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Presentation of a book of the
Six Decades of H.M. The Queen's Commonwealth and State Visits , 18 December 2012
Queen Elizabeth II became Head of the Commonwealth upon the death of her father, King George VI , on 6 February 1952. Since then, she has toured the Commonwealth of Nations widely. She has visited all member states except Cameroon and Rwanda .[1] [2] [3] Her first foreign tour was before her accession when she accompanied her parents to the countries of Southern Africa in 1947.
Tours of the British Islands are excluded from the list below.
1950s [ ]
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh visiting Bermuda in 1953
A young girl presenting flowers to The Queen outside Brisbane City Hall, March 1954
Date
Host
6 February 1952[4]
Kenya
Governor Mitchell
24–25 November 1953[4]
Bermuda
Governor Hood
25–27 November 1953[4]
Jamaica
Governor Foot
17–19 December 1953[4]
Fiji
Governor Garvey
19–20 December 1953[4]
Tonga
Queen Sālote Tupou III
23 December 1953 – 30 January 1954[4]
New Zealand
Governor-General Norrie
3 February 1954 – 1 April 1954[4]
Australia
Governor-General Slim
5 April 1954[4]
Cocos Islands
Governor Nicoll
10–21 April 1954[4]
Ceylon
Governor-General Ramsbotham
27 April 1954[4]
Aden
28–30 April 1954[4]
Uganda
Governor Cohen
3–7 May 1954[4]
Malta
Governor Creasy
10 May 1954[4]
Gibraltar
Governor MacMillan
28 January – 16 February 1956[4] [5]
Nigeria
Governor-General Robertson
12–16 October 1957[4]
Canada
Governor General Massey
18 June – 1 August 1959[4]
Canada
Governor General Massey
1960s [ ]
The Queen cutting a cake in celebration of the first birthday of Prince Andrew in Chennai, India, 19 February 1961
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh at Sydney, Australia, February 1963
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh at the opening of the New Zealand Parliament in 1963
Date
Host
20 January 1961
Cyprus
President Makarios III
21 January – 1 February 1961 16–26 February 1961 1–2 March 1961[4]
India
President Prasad
1–16 February 1961[6] [7]
Pakistan
President Ayub Khan
9–20 November 1961[4]
Ghana
President Nkrumah
25 November – 1 December 1961 [4]
Sierra Leone
Governor-General Dorman
3–5 December 1961[4]
Gambia
Governor Windley
30 January – 1 February 1963[4]
Canada
Governor General Vanier
2–3 February 1963[4]
Fiji
Governor Maddocks
6–18 February 1963[4]
New Zealand
Governor-General Fergusson
18 February – 27 March 1963[4]
Australia
Governor-General Sidney
5–13 October 1964[4]
Canada
Governor General Vanier
1 February 1966[4]
Canada (refueling)
Governor General Vanier
1 February 1966[4]
Barbados
Governor Stow
4–5 February 1966[4]
British Guiana
Governor Luyt
7–10 February 1966[4]
Trinidad and Tobago
Governor-General Hochoy
11 February 1966[4]
Grenada
Governor Turbott
13 February 1966[4]
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
14–15 February 1966[4]
Barbados
Governor Stow
16 February 1966[4]
Saint Lucia
18 February 1966[4]
Dominica
Administrator Guy
19 February 1966[4]
Montserrat
20 February 1966[4]
Antigua
Administrator Rose
22 February 1966[4]
Saint Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla
Administrator Howard
23 February 1966[4]
British Virgin Islands
25 February 1966[4]
Turks and Caicos Islands
Roger Tutt
27–28 February 1966[4]
Bahamas
Governor Grey
3–6 March 1966[4]
Jamaica
Governor-General Campbell
29 June – 5 July 1967[4]
Canada
Governor General Michener
14–17 November 1967[4]
Malta
Governor-General Dorman
1970s [ ]
