywa Saykasige, former ambassador of Zaire • 29 January 1985: Marcel Houllez, former ambassador of Belgium • 29 January 1985:
Christian Calmes, former Grand Marshal, Luxembourg • 29 January 1985:
Jacques Poos, former deputy prime minister, Luxembourg • 29 January 1985: Léopold Quarles van Ufford, former ambassador of Luxembourg • 13 March 1985: Enrique Quintana, former ambassador of Argentina • 13 March 1985:
Silvino Manuel da Luz, former Minister of Foreign Minister, Cape Verde • 26 April 1985: Cardinal
Agostino Casaroli, former Secretary of State, Holy See • 26 April 1985:
Siddhi Savetsila, former deputy prime minister, Thailand • 9 July 1985: Toshikuni Yahiro, former chairman, Mitsui & Co. • 19 August 1985: Hassan Solaiman Abu Basha, former diplomat, Egypt • 5 September 1985: Kim Ki-Soo, former ambassador of South Korea • 5 September 1985: Willt Patocchi, former ambassador of Uruguay • 5 September 1985: , former ambassador of Germany • 5 September 1985: Carlos Luis Pedroso, former ambassador of Spain • 5 September 1985: Manuel Fonseca Veloso, former ambassador of São Tomé and Príncipe • 12 November 1985:
Robert Urbain, Minister of State, Belgium • 12 November 1985:
Walter Moreira Salles, former Minister of Finance, Brazil • 31 January 1986:
Arturo Uslar Pietri, former Minister of Finance, Venezuela • 25 February 1986:
Lorenzo Natali, former European Commissioner for International Cooperation • 18 July 1986:
Bernardo Sepúlveda Amor, former Vice President, International Court of Justice • 14 July 1986:
Luís Viana Filho, former president of Federal Senate, Brazil • 14 July 1986:
Rubens Ricupero, former secretary-general, UNCTAD • 14 July 1986: Paulo Cardoso de Oliveira Pires do Rio, former diplomat, Brazil • 14 July 1986: Carlos Eduardo Fonseca Alves, former diplomat, Brazil • 14 July 1986: Joshua Montello, former diplomat, Brazil • 14 July 1986: João Tabajara de Oliveira, former diplomat, Brazil • 14 July 1986:
Paulo Tarso Flecha de Lima, former ambassador of Brazil • 12 December 1986: Bokota w' Ekila, Zaire • 13 January 1987: Nils-Eric Svensson, Swedish sports administrator • 13 January 1987:
Alice Trolle-Wachtmeister, former Chief Court Mistress, Sweden • 13 January 1987: , former Marshal of Royal Court, Sweden • 13 January 1987:
Sten Andersson, former minister of foreign affairs, Sweden • 13 January 1987:
Jan Eliasson, former minister of foreign affairs, Sweden • 13 January 1987: Göran Hasselmark, diplomat, Sweden • 13 January 1987:
Sven Fredrik Hedin, former ambassador of Sweden • 21 January 1987:
Blanca Ibáñez, former first lady of Venezuela • 21 January 1987:
Oswaldo Álvarez Paz, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Venezuela • 21 January 1987:
Carmelo Lauría Lesseur, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Venezuela • 21 January 1987: Freddy Augusto Gonzalez Echenagucia, former secretary-general to President, Venezuela • 21 January 1987: Moritz Eiris Villegas, former ambassador of Venezuela • 21 January 1987: Ruben Carpio Castillo, Venezuelan author • 21 January 1987: Horacio Arteaga, Venezuela • 21 January 1987: Rafael José Neri, former Rector, UCV, Venezuela • 21 January 1987: Pedro Sorensen, former ambassador of Venezuela • 28 October 1987:
Danielle Mitterrand, former first lady of France • 31 October 1987:
Poul Schlüter, former prime minister of Denmark • 31 October 1987: Niels Christian Ersbøll, former secretary-general, Council of Europe • 31 October 1987:
Laurent Fabius, former prime minister of France • 31 October 1987:
Bettino Craxi, former prime minister of Italy • 31 October 1987:
Frans Andriessen, former European Commissioner • 31 October 1987:
Garret FitzGerald, former Taoiseach of Ireland • 31 October 1987:
Jacques Delors, former president of European Commission • 31 October 1987:
Étienne Davignon, former Vice-President, European Commission • 31 October 1987:
Émile Noël, former president, European University Institute • 31 October 1987:
Wilfried Martens, former prime minister of Belgium • 31 October 1987:
Ruud Lubbers, former prime minister of Netherlands • 26 November 1987:
Aureliano Chaves, former Vice President of Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Marco Maciel, former Vice President of Brazil • 26 November 1987: , former president of Senate, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Ulysses Guimarães, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Brazil • 26 November 1987: , former president of Supreme Court, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Abreu Sodré, former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Dilson Funaro, former Minister of Finance, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Waldir Pires, former minister of defence, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Renato Archer, former Minister of Science and Technology, Brazil • 26 November 1987: , former minister of culture, Brazil • 26 November 1987: , former minister of industry, Brazil • 26 November 1987: , former secretary-general to president, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Epitácio Cafeteira, former governor of Maranhão, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Miguel Arraes, former governor of Pernambuco, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Jorge Bornhausen, former governor of Santa Catarina, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Orestes Quércia, former governor of São Paulo, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Moreira Franco, former governor of Rio De Janeiro, Brazil • 26 November 1987: José Augusto Olympio Rocha de Almeida, former ambassador of Brazil • 26 November 1987: , former diplomat, Brazil • 26 November 1987: José Nogueira Filho, former diplomat, Brazil • 26 November 1987:
