Commonwealth Secretariat
  1. The Commonwealth Home
  2. Key Declarations
    1. Harare Commonwealth Declaration, 1991
    2. The Millbrook Commonwealth Action Programme on the Harare Declaration, 1995
    3. Singapore Declaration of Commonwealth Principles 1971
  3. Members
    1. Membership of the Commonwealth: Report of the Committee on Commonwealth Membership
  4. Head of the Commonwealth
  5. CHOGM
  6. History
    1. Modern Commonwealth
    2. Timeline
  7. Commonwealth Day
    1. Commonwealth Day 2007 Messages
    2. Puzzle Game
    3. Screen Saver
    4. Commonwealth Day 2006
    5. Commonwealth Day 2005
  8. Symbol and Flag
  9. Civil Society
    1. Core Information 1 to 3
    2. Core Information 4 to 7
    3. Core Information 8
    4. Core Information 9 and 10
  10. Commonwealth Family
    1. Association of Commonwealth Amnesty International Sections (ACAIS)
    2. Association of Commonwealth Archivists and Records Managers (ACARM)
    3. Association of Commonwealth Examination and Accreditation Bodies (ACEAB)
    4. Association for Commonwealth Literature and Language Studies (ACLALS)
    5. Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU)
    6. British Empire and Commonwealth Museum
    7. Commonwealth Association of Architects (CAA)
    8. Commonwealth Association of Indigenous Peoples (CAIP)
    9. Commonwealth Association for Mental Handicap and Developmental Disabilities (CAMHADD)
    10. Commonwealth Association of Museums
    11. Commonwealth Association for Paediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition (CAPGAN)
    12. Commonwealth Association of Planners (CAP)
    13. Commonwealth Association of Professional Centres
    14. Commonwealth Association for Public Administration and Management (CAPAM)
    15. Commonwealth Association of Public Sector Lawyers
    16. Commonwealth Association of Science, Technology and Mathematics Educators (CASTME)
    17. Commonwealth Association of Surveying and Land Economy (CASLE)
    18. Commonwealth Association of Tax Administrators (CATA)
    19. Commonwealth Broadcasting Association (CBA)
    20. Commonwealth Business Council (CBC)
    21. Commonwealth Centre for Electronic Governance (CCEG)
    22. Commonwealth Consortium for Education (CCfE)
    23. Commonwealth Council for Educational Administration and Management (CCEAM)
    24. Commonwealth Countries’ League (CCL)
    25. Commonwealth Countries’ League Education Fund
    26. Commonwealth Dental Association (CDA)
    27. Commonwealth Engineers Council (CEC)
    28. Commonwealth Education Trust
    29. Commonwealth Forestry Association (CFA)
    30. Commonwealth Foundation
    31. Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF)
    32. Commonwealth Geographical Bureau (CGB)
    33. Commonwealth Group of Family Planning Associations
    34. Commonwealth Hansard Editors Association
    35. Commonwealth Historians Society
    36. Commonwealth Human Ecology Council (CHEC)
    37. Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI)
    38. The Commonwealth Jewish Council and Trust
    39. The Commonwealth Journalists Association (CJA)
    40. Commonwealth Judicial Education Institute (CJEI)
    41. Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA)
    42. Commonwealth of Learning (COL)
    43. Commonwealth Legal Advisory Service (CLAS)
    44. Commonwealth Legal Education Association (CLEA)
    45. Commonwealth Library Association (COMLA)
    46. Commonwealth Local Government Forum (CLGF)
    47. Commonwealth Magistrates’ and Judges’ Association (CMJA)
    48. Commonwealth Medical Association (CMA)
    49. Commonwealth Medical Trust (Commat)
    50. Commonwealth Network of Information Technology for Development (COMNET-IT)
    51. Commonwealth Nurses Federation
    52. Commonwealth Organisation for Social Work (COSW)
    53. Representative to Commonwealth Institutions (UK)
    54. The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA)
    55. Commonwealth Partnership for Technology Management (CPTM)
    56. Commonwealth Pharmaceutical Association (CPA)
    57. Commonwealth Policy Studies Unit (CPSU)
    58. Commonwealth Press Union (CPU)
    59. Commonwealth Relations Trust
    60. Commonwealth Scholarship and Fellowship Plan (CSFP)
    61. The Commonwealth Society for the Deaf – Sound Seekers
    62. Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO)
    63. Commonwealth Tourism Centre (CTC)
    64. Commonwealth Universities Study Abroad Consortium (CUSAC)
    65. Commonwealth Veterinary Association (CVA)
    66. Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC)
    67. Commonwealth Women’s Network (CWN)
    68. Commonwealth Youth Exchange Council (CYEC)
    69. Conference of Commonwealth Meteorologists (CCM)
    70. The Council of Commonwealth Societies (CCS)
    71. Council for Education in the Commonwealth (CEC)
    72. The English-Speaking Union of the Commonwealth (ESU)
    73. Institute of Commonwealth Studies (ICS)
    74. League for the Exchange of Commonwealth Teachers (LECT)
    75. Organisation of Commonwealth United Nations Associations (OCUNA)
    76. The Round Table: Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs (CJIA)
    77. Royal Agricultural Society of the Commonwealth (RASC)
    78. Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League (RCEL)
    79. The Royal Commonwealth Society (RCS)
    80. Royal Over-Seas League (ROSL)
    81. Sight Savers International (The Royal Commonwealth Society for the Blind) (RCSB)
    82. Soroptimist International Commonwealth Group (SICG)
    83. Victoria League for Commonwealth Friendship (VLCF)
  11. FAQs
  12. Commonwealth Tour

History

Though the modern Commonwealth is just over 50 years old, the idea took root in the 19th century.

 Flags flying at Marlborough House, Head Quarters of the Commonwealth Secretariat

In 1867, Canada became the first colony to be transformed into a selfgoverning 'Dominion', a newly constituted status that implied equality with Britain. The empire was gradually changing and Lord Rosebury, a British politician, described it in Australia in 1884 as a "Commonwealth of Nations".

Other parts of the empire became Dominions too: Australia (1900), New Zealand (1907), South Africa (1910) and the Irish Free State (1921).  All except the Irish Free State (that did not exist at the time) participated as separate entities in the First World War and were separate signatories to the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. Subsequently, they became members of the League of Nations.

After the end of the First World War, the Dominions began seeking a new constitutional definition and reshaping their relationship with Britain. The Conferences of Dominions begun in 1887 were resumed and at the Imperial Conference in 1926, the prime ministers of the participating countries adopted the Balfour Report which defined the Dominions as autonomous communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate to one another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs, though united by common allegiance to the Crown, and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations.

This definition was incorporated into British law in 1931 as the Statute of Westminster. It was adopted immediately in Canada, the Irish Free State, Newfoundland (which joined Canada in 1949) and South Africa. Australia and New Zealand followed. India, Britain's largest colony at the time, had still not achieved self-government  and remained a Dominion under the India Act of 1935 until its independence in 1947.

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