The Queen during a walkabout in Townsville, Australia, 1970
The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and Princess Anne during the 1970 Royal tour of Australia
The Queen opening the Sydney Opera House, 20 October 1973
The Queen with the Brian Elwood, Mayor of Palmerston North, New Zealand, during a walkabout in The Square, 26 February 1977
The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Andrew, Prince Edward at the opening of the
1978 Commonwealth Games in
Edmonton ,
Alberta
1980s [ ]
The Queen meeting Australian entertainers who performed in a Royal Charity Concert at the Sydney Opera House, 1980
The Queen of Zealand posing with the New Zealand Cabinet during her visit to New Zealand, 1981
The Queen surrounded by children in Queen Street Mall, Brisbane City, 1982
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh at the Closing Ceremony of the XII Commonwealth Games, Brisbane, 1982
The Queen opening
World Expo 88 at Brisbane, 30 April 1988
Date
Host
24–28 May 1980[4]
Australia
Governor-General Cowen
26 September – 12 October 1981[4]
Australia (for 6th CHOGM )
Governor-General Cowen
12–20 October 1981[4]
New Zealand
Governor-General Beattie
20–21 October 1981[4]
Australia
Governor-General Cowen
21–25 October 1981[4] [8]
Sri Lanka
President Jayawardene
15–18 April 1982[4] [8]
Canada
Governor General Schreyer
5–13 October 1982[4]
Australia
Governor-General Stephen
13–14 October 1982[4]
Papua New Guinea
Governor-General Lokoloko
18 October 1982[4]
Solomon Islands
Governor-General Devesi
21 October 1982[4]
Nauru
President DeRoburt
23 October 1982[4]
Kiribati
President Tabai
26–27 October 1982[4]
Tuvalu
Governor-General Teo
30 October – 1 November 1982[4]
Fiji
Governor-General Cakobau
13 February 1983[4]
Bermuda
Governor Posnett
13–16 February 1983[4]
Jamaica
Governor-General Glasspole
16–17 February 1983[4]
Cayman Islands
8–11 March 1983[4]
Canada
Governor General Schreyer
9–10 November 1983[4]
Cyprus
President Kyprianou
10–14 November 1983[8]
Kenya
President Moi
14–17 November 1983[8]
Bangladesh
President Chowdhury
17–26 November 1983[8]
India (for 7th CHOGM )
President Singh
25–26 March 1984[4]
Cyprus
President Kyprianou
24 September – 7 October 1984[4]
Canada
Governor General Sauvé
9–11 October 1985[4]
Belize
Governor-General Gordon
11–18 October 1985[4]
Bahamas (for 8th CHOGM )
Governor-General Cash
20 October 1985[4]
Inagua (private)
23 October 1985[4]
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Governor-General Arrindell
24 October 1985[4]
Antigua and Barbuda
Governor-General Jacobs
25 October 1985[4]
Dominica
President Seignoret
26 October 1985[4]
Saint Lucia
Governor-General Lewis
27 October 1985[4]
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Governor-General Eustace
28–29 October 1985[4]
Barbados
Governor-General Springer
31 October 1985[4]
Grenada
Governor-General Scoon
1–3 November 1985[4]
Trinidad and Tobago
President Clarke
22 February – 2 March 1986[4]
New Zealand
Governor-General Reeves
2–13 March 1986[4]
Australia
Governor-General Stephen
21–23 October 1986[4]
Hong Kong
Governor Youde
9–24 October 1987[4]
Canada (for 10th CHOGM )
Governor General Sauvé
19 April – 10 May 1988[4]
Australia
Governor-General Stephen
8–11 March 1989[4]
Barbados
Governor-General Springer
9–11 October 1989[8]
Singapore
President Wee
14–17 October 1989[8]
Malaysia (for 11th CHOGM )
Yang di-Pertuan Agong Azlan Shah of Perak
1990s [ ]
The Queen with the Mayor of Christchurch
Vicki Buck , during a walkabout in Victoria Square, Christchurch, New Zealand, February 1990