Adolpho Bloch, Brazilian television personality • 26 November 1987: , Brazilian businessman • 26 November 1987:
Roberto Marinho, Brazilian businessman • 5 December 1987: , former diplomat, Norway • 25 January 1988: Hernani do Amaral Peixoto, former diplomat, Brazil • 5 July 1988:
Giuliano Vassalli, former president of Constitutional Court, Italy • 25 August 1988: Funiya Okada, former ambassador of Japan • 13 October 1988:
Queen Sofía of Spain • 13 October 1988:
Infanta Margarita, Duchess of Soria • 13 October 1988:
José Federico de Carvajal, former president of Senate, Spain • 13 October 1988:
Francisco Fernández Ordóñez, former minister of foreign affairs, Spain • 13 October 1988:
Félix Pons, former Minister of Territorial Administration, Spain • 13 October 1988:
José Rodríguez de la Borbolla, former president of Andalusia Government, Spain • 13 October 1988:
Jordi Pujol, former president of Catalonian Government, Spain • 13 October 1988:
Gabriel Ferrán de Alfaro, former ambassador of Spain • 13 October 1988: Fernando Perpiña Robert, former diplomat, Spain • 13 October 1988:
Máximo Cajal López, former diplomat, Spain • 12 November 1988:
Léon Bollendorff, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Luxembourg • 12 November 1988:
Jean-Claude Juncker, former prime minister of Luxembourg • 12 November 1988:
Bernard Berg, former deputy prime minister of Luxembourg • 12 November 1988:
Marc Fischbach, former minister of defence, Luxembourg • 12 November 1988:
Robert Krieps, former minister of culture, Environment, Luxembourg • 12 November 1988:
Fernand Boden, former Minister of National Education, Luxembourg • 12 November 1988:
Jean Spautz, former minister of home affairs, Luxembourg • 12 November 1988:
Marcel Schlechter, former Minister of Transport, Luxembourg • 18 March 1989: Moulay Slama Benzidane, former ambassador of Morocco • 5 May 1989: Fernando Nardiz Vial, former Chief of Navy, Spain • 2 June 1989:
Marianne von Weizsäcker, former first lady of Germany • 2 June 1989:
Wolfgang Schäuble, former president of Bundestag, Germany • 2 June 1989:
Martin Bangemann, former Minister of Economics, Germany • 2 June 1989:
Irmgard Schwaetzer, former Minister of Regional Planning, Germany • 2 June 1989:
Lutz Stavenhagen, former Minister of State, Germany • 2 June 1989: , former Minister of State, Germany • 2 June 1989:
Lothar Späth, former Minister-President of Baden-Württemberg, Germany • 2 June 1989:
Eberhard Diepgen, former Governing Mayor of Berlin, Germany • 2 June 1989: , former Head of President's Office, Germany • 2 June 1989: , former State Secretary, Foreign Office, Germany • 2 June 1989: , former State Secretary, Germany • 2 June 1989: , former ambassador of Germany • 16 April 1990:
Albrecht von Boeselager, former Grand Chancellor, Sovereign Military Order of Malta • 11 May 1990: Stephen Reckert, American writer • 12 September 1990: , former minister of foreign affairs, Ecuador • 12 September 1990:
Giulio Andreotti, former prime minister of Italy • 12 September 1990:
Valerio Zanone, former minister of defence, Italy • 12 September 1990:
Antonio Mario La Pergola, former Minister of Community Policies, Italy • 12 September 1990:
Antonio Gava, former minister of interior, Italy • 12 September 1990: , former Undersecretary of State, Italy • 12 September 1990: , former secretary-general to President, Italy • 12 September 1990: , former secretary-general, Foreign Ministry, Italy • 12 September 1990: Luigi Garafoli, former diplomat, Italy • 12 September 1990: Franco Ferretti, former diplomat, Italy • 12 September 1990: , former ambassador of Italy • 12 September 1990:
Sergio Berlinguer, former secretary-general to President, Italy • 19 October 1990: , former Minister of Navy, Brazil • 19 October 1990: , former Minister of Navy, Brazil • 19 October 1990: , former Minister of Justice, Brazil • 5 November 1990: Axel Buus, former ambassador of Denmark • 8 November 1990:
Jacques Santer, former president of European Commission • 12 November 1990:
Theodoros Pangalos, former deputy prime minister, Greece • 12 November 1990: Dimitrios Makris, Greece • 12 November 1990: Konstantinos Iliopoulos, former diplomat, Greece • 12 November 1990: Georgios Mathioudakis, former diplomat, Greece • 12 November 1990: Leonidas Papakarias, former diplomat, Greece • 12 November 1990: Stylianos Vassilikos, former ambassador of Greece • 12 November 1990:
Costas Simitis, former prime minister of Greece • 22 November 1990:
Noboru Takeshita, former prime minister of Japan • 23 November 1990:
Andreas Meyer-Landrut, former chief of staff to president, Germany • 12 December 1990:
Bengt Rabaeus, former diplomat, Sweden • 21 December 1990:
Oscar Rizzato, Archbishop, Vatican City • 21 December 1990: Pietro Canisio Van Lierde, Archbishop, Vatican City • 21 December 1990:
Domenico De Luca, Archbishop, Vatican City • 21 December 1990:
Dino Monduzzi, former Prefect, Papal Household • 2 January 1991:
Alberto da Costa e Silva, former ambassador of Brazil • 22 January 1991: Alexander Otto, former ambassador of Austria • 20 February 1991: Cardinal
Achille Silvestrini, former Prefect, Congregation for Oriental Churches • 27 February 1991:
Gabriel Ferrán de Alfaro, former ambassador of Spain • 15 April 1991: Luciano Koch, former ambassador of Italy • 14 May 1991:
Pieter van Vollenhoven, Netherlands • 14 May 1991:
Ruud Lubbers, former prime minister of Netherlands • 14 May 1991:
Hans van den Broek, former minister of foreign affairs, Netherlands • 15 May 1991: , Marshal, Sweden • 15 May 1991:
