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Cadbury, royal warrant of appointment and King Charles III
Cadbury loses royal warrant after 170 years
Chocolate maker Cadbury has been dropped from the list of royal warrants for the first time in 170 years. The Birmingham-based chocolatier was awarded its first royal warrant as chocolate and cocoa manufacturers by Queen Victoria in 1854, but it has lost its royal endorsement under King Charles.
King strips Cadbury of its Royal Warrant – 170 years after it was first awarded
King strips Cadbury of its Royal Warrant – 170 years after it was first awarded - Cadbury’s Bournville chocolates were famously a favourite of the late Queen Elizabeth II
Explained: UK's Royal Warrant — The Endorsement King Charles III Stripped Cadbury Of, Ending A 170-Year Connection
Cadbury has lost its prestigious royal warrant, a mark of quality and trust that allows its holders to use the royal coat of arms on their packaging.
Why has King Charles dropped Cadbury from the royal warrant after 170 years?
Cadbury, Britain’s iconic chocolate brand, has lost its royal warrant after nearly two centuries of association with the monarchy. First granted in 1854 by Queen Victoria, the warrant symbolised Cadbury’s historic ties to the UK royal household,
King Charles is right to take away Cadbury chocolate’s royal warrant – it’s overrated
COMMENT: As the Birmingham-born chocolate brand loses its royal warrant, Katie Rosseinsky presents the case against this iconic British treat
Cadbury’s loses royal warrant for the first time in 170 years
Cadbury’s has not been granted a royal warrant for the first time in 170 years...
Cadbury loses royal warrant under King Charles
A royal warrant is regarded as a guarantee of quality and can sway some customers to choose a particular firm. Read more at straitstimes.com.
For the first time in 170 years, Cadbury has lost its prestigious royal warrant
Cadbury, the iconic British chocolate maker. For the first time in 170 years, the company has lost its prestigious royal warrant.
Chocolate giant Cadbury loses royal warrant after 170 years
Legendary British chocolatier Cadburys has lost its royal warrant, having held it for 170 years. The company is currently owned by Mondelez international, which has refused to stop doing business in Russia during the Ukraine war: the cause of King Charles' decision to stop doing business with it.
Cadbury ‘disappointed’ on losing British royal warrant to provide chocolates, a first in 170 years
Campaign group B4Ukraine had urged King Charles III to remove those companies “still operating in Russia” following its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
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Cadbury, late Queen’s favorite, stripped from royal warrant list for first time in 170 years
Cadbury has held it consistently since 1854, surviving under six different monarchs until King Charles III’s decision last ...
3d
on MSN
Britain's most-loved chocolate brand was stripped of its royal seal of approval
Cadbury, a storied chocolate maker owned by US company Mondelez, has lost its Royal Warrant from the British monarchy, which ...
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