The Queen in Ottawa in 1992 to celebrate her
Ruby Jubilee and the 125th anniversary of the
Canadian Confederation
Date
Host
1–16 February 1990[4]
New Zealand
Governor-General Reeves
27 June – 1 July 1990[4]
Canada
Governor General Hnatyshyn
7 October 1991[4]
Kenya (overnight stop)
President Moi
8–10 October 1991[8]
Namibia
President Nujoma
10–15 October 1991[8]
Zimbabwe (for 12th CHOGM )
President Mugabe
18–25 February 1992[4]
Australia
Governor-General Hayden
28–30 May 1992[4]
Malta
President Tabone
30 June – 2 July 1992[4]
Canada
Governor General Hnatyshyn
18–24 October 1993[4]
Cyprus (for 13th CHOGM )
President Clerides
18 February 1994[4]
Anguilla
19 February 1994[4]
Dominica
President Sorhaindo
19–22 February 1994[4]
Guyana
President Jagan
22–24 February 1994[4]
Belize
Governor-General Young
26–27 February 1994[4]
Cayman Islands
1–3 March 1994[4]
Jamaica
Governor-General Cooke
6–8 March 1994[4]
Bahamas
Governor-General Darling
8–10 March 1994[4]
Bermuda
Governor Waddington
13–22 August 1994[4]
Canada
Governor General Hnatyshyn
19–25 March 1995
South Africa
President Mandela
30 October – 11 November 1995[4]
New Zealand (for 14th CHOGM )
Governor-General Tizard
23 June – 2 July 1997[4]
Canada
Governor General LeBlanc
6–12 October 1997[8]
Pakistan
President Leghari
12–18 October 1997[8]
India
President Narayanan
17–20 September 1998[8]
Brunei
Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah
20–23 September 1998[8]
Malaysia
Yang di-Pertuan Agong Jaafar of Negeri Sembilan
7–9 November 1999[4]
Ghana
President Rawlings
9–15 November 1999[4]
South Africa (for 16th CHOGM )
President Mbeki
15 November 1999[4]
Mozambique
President Chissano
2000s [ ]
The Queen with the President of Uganda Yoweri Kaguta Museveni at CHOGM in Kampala, Uganda, 2007
Date
Host
17 March – 1 April 2000[4]
Australia
Governor-General Deane
18–20 February 2002[4]
Jamaica
Governor-General Cooke
22–27 February 2002[4]
New Zealand
Governor-General Cartwright
27 February – 3 March 2002[4]
Australia (for 17th CHOGM )
Governor-General Hollingworth
4–15 October 2002[4]
Canada
Governor General Clarkson
3–6 December 2003[4]
Nigeria (for 18th CHOGM )
President Obasanjo
17–25 May 2005[4]
Canada
Governor General Clarkson
23–26 November 2005[4]
Malta (for 19th CHOGM )
President Fenech Adami
11–16 March 2006[4]
Australia
Governor-General Jeffery
16–18 March 2006[4]
Singapore
President Nathan
20 November 2007[4]
Malta
President Fenech Adami
21–24 November 2007[4]
Uganda (for 20th CHOGM )
President Museveni
24–26 November 2009
Bermuda
Governor Gozney
26–28 November 2009
Trinidad and Tobago (for 21st CHOGM )
President Richards
2010s [ ]
The Queen with the Duke of Edinburgh arriving at Perth Convention and Exhibition Centre to inaugurate the CHOGM Summit, 28 October 2011
See also [ ]
References [ ]
hide Elizabeth II
Queen of the United Kingdom and the other Commonwealth Realms (1952–present)
Monarchies
Family
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (husband)
Charles, Prince of Wales (son)
Anne, Princess Royal (daughter)
Prince Andrew, Duke of York (son)
Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex (son)
George VI (father)
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother (mother)
Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon (sister)
Mountbatten-Windsor family
Accession and coronation Reign Jubilees
Commonwealth tours
State visits
Titles and honours Depictions
Televised addresses Documentaries Film and television Plays Portraits Books Songs
"God Save the Queen "
"Her Majesty "
Stamps
Animals
Related