Lennart Ljung, former Supreme Commander of Armed Forces, Sweden • 15 May 1991:
Bror Stefenson, former Chief of Defence Staff, Sweden • 15 May 1991:
Björn Eriksson, former president of Interpol • 15 May 1991: Jan Kuylenstierna, Marshal, Sweden • 15 May 1991: , former Chief Master of Ceremonies, Sweden • 15 May 1991: , former diplomat, Sweden • 15 May 1991: Kerstin Asp. Johnsson, former ambassador of Sweden • 2 July 1991:
Luiz Felipe Lampreia, former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 2 July 1991: , former Head of Security to President, Brazil • 2 July 1991:
Marcos Azambuja, former diplomat, Brazil • 2 July 1991:
Tellervo Koivisto, former first lady of Finland • 2 July 1991:
Pertti Paasio, former minister of foreign affairs, Finland • 29 August 1991:
Edgar Faure, former prime minister of France • 9 December 1991:
Jacques De Staercke, former politician, Belgium • 9 December 1991:
Jean Godeaux, former governor of National Bank, Belgium • 3 February 1992: John Correia Afonso, Indian author • 14 February 1992: Robert Van Overberghe, former ambassador of Belgium • 10 June 1992:
Alceu Amoroso Lima, Brazilian writer • 10 June 1992: , British musician • 26 August 1992:
Enrique Silva Cimma, former minister of foreign affairs, Chile • 30 September 1992: Giovanni Battistini, former ambassador of Italy • 30 September 1992:
Emilio Cassinello, former ambassador of Spain • 12 October 1992: , former Court Marshal, Denmark • 12 October 1992: , former chamberlain, Denmark • 12 October 1992: , former Speaker of Folketing, Denmark • 23 November 1992: , Spanish anthropologist • 2 December 1992:
Empress Masako of Japan • 26 March 1993:
Simone Veil, former president of European Parliament • 26 March 1993: King
Mohammed VI of Morocco • 26 March 1993:
Prince Moulay Rachid of Morocco • 27 April 1993:
David Ogilvy, 13th Earl of Airlie, former Lord Chamberlain, United Kingdom • 27 April 1993:
David Gillmoore, former Permanent Undersecretary, United Kingdom • 27 April 1993:
Robert Fellowes, former Private Secretary to Queen, United Kingdom • 9 June 1993: Paulo Cesar Prado Ferreira da Gama, former diplomat, Brazil • 9 June 1993: Joaquim-Francisco Coelho, former diplomat, Brazil • 21 June 1993: Basilio Basilio I, Poland • 9 July 1993:
Gabriel Valdés, former minister of foreign affairs, Chile • 9 July 1993:
José Antonio Viera-Gallo, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Chile • 4 October 1993:
Chilel Jawara, former first lady of the Gambia • 9 November 1993:
Emilio García Gómez, Spanish historian • 15 November 1993:
Robert Van Lierop, former diplomat, United States • 29 November 1993:
Princess Lalla Meryem of Morocco • 2 December 1993:
Norihito, Prince Takamado • 2 December 1993:
Hisako, Princess Takamado • 2 December 1993:
Morihiro Hosokawa, former prime minister of Japan • 2 December 1993:
Tsutomu Hata, former prime minister of Japan • 2 December 1993:
Takako Doi, former Speaker of House of Representatives, Japan • 2 December 1993: Bunbei Hara, former president, Asian Women's Fund • 2 December 1993: Ryouhachi Kusaba, former diplomat, Japan • 7 December 1993:
Celso Amorim, former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 11 August 1994:
Georgios Iacovou, former minister of foreign affairs, Cyprus • 11 August 1994: Andreas Gavrielides, former diplomat, Cyprus • 30 August 1994: , former Minister of Navy, Brazil • 8 September 1994:
Jean-Michel Wilmotte, French architect • 27 October 1994:
Loïc Bouvard, former Member of National Assembly, France • 9 November 1994:
Eddie Fenech Adami, former president of Malta • 14 November 1994:
Wilfred de Souza, former Chief Minister of Goa, India • 14 November 1994:
Bruce Millan, former European Commissioner for Regional Policy • 14 November 1994:
Earl A. Powell III, former chairman, U.S. Commission of Fine Arts • 29 November 1994:
Efraín Goldenberg, former prime minister of Peru • 20 December 1994:
José Joaquín Puig de la Bellacasa, former secretary-general of Royal Household, Spain • 3 March 1995: Pieter Andries Swanepoel, former ambassador of South Africa • 30 March 1995:
Stanley Ho, Founder Chairman of SJM Holdings • 11 April 1995: Aldo Ajello, former diplomat, Italy • 26 June 1995:
Esperança Machavela, former Minister of Justice, Mozambique • 25 July 1995:
Federico Mayor Zaragoza, former Director-General, UNESCO • 26 July 1995:
Ruy Mingas, former ambassador of Angola • 2 October 1995:
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, former president of Tunisia • 4 October 1995: , former Federal Deputy, Brazil • 4 October 1995: , former Minister of Justice, Brazil • 4 October 1995:
Artur da Távola, former Federal Deputy, Brazil • 4 October 1995:
Roseana Sarney, former governor of Maranhão, Brazil • 4 October 1995:
Sérgio Amaral, former Minister of Development, Trade, Brazil • 9 November 1995:
Pratapsingh Rane, former Chief Minister of Goa, India • 9 January 1996:
Alioune Blondin Béye, former minister of foreign affairs, Mali • 16 January 1996:
Venâncio da Silva Moura, former Minister of External Relations, Angola • 16 January 1996: Wu Tao, former diplomat, China • 22 February 1996: José María Vargas-Zúñiga Ledesma, Spain • 22 February 1996:
Enrique Fuentes Quintana, former deputy prime minister, Spain • 22 February 1996:
Fernando Lázaro Carreter, Spanish journalist • 22 February 1996:
José Ángel Sánchez Asiaín, Spanish economist • 22 February 1996:
Miguel Artola Gallego, Spanish historian • 7 May 1996:
Marcolino Moco, former prime minister of Angola • 20 May 1996: Michel-Akis Papageorgiou, former ambassador of Greece • 3 June 1996:
Guilherme Posser da Costa, former prime minister of São Tomé and Príncipe • 17 June 1996:
