The Corps of Queen's
Messengers are couriers employed by the British Foreign and
Commonwealth Office. They hand-carry secret and important documents
to British embassies and consulates around the world. Many Queen's
Messengers are retired Army personnel. Messengers generally travel in
plain clothes in business class on scheduled airlines, carrying an
official case from which they must not be separated - it may even be
chained to their wrist.
The safe passage of
diplomatic baggage is guaranteed by the Vienna Convention on
Diplomatic Relations, and for reasons of state secrecy, the
diplomatic bag does not go through normal airport baggage-checks and
must not be opened, x-rayed, weighed, or otherwise investigated by
customs, airline security staff, or anyone else for that matter. The
bag is closed with a tamper-proof seal and has its own diplomatic
passport. The Queen's Messenger and the messenger's personal luggage
are not covered by special rules, however, so although the diplomatic
bag, covered by the passport, is not checked, the messenger and the
messenger's personal luggage go through normal security screening.
The first recorded
King's Messenger was John Norman, who was appointed in 1485 by King
Richard III to hand-deliver secret documents for his monarch. During
his exile, Charles II appointed four trusted men to convey messages
to Royalist forces in England. As a sign of their authority, the King
broke four silver greyhounds from a bowl familiar to royal courtiers,
and gave one to each man. A silver greyhound thus became the symbol
of the Service. On formal occasions, the Queen's Messengers wear this
badge from a ribbon, and on less formal occasions many messengers
wear ties with a discreet greyhound pattern while working.
Badges of King's or
Queen's Messengers from 18th to 20th centuries
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Modern
communications have diminished the role of the Queen's Messengers,
but as original documents still need to be conveyed between countries
by "safe-hand", their function remains valuable, but
declining.
In 1995 a
Parliamentary question[2] put the number then at 27. The current
number of Messengers as of March 2015 is sixteen full-time and two
part-time, and the departmental headcount is nineteen.
In December 2015 an
article in the Daily Express suggested that the Queen's Messenger
service was "facing the chop by cost-cutting Foreign Office
mandarins who see them as a legacy of a by-gone age".
The British Rail
Class 67 diesel locomotive 67005 bears the name Queen's Messenger.
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