Including the temporary seal issued in 1867, there have been eight Great Seals of Canada, one for each
monarch of Canada, except for
Edward VIII, who
abdicated before a seal could be produced. Following British tradition, Canada customarily continues to use a late monarch's Great Seal after their death, until a new one is issued in the name of the reigning sovereign. Only
Queen Victoria and King
George VI had two Great Seals issued in their name. The 1867 temporary Great Seal was issued in Victoria's name before a permanent one entered use in 1869, and a second seal was issued for George VI after he relinquished the
Emperor of India title in 1947. , a permanent visual element used on the central disc of the Great Seal since 2025 Before 2025, each Great Seal featured a design entirely unique to the reigning monarch and was replaced after the accession of a new sovereign. In 2025, however, a "hybrid" design was introduced which included a permanent central disc to be used on all future Great Seals, and an outer ring that remains unique to each reigning sovereign. All Great Seals of Canada, except those issued in the name of Queen Victoria, are made of tempered steel, with the counterseal crafted from a copper alloy. The seals issued for Victoria were made of silver, but the metal proved too soft to withstand the pressure required for sealing and was therefore not used in subsequent designs. All matrices of past Great Seals of Canada, except for the 1867 temporary Great Seal, are preserved by the
National Archives of Canada in recognition of their historical, symbolic, and artistic significance.
Queen Victoria Temporary seal The first Great Seal of Canada, a temporary seal issued in Queen Victoria's name, came into official use on 1 July 1867. It featured the royal
arms of the United Kingdom and the Latin inscriptions
VICTORIA D · BRITT · REG · F · D () and
SIGILLUM CANADÆ (). The base of the seal, extending upward to the motto, displayed the rose of England, an Irish
shamrock, and the
Scottish thistle. The temporary seal was originally intended for use only a few months, but disagreements over the design of its replacement delayed its defacement until 1869. At , the temporary Great Seal was smaller than subsequent Great Seals, and was made out of copper.
Permanent seal 's name The permanent Great Seal issued in Victoria's name was used from mid-1869, and saw use for nearly 35 years. It depicts Victoria wearing a stylized heraldic crown, the collar of the Order of the Garter, and state robes, seated beneath a triple Gothic canopy adorned with roses, shamrocks, and thistles at the hem. She holds the sceptre with the cross in her right hand and an orb in her left. The arms of the four founding provinces of Canada are displayed in the niches to the right and left of the canopy. A scroll bearing the royal motto
Dieu et mon droit appears at the top while the royal arms appears at the bottom. The diameter of the Great Seal measures .
King Edward VII The design process for Edward VII’s Great Seal was lengthy, with sketches prepared in the United Kingdom and sent to Canada for revisions until both parties reached a mutual agreement. A Canadian government committee had largely recommended that the overall design follow the design of the prior Great Seal, although some pushed for the incorporation of arms from provinces that joined Confederation since 1867. However, the idea was abandoned, partly because the
arms of British Columbia,
Manitoba, and
Prince Edward Island lacked official recognition from the monarch at the time. The design of the Great Seal was further delayed by the death of the engraver responsible for its creation, whose estate executor refused to release the design documents. Edward VII’s Great Seal was eventually brought into use in Canada on 4 July 1905. The design closely imitates the 1869 Great Seal, although he is also adorned by a garter worn by his 14th-century namesake,
Edward III, and is depicted wearing the
Imperial State Crown. The seal's legend reads
EDWARVS VII D · G · BRITT · ET TERRARVM TRANSMAR · QVÆ IN DIT · SVNT BRIT · REX F · IND · IMP () and
IN CANADA SIGILLVM 1904 (). It measures in diameter.
King George V 's name A Great Seal issued for George V was created in 1912. George's seal was more conservative in stately, austere and conservative in nature, with the Sovereign depicted with the
robe of state. The legend reads the same as Edward VII's Great Seal, except for the name
GEORGIVS V and the date 1912. Like its predecessor, George V's Great Seal measures . The Great Seal issued for George V remained in use throughout King Edward VIII’s brief reign in 1936, as Edward abdicated before a new seal could be issued in his name. Before his abdication, proposals were introduced for Edward VIII's Great Seal to be designed by a Canadian artist and produced by the
Royal Mint.
King George VI First seal The first Canadian Great Seal issued for George VI was also the first to be ordered at the instance of the
Privy Council of Canada, although it was minted at the British Royal Mint. The Great Seal of George VI measures . It is the first design that deviates significantly from the gothic ornamentation of its predecessors. George VI's Great Seal of Canada is also unique in that it is the only one to depict the sword of justice. Beneath the King's portrait is the
coat of arms of Canada that was issued in 1921, replacing the four arms of the founding provinces. A double legend band reads
GEORGIUS VI D · G · MAG · BRIT · HIB · ET TERR · TRANSMAR · QUAE IN DIT · SUNT BRIT · REX F · D · IMP · IND (), while the top legend reads
IN CANADA SIGILLUM.
Second seal Following the passage of the British
Indian Independence Act 1947, a second Great Seal was issued for George VI in 1949 to reflect the removal of the title Emperor of India. This second seal is nearly identical to the first, except that it omits
IND · IMP from the legend and extends the abbreviated
F · D to
FIDEI · DEF. The 1949 Great Seal was the first to be produced domestically, having been made by the
Royal Canadian Mint, and remained in use until 14 November 1955.
Queen Elizabeth II 's name, and first used in 1955 A Great Seal issued in Queen
Elizabeth II's name was authorized for use on 14 November 1955. The development of Elizabeth II's Canadian Great Seal saw significant preparations, with the first Canadian artist,
Eric Aldwinckle, selected to design the seal and
Thomas Shingles of the Royal Canadian Mint as its engraver. Like its predecessor, Elizabeth II's Great Seal depicts the Sovereign in state robes, wearing the crown and the collar of the Order of the Garter, and holding the orb and sceptre, with its surrounding design being austere. However, Elizabeth II's Great Seal abandons the use of the
Latin language in favour of English and French, with the seal's legend reading
REINE DU CANADA ELIZABETH II · QUEEN OF CANADA. Elizabeth II's Great Seal weighs . The design was created by
Samy Khalid, the
Chief Herald of Canada, and
Cathy Bursey-Sabourin, the principal artist for the
Canadian Heraldic Authority. The introduction of a permanent central disc allows future Great Seals to be updated more easily and produced at a lower cost. The seal's outer ring will continue to be unique to each reigning monarch, bearing the name and
title and will be updated with every succession. The seal issued for Charles III reads
CHARLES III · KING OF CANADA · ROI DU CANADA. ==See also==