Thabo Mbeki, former president of South Africa • 23 August 1996:
Infanta Elena, Duchess of Lugo • 23 August 1996:
Infanta Cristina of Spain • 23 August 1996:
José María Aznar, former prime minister of Spain • 23 August 1996:
Federico Trillo, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Spain • 23 August 1996:
Abel Matutes, former minister of foreign affairs • 23 August 1996: Miguel Díaz Pache, former diplomat, Spain • 23 August 1996: Cristina Barrios Almazor, former diplomat, Spain • 23 August 1996: , former ambassador of Spain • 23 August 1996:
Rafael Spottorno, former secretary-general of Royal Household, Spain • 23 August 1996: , former Head of Royal Household of HM King, Spain • 10 February 1997:
Carlos Veiga, former prime minister of Cape Verde • 12 May 1997: Leonardo Santos Simão, former diplomat, Mozambique • 12 May 1997: Francisco Caetano Madeira, former diplomat, Mozambique • 9 June 1997: James Mitchel, former diplomat, Venezuela • 18 August 1997:
Paulo Souto, former governor of Bahia, Brazil • 18 August 1997: , former governor of Minas Gerais, Brazil • 18 August 1997:
Marcello Alencar, former governor of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil • 18 August 1997:
Cristovam Buarque, former governor of Federal District, Brazil • 18 August 1997:
Mario Covas, former governor of São Paulo, Brazil • 23 September 1997: Mihu Miron Biji, former ambassador of Romania • 8 October 1997: , former president of Senate, Spain • 15 October 1997: Walter Neuer, former ambassador of Germany • 17 October 1997:
Miguel Ángel Burelli Rivas, former minister of foreign affairs, Venezuela • 17 October 1997: Nelson Valera Parra, former diplomat, Venezuela • 17 October 1997:
Fernando José de França Dias Van-Dúnem, former prime minister of Angola • 21 November 1997:
Elizabeth Frawley Bagley, former ambassador of United States • 16 December 1997:
Antônio Carlos Magalhães, former president of Senate, Brazil • 16 December 1997: , former secretary-general of Presidency, Brazil • 16 December 1997: , former Minister of Development, Trade, Brazil • 16 December 1997: , former Chief of General Staff, Brazil • 16 December 1997: , former Minister of Science and Technology, Brazil • 16 December 1997:
Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira, former Minister of Finance, Brazil • 16 December 1997:
Francisco Weffort, former minister of culture, Brazil • 16 December 1997:
José Botafogo Gonçalves, former minister of industry, Commerce, Brazil • 16 December 1997: , former Federal Deputy, Brazil • 16 December 1997: Adhemar Gabriel Bahadian, former ambassador of Brazil • 16 December 1997: Ivan de Cannabrava, former diplomat, Brazil • 16 December 1997: , former Military Chief to President, Brazil • 16 December 1997: Gelson Fonseca Jr., former diplomat, Brazil • 16 December 1997: João Augusto de Médicis, former diplomat, Brazil • 16 December 1997: Affonso Emilio de Alencastro Massot, former diplomat, Brazil • 16 December 1997: Luis Tupy Calder de Moura, former diplomat, Brazil • 13 March 1998:
Jean-Claude Paye, former secretary-general, OECD • 13 March 1998: Daniel Elm, former ambassador of Argentina • 13 March 1998:
Amílcar Spencer Lopes, former minister of foreign affairs, Cape Verde • 16 April 1998:
Oleksandr Moroz, former chairman of Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine • 16 April 1998:
Valeriy Pustovoitenko, former prime minister of Ukraine • 16 April 1998:
Hennadiy Udovenko, former minister of foreign affairs, Ukraine • 12 May 1998:
Empress Michiko of Japan • 12 May 1998:
Yukihiko Ikeda, former minister of foreign affairs, Japan • 29 May 1998: Cristobal Fernández Daló, former president of Senate, Venezuela • 29 May 1998: , former minister of interior, Venezuela • 29 May 1998: Freddy Rojas Parra, former Minister of Finance, Venezuela • 1 July 1998:
Plácido Domingo, Spanish opera singer and conductor • 20 July 1998:
Alfredo Kraus, Spanish tenor • 5 August 1998: Cardinal
Jean-Marie Lustiger, Archbishop Emeritus of Paris • 13 August 1998:
Helmut Kohl, former chancellor of Germany • 13 August 1998:
Rita Süssmuth, former president of Bundestag, Germany • 13 August 1998:
Bernhard Vogel, former president of Bundesrat, Germany • 13 August 1998:
Edmund Stoiber, former president of Bundesrat, Germany • 19 October 1998:
Rosario Green, former Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Mexico • 19 October 1998:
Herminio Blanco Mendoza, former Secretary of Trade and Industry, Mexico • 19 October 1998: Pedro González Rubio S., former diplomat, Mexico • 19 October 1998: , former diplomat, Mexico • 27 October 1998:
Peter Sutherland, former director, World Trade Organization • 16 November 1998:
Vartan Gregorian, American academic • 4 February 1999:
Dominique de Villepin, former prime minister of France • 4 February 1999:
Catherine Trautmann, former minister of culture, France • 4 February 1999:
Hubert Védrine, former minister of foreign affairs, France • 27 May 1999:
Anthony Giddens, British sociologist • 31 May 1999:
Cesária Évora, Cape Verdean singer-songwriter • 9 July 1999: Vincente Loscertales, former diplomat, Spain • 9 July 1999: Ole Philipson, former diplomat, Denmark • 2 September 1999:
Monika Wulf-Mathies, former European Commissioner • 16 November 1999:
Jan Arvesen, former ambassador of Norway • 13 September 1999: Mohamed Khairet El Fattah Radi, former ambassador of Egypt • 13 December 1999:
Louis Michel, former minister of foreign affairs, Belgium • 13 December 1999:
Michel Corboz, Swiss conductor • 13 December 1999: Constantinos Ailianos, former diplomat, Greece • 13 December 1999: Emmanouil Gikas, former diplomat, Greece • 13 December 1999: Georges Yennimatas, former diplomat, Greece • 13 December 1999:
Christos Rokofyllos, former diplomat, Greece • 11 January 2000:
José Patrício, former ambassador of Angola • 11 January 2000:
Alfred Missong jun., former ambassador of Austria • 14 March 2000:
José Sarney, former president of Brazil • 14 March 2000:
Ruth Cardoso, former first lady of Brazil • 14 March 2000:
Andrea Matarazzo, former diplomat, Brazil • 14 March 2000:
Rafael Greca, former mayor of Curitiba, Brazil • 14 March 2000: Frederico Cezar de Araujo, former ambassador of Brazil • 14 March 2000: Valter Pechy Moreira, former diplomat, Brazil • 14 March 2000: Lauro Barbosa da Silva Moreira, former diplomat, Brazil • 15 March 2000:
Mircea Ionescu-Quintus, former president of Senate, Romania • 15 March 2000:
Ion Diaconescu, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Romania • 15 March 2000:
Mugur Isărescu, former prime minister of Romania • 6 April 2000:
Jorge Alberto Lozoya, former diplomat, Mexico • 6 April 2000:
José Ángel Gurría, former secretary-general, OECD • 14 April 2000: Nikola Kaloudou, former ambassador of Bulgaria • 12 May 2000:
Luís Eduardo Magalhães, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Brazil • 2 August 2000:
Joaquim Rafael Branco, former prime minister of São Tomé and Príncipe • 11 September 2000: , former diplomat, Spain • 11 September 2000: , former secretary-general to HM King, Spain • 11 September 2000: Juan Manuel de Barandica y Luxán, former ambassador of Spain • 11 September 2000: Alfonso Sanz Portolés, former secretary-general of Royal Household, Spain • 24 October 2000:
Gregorio Peces-Barba, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Spain • 12 December 2000: Lucas Mahlasela Makhubela, former diplomat, South Africa • 3 January 2001: Guiseppe Acqua, former ambassador of Italy • 5 February 2001:
Gerald S. McGowan, former ambassador of the United States • 16 February 2001: Walter Slaves, former ambassador of Peru • 22 May 2001: Patricia Marsden‑Dole, former Trade Commissioner, Canada • 18 June 2001: Pedro Comissário Afonso, former diplomat, Mozambique • 4 July 2001: Niels Tillisch, former ambassador of Norway • 16 July 2001: Krister Isaksson, former ambassador of Sweden • 4 August 2001:
Celso Lafer, former minister of foreign affairs, Brazil • 26 September 2001:
Jorge Rodríguez Grossi, former Minister of Economy, Tourism, Chile • 26 September 2001:
Heraldo Muñoz, former minister of foreign affairs, Chile • 26 September 2001: Eduardo Araya Alemparte, former ambassador of Chile • 8 November 2001:
Jorge Giordani, former Minister of Finance, Venezuela • 8 November 2001: , former Minister of Energy, Venezuela • 8 November 2001:
Luis Alfonso Dávila, former minister of foreign affairs, Venezuela • 8 November 2001: Andrés Eloy Rondën, former ambassador of Venezuela • 8 November 2001: María Lourdes Urbaneja, former diplomat, Venezuela • 14 November 2001:
Adalberto Rodríguez Giavarini, former minister of foreign affairs, Argentina • 14 November 2001: Jesús Fernando Taboada, former diplomat, Argentina • 3 January 2002: , former senator, Italy • 3 January 2002: , Italian historian • 3 January 2002: , former diplomat, Italy • 14 February 2002: Josef Hendrikus Jeurissen, former ambassador of the Netherlands • 14 February 2002: Antônio Paulo Cachapuz de Medeiro, former diplomat, Brazil • 5 April 2002:
Peter Cosgrove, former Governor-General of Australia (then Defence Chief) • 9 June 2002: , French poet and writer • 18 August 2002:
Margot Klestil-Löffler, former first lady of Austria • 18 August 2002:
Franz Schausberger, former governor of Salzburg, Austria • 18 August 2002:
Helmut Türk, former diplomat, Austria • 25 September 2002: Enrique Pareja, former ambassador of Argentina • 25 September 2002: John Campbell, former ambassador of Ireland • 7 October 2002:
Zorka Parvanova, former first lady of Bulgaria • 7 October 2002:
Lydia Shouleva, former deputy prime minister, Bulgaria • 7 October 2002:
Solomon Passy, former minister of foreign affairs, Bulgaria • 7 October 2002:
Meglena Kuneva, former minister of European affairs, Bulgaria • 14 October 2002:
Juan Carlos Rodríguez Ibarra, former president of Extremadura Government, Spain • 16 October 2002: Jorge Gabriel Perdomo Martinez, former ambassador of Colombia • 24 October 2002:
Pentti Arajärvi, former First Gentleman of Finland • 24 October 2002:
Riitta Uosukainen, former Speaker of Parliament, Finland • 24 October 2002:
Paavo Lipponen, former prime minister of Finland • 24 October 2002:
Jan-Erik Enestam, former minister of defence, Finland • 6 December 2002:
Pierre Brochand, former diplomat, France • 14 January 2003: Bunthan Bairaj-Vinichai, former ambassador of Thailand • 16 January 2003: Synesio Sampaio Goes Son, former ambassador of Brazil • 16 January 2003: Antonio Catalano di Melilli, former ambassador of Portugal • 31 January 2003:
Costas Simitis, former prime minister of Greece • 31 January 2003:
Apostolos Kaklamanis, former Speaker of Parliament, Greece • 31 January 2003:
Vasso Papandreou, former minister of interior, Greece • 31 January 2003: , former Minister, Greece • 31 January 2003:
Andreas Loverdos, former Minister of Education, Greece • 31 January 2003: Anastasios Skopelitis, former ambassador of Greece • 31 January 2003: Ilias Plaskovitis, former banker, Greece • 31 January 2003: Ioannis Vavvas, former ambassador of Greece • 4 April 2003:
Carlos Ruckauf, former Vice President of Argentina • 29 May 2003:
Ingrid Rüütel, former first lady of Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Ene Ergma, former Speaker of Riigikogu, Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Lennart Meri, former president of Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Juhan Parts, former prime minister of Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Meelis Atonen, former minister of economic affairs, Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Margus Leivo, former minister of interior, Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Kristiina Ojuland, former minister of foreign affairs, Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Tarmo Kõuts, former Commander of Defence Forces, Estonia • 29 May 2003:
Imants Freibergs, former first gentleman of Latvia • 29 May 2003:
Algirdas Brazauskas, former president of Lithuania • 29 May 2003:
Laima Paksienė, former first lady of Lithuania • 29 May 2003:
Artūras Paulauskas, former Speaker of Seimas, Lithuania • 17 June 2003: József Bényi, former deputy foreign minister, Hungary • 17 June 2003:
Belisario Velasco, former minister of interior, Chile • 23 July 2003:
Mauro Vieira, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Brazil • 23 July 2003:
Tarso Genro, former Minister of Justice, Brazil • 23 July 2003: , former minister of industry and Foreign Trade, Brazil • 23 July 2003:
Gilberto Gil, former minister of culture, Brazil • 23 July 2003:
José Gregori, former Minister of Justice, Brazil • 23 July 2003: , former secretary-general of Presidency, Brazil • 23 July 2003: Ruy de Lima Casaes e Silva, former diplomat, Brazil • 23 July 2003: Paulo César de Oliveira Campos, former diplomat, Brazil • 23 July 2003: , former diplomat, Brazil • 28 July 2003: Paul Duhr, Marshal of Grand Ducal Court, Luxembourg • 30 July 2003: Abdallah Salah Eddine Tazi, former ambassador of Morocco • 3 September 2003: Dawlat Hassan, former ambassador of Egypt • 11 September 2003:
Wim Duisenberg, former president of European Central Bank • 17 October 2003: Marcelo Andrade de Moraes Garden, former ambassador of Brazil • 24 November 2003:
Frank Carlucci, former Secretary of Defense, United States • 13 February 2004:
Queen Sonja of Norway • 13 February 2004: Prince
Haakon, Crown Prince of Norway • 13 February 2004: Princess
Mette-Marit, Crown Princess of Norway • 13 February 2004:
Princess Märtha Louise of Norway • 11 March 2004: Wolfgang Kriechbaum, former diplomat, Austria • 11 March 2004: Michel Cosentino, former diplomat, Italy • 9 June 2004:
Fernanda Montenegro, Brazilian actress • 23 June 2004:
Richard Holbrooke, former diplomat, United States • 12 October 2004:
José Alencar, former Vice President of Brazil • 31 January 2005:
Silvio Berlusconi, former prime minister of Italy • 31 January 2005:
Marcello Pera, former president of Senate, Italy • 31 January 2005:
Pier Ferdinando Casini, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Italy • 31 January 2005:
Franco Frattini, former minister of foreign affairs, Italy • 31 January 2005:
Antonio Martino, former minister of defence, Italy • 31 January 2005:
Gaetano Gifuni, former secretary-general to President, Italy • 31 January 2005:
Umberto Vattani, former secretary-general, Foreign Ministry, Italy • 31 January 2005: , former secretary-general, Foreign Ministry, Italy • 31 January 2005:
Martin Bartenstein, former Minister of Economy and Labour, Austria • 31 January 2005: , former secretary-general, Foreign Ministry, Austria • 31 January 2005: Rene Pollitzer, former diplomat, Austria • 9 March 2005: Harold V. Livermore, British historian • 9 March 2005:
Heinrich von Pierer, former Advisor to the Government, Germany • 21 April 2005: , former president, Federal Audit Court, Brazil • 21 April 2005: , former ambassador of Brazil • 21 April 2005: António Luís Pale, former president of Administrative Tribunal, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005: , former Court Marshal, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Fernand Boden, former minister of agriculture, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
François Biltgen, former Minister of Justice, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Luc Frieden, former minister of defence, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Mady Delvaux-Stehres, former Minister of Health, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Marie-Josée Jacobs, former Minister of Family and Integration, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Jean Asselborn, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Claude Wiseler, former Minister of Public Works, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Jean-Marie Halsdorf, former minister of defence, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Lucien Lux, former Minister of Transport, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Mars Di Bartolomeo, former Minister of Health, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Jeannot Krecké, former Minister of Economy, Luxembourg • 6 May 2005:
Nicolas Schmit, former deputy minister of foreign affairs, Luxembourg • 11 July 2005: Mikael Essayan, United Kingdom • 15 July 2005:
Gabriel Ascencio, former president of Chamber of Deputies, Chile • 15 July 2005:
Marcos Libedinsky, former president of Supreme Court, Chile • 15 July 2005:
Sergio Romero Pizarro, former president of Senate, Chile • 30 August 2005: Prince
Khalid bin Faisal Al Saud of Saudi Arabia • 6 October 2005:
Kōichirō Matsuura, former Director-General, UNESCO • 27 October 2005: Hideichiro Hamanaka, former ambassador of Japan • 22 November 2005:
Ignacio Walker, former minister of foreign affairs, Chile • 3 January 2006:
Jean-Louis Debré, former president of National Assembly, France • 5 January 2006:
Bill Gates, former Chief Executive Officer, Microsoft • 14 February 2006:
Mari Alkatiri, former prime minister of East Timor • 8 March 2006:
Prince Laurent of Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Princess Claire of Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Princess Astrid of Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Prince Lorenz of Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Guy Verhofstadt, former prime minister of Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Herman De Croo, former president of Chamber of Representatives, Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Anne-Marie Lizin, former president of Senate, Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Karel De Gucht, former minister of foreign affairs, Belgium • 8 March 2006:
Aivar Sõerd, former Minister of Finance, Estonia • 8 March 2006:
Villu Reiljan, former Minister of Environment, Estonia • 8 March 2006:
Aino Lepik von Wirén, former State Secretary, Estonia • 21 July 2006: , former ambassador of Germany • 21 July 2006: Manuel Veremendi i Serra, former ambassador of Peru • 21 July 2006: Cheng Zying, former ambassador of China • 25 September 2006:
Vicente Álvarez Areces, former president of Principality of Asturias, Spain • 25 September 2006:
María Antonia Trujillo, former Minister of Housing, Spain • 25 September 2006:
Mercedes Cabrera, former Minister of Education and Science, Spain • 25 September 2006:
Miguel Ángel Moratinos, former minister of foreign affairs, Spain • 25 September 2006:
Bernardino León, former Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Spain • 25 September 2006:
Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón, former mayor of Madrid, Spain • 25 September 2006:
Joan Clos, former mayor of Barcelona, Spain • 25 September 2006:
Cristina Narbona, First Vice-President of Senate, Spain • 25 September 2006:
Ricardo Díez-Hochleitner Rodríguez, former Secretary General, Royal Household, Spain • 25 September 2006: , former ambassador of Spain • 25 September 2006: , former diplomat, Spain • 25 September 2006: Nicolas Martinez Fresno, former diplomat, Spain • 25 September 2006: Enrique Panels, former diplomat, Spain • 29 September 2006: Henrique Serrano, former diplomat, Spain • 29 September 2006: Manuel Quijada, former ambassador of Venezuela • 29 September 2006: Arnt Magne Rindal, former ambassador of Norway • 29 September 2006: Herman Reijer Reimond Virgiel Froger, former ambassador of the Netherlands • 20 November 2006:
Zergün Korutürk, former ambassador of Turkey • 27 November 2006:
Richard Eckaus, Emeritus Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology • 27 November 2006:
Robert Solow, Emeritus Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology • 27 February 2007:
Rubén Ramírez Lezcano, former minister of foreign affairs, Paraguay • 6 March 2007:
Pascoela Barreto, former ambassador of East Timor • 30 March 2007:
Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza, former ambassador of Colombia • 2 April 2007: Paul Ponjaert, former ambassador of Belgium • 13 April 2007: , former ambassador of Brazil • 31 May 2007:
Alma Adamkienė, former first lady of Lithuania • 31 May 2007:
Petras Vaitiekūnas, former minister of foreign affairs, Lithuania • 31 May 2007:
Raimondas Šukys, former minister of interior, Lithuania • 25 July 2007:
Albert Pintat, former prime minister of Andorra • 3 December 2007: Pensak Chalarak, former ambassador of Thailand • 25 January 2008: , former ambassador of France • 5 March 2008:
Queen Rania of Jordan • 5 March 2008:
Cesar Maia, former mayor of Rio de Janeiro • 5 March 2008:
Jaques Wagner, former governor of Bahia • 5 March 2008:
Sérgio Cabral Filho, former governor of Rio de Janeiro • 5 March 2008: Ubiratan Castro de Araújo, Brazil • 2 May 2008:
Queen Silvia of Sweden • 2 May 2008: , Chief Court Mistress, Sweden • 2 May 2008:
Tobias Billström, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sweden • 2 May 2008:
Andreas Carlgren, former Minister of Environment, Sweden • 2 May 2008: , former Head of Protocol, Sweden • 2 May 2008: Maria Gabriella Lindholm, former ambassador of Sweden • 2 May 2008: Lars-Hjalmar Wide, former diplomat, Sweden • 26 May 2008: , former Cabinet Secretary, Royal Court, Norway • 26 May 2008: , former Head of Adjutant Staff, Norway • 26 May 2008: Lars Christian Krog, Master of the Royal Household, Norway • 26 May 2008:
Bjørn T. Grydeland, former Permanent Undersecretary of State, Norway • 26 May 2008:
Inga Magistad, former ambassador of Norway • 26 May 2008:
Ove Thorsheim, former ambassador of Norway • 26 May 2008:
Rolf Trolle Andersen, former Lord Chamberlain, Norway • 30 July 2008:
Luís de Matos Monteiro da Fonseca, former Executive Secretary, Lusophone Commonwealth • 1 September 2008:
Maria Kaczyńska, former first lady of Poland • 17 November 2008: Samir Arrour, former ambassador of Morocco • 26 November 2008: Prince Léopold, 13th Duke of Arenberg, Belgium • 30 December 2008:
Assunção dos Anjos, former minister of foreign affairs, Angola • 2 March 2009:
Eva Köhler, former first lady of Germany • 2 March 2009:
Angela Merkel, former chancellor of Germany • 16 March 2009:
Amer Al-Fayez, former Head of Royal Protocol, Jordan • 16 March 2009:
Dina Kawar, former ambassador of Jordan • 16 March 2009: Amer Hadidi, President of Royal Jordanian • 16 March 2009:
Nasser Judeh, former deputy prime minister, Jordan • 16 March 2009:
Ayman Safadi, Deputy Prime Minister of Jordan • 16 March 2009: Nasser Lozi, Chairman of Jordan Kuwait Bank • 20 April 2009: Sheikha
Moza bint Nasser, Consort of Emir of Qatar • 21 May 2009:
Sydney Brenner, biologist and Nobel laureate, United Kingdom • 1 December 2009:
Mariano Fernández, former diplomat, Chile • 21 December 2009:
Atul Khare, former diplomat, India • 5 March 2010:
Jaume Bartumeu, former prime minister of Andorra • 6 May 2010:
Jean-Claude Trichet, former president, European Central Bank • 11 May 2010:
Domenico Giani, former Inspector General, Gendarmerie Corps, Vatican City • 11 May 2010: Alberto Gasbarri, former diplomat, Italy • 1 June 2010: Mauritius Ribot, former ambassador of Mexico • 26 July 2010: Lars Vissing, former ambassador of Denmark • 7 September 2010:
Pierre Mores, Marshal of Royal Court, Luxembourg • 7 September 2010: Alain de Muyser, former diplomat, Luxembourg • 6 October 2010: Celso Vieira de Souza, former ambassador of Brazil • 23 November 2010: Miguel de Polignac Mascarenhas de Barros, former diplomat, Finance • 23 November 2010:
Alberto Leoncini Bartoli, former ambassador of Italy • 23 November 2010: Élie de Comminges, former French historian • 21 April 2011: , former diplomat, France • 10 June 2011:
Colette Avital, former Member of Knesset, Israel • 13 September 2011: Luca del Balzo di Presenzano, former ambassador of Italy • 10 May 2012:
Cláudio de Jesus Ximenes, former president of Supreme Court, East Timor • 8 June 2012:
Robert W. Wilson, United States • 30 July 2012:
Domingos Simões Pereira, Prime Minister of Guinea-Bissau • 19 November 2012: , former minister of culture, Peru • 19 November 2012:
Rafael Roncagliolo, former ambassador of Peru • 13 December 2012: Željko Vukosav, former ambassador of Croatia • 28 January 2013:
Jorge Faurie, former minister of foreign affairs, Argentina • 15 October 2013: , former ambassador of Portugal • 14 February 2014:
Enrique V. Iglesias, former president, Inter-American Development Bank • 4 March 2014:
Félix Sanz Roldán, former director of national intelligence, Spain • 9 May 2014: Guo Jiading, former ambassador of China • 2 June 2014:
Angélica Rivera, former first lady of Mexico • 29 July 2014: Hendrik Soeters, former ambassador of the Netherlands • 23 October 2014: , former ambassador of Sweden • 28 January 2015:
José Antonio Meade, former Secretary of Finance, Mexico • 28 January 2015:
Benito Andion, former ambassador of Mexico • 2 June 2015:
Pedro Morenés, former Minister of Defense, Spain • 9 June 2015:
Ernest Moniz, former Secretary of Energy, United States • 9 June 2015:
Alberto Núñez Feijóo, former president of Galicia Region, Spain • 3 September 2015: Renato Varriale, former ambassador of Italy • 19 November 2015:
María Ángela Holguín, former minister of foreign affairs, Colombia • 19 November 2015: Chakorn Suchiva, former ambassador of Thailand • 23 April 2016:
Paul Gallagher, Secretary for Relations with States, Holy See • 23 April 2016:
Giovanni Angelo Becciu, Cardinal Deacon of San Lino • 8 June 2016:
Cleonice Berardinelli, Brazilian academic • 28 June 2016: Cardinal
Seán Patrick O'Malley, Archbishop of Boston • 28 November 2016: Juan José Buitrago De Benito, former ambassador of Spain • 28 November 2016: , former Secretary of State, Spain • 28 November 2016:
María Victoria Morera, Director-General for Europe, Spain • 28 November 2016: Juan Ruiz Casas, former Chief of Military Staff, Royal Household, Spain • 9 December 2016: Ali Adel A Alkhal Fakhro, former ambassador of Qatar • 30 January 2017:
Georgios Katrougalos, former minister of foreign affairs, Greece • 30 January 2017: Ekaterini Simpoulou, former ambassador of Greece • 10 March 2017:
Robert A. Sherman, former ambassador of United States • 6 April 2017:
Amadou-Mahtar M'Bow, former Director-General, UNESCO • 23 May 2017:
Maria Teresa, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg • 23 May 2017:
Xavier Bettel, Prime Minister of Luxembourg • 23 May 2017:
Etienne Schneider, former deputy prime minister of Luxembourg • 23 May 2017: Jean-Jacques Welfring, former ambassador of Luxembourg • 25 July 2017: Caroline Fleetwood, former ambassador of Sweden • 13 November 2017:
María Clemencia de Santos, former first lady of Colombia • 22 November 2017:
Lígia Fonseca, former first lady of Cape Verde • 22 November 2017:
Thomas Stelzer, Ambassador of Austria • 15 April 2018:
Alfonso Dastis, former minister of foreign affairs, Spain • 15 April 2018:
Jaime Alfonsín, Chief of Royal Household, Spain • 9 May 2018: , former ambassador of Morocco • 10 June 2018: José Manuel Fonseca de Moura, Professor, Carnegie Mellon University, USA • 19 July 2018: Govert Jan Bijl de Vroe, former ambassador of the Netherlands • 1 August 2018: Michael Suhr, former ambassador of Denmark • 22 November 2018:
Ana Dias Lourenço, First Lady of Angola • 6 December 2018:
Pierre Moscovici, former European Commissioner for Economic Affairs • 17 January 2019:
Michel Barnier, former Chief Negotiator, Task Force 50 • 5 April 2019: Carmenza Jaramillo Gutiérrez, former ambassador of Colombia • 18 November 2019:
Luiz Alberto Figueiredo, former ambassador of Brazil • 18 December 2020:
George Edward Glass, former ambassador of the United States • 9 September 2021:
Rebeca Grynspan, Secretary-General, UNCTAD • 1 October 2021:
Evaristo Carvalho, former president of São Tomé and Príncipe • 16 February 2022: Carlos Alberto Simas Magalhães, former ambassador of Brazil • 15 June 2022: Martin Ney, former ambassador of Germany • 21 July 2022: Catharina Maria Trooster, former ambassador of the Netherlands • 20 April 2023:
Ho Iat Seng, Chief Executive of Macau • 22 April 2023:
Rosângela Lula da Silva, First Lady of Brazil • 15 June 2023:
Charles Wellesley, 9th Duke of Wellington • 2 September 2023:
Edgar Morin, French philosopher • 6 September 2023:
Isidro Fainé Casas, Spain == See also ==