Prinsara
Heir Apparent
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Might he not have to renounce a foreign title if he's the future consort?
I expect him to be titled as prince but probably not with the style (at least that is what happened to Lorenz if I am not mistaken; his HIIH wasn't recognized but him being an Archduke was)
Was Prince Albert styled Duke of Brabant at the time of the wedding?
Exactly. But in registrary office not via court.
AFAIK applicant was Delphine, she won her surname and the court decision can not affect another persons and their surnames.
In the official communication (on Monarchie.be), she is called HRH Princess Delphine, so she is addressed with her new title, which is another sign of acceptance of her new status as Princess.
She is legally HRH Princess Delphine, so I would expect the palace to address her correctly.
We are not experts in Belgian law but I think that Her Royal Highness was born as daughter of heк present father
Delphine could have opted for o'Hare de Saxe-Cobourg or De Saxe-Cobourg o'Hare (see De Roumanie Medforth Mills or Van Oranje-Nassau van Amsberg).
de Roumanie in Nicholas and Karina's case is one of their middle names. The siblings' legal surname in the UK: Medforth-Mills.
No, their legal surnames at birth did not include de Roumanie. How they may have used or represented the name since is a different matter. Nicholas's sister in particular is little interested and very low-key about her royal background. Her friends know her as Karina Medforth-Mills. Sorry, this is quite tangential to the topic here, but I was responding to a questionable comparison made above concerning double royal surnames.
You invented the title "prince/ss of Nowhere".
Yes, I read all messages in this thread.
Oh, God!
Article 1-3: "some descendants of Leopold I IS princes(ses) of Belgium".
Article 4: "other descendants of Leopold I IS NOT princes(ses) of Belgium".
Lorenz's son, born before the abolition of Salic law in 1991, was styled as HIRH Prince Amedeo in his (Belgian) birth registration. I suppose his father's HIRH would likewise have been recognized in any Belgian documents where his name appeared..
I. Les dispositions de l’article 85 seront pour la première fois d’application à
la descendance de S.A.R. le Prince Albert, Félix, Humbert, Théodore, Christian, Eugène, Marie, Prince de Liège, Prince de Belgique, étant entendu que le mariage de S.A.R. la Princesse Astrid, Joséphine, Charlotte, Fabrizia, Elisabeth, Paola, Marie, Princesse de Belgique, avec Lorenz, Archiduc d’Autriche-Este, est censé avoir obtenu le consentement visé à l’article 85, alinéa 2.
Art. 1er. Dans les actes publics et privés qui le concernent, l'Archiduc Lorenz – Otto – Carl - Amedeus d'Autriche-Este, époux de Notre Fille bien-aimée, la Princesse Astrid – Joséphine – Charlotte – Fabrizia – Elisabeth – Paola - Marie, Princesse de Belgique, sera qualifié Prince de Belgique à la suite des noms et titres qui lui sont propres.
It can be even more intersesting to nete that before 1891 they were not only Princes and Princesses but alsa had style of HRH. And if one can say they were princes/ses of SCG, nobody can say they were SCG HRH because SCG were merely Highnesses.
I suppose it was just custom that children of king are princes/ses and HRH. [...]
Look at page of Almanac de Gotha 1886. It was before 1891 decree but they all were princes/ses and Alt.Roy. Please note that this information was approved by the court. [...]
And 1890:
Thus in 1891 it was just transferred from custom into law
I wonder what will happen concerning the titles of Princess Maria Laura, her future husband William Isvy, and any possible children of the marriage.
The princess:
Princess Maria Laura's official style will certainly continue to be HRH Princess Maria Laura, in the same way that her mother (since the succession changes of 1991) is officially styled as HRH Princess Astrid, Princess of Belgium.
https://www.monarchie.be/en/royal-family/princess-astrid
However, if Laura and William continue to live in Britain, I wonder if she will call herself Mrs. Isvy in private life, in accordance with British custom.
Her future husband:
William Isvy will not acquire any legal titles; Prince Amedeo's wife Lili Rosboch did not.
However, the Royal Palace currently styles Lili by courtesy as Princess Elisabetta Rosboch von Wolkenstein, which is often shortened to Princess Elisabetta.
https://www.lesoir.be/246315/articl...dit-le-prince-amedeo-et-sa-femme-annoncent-la
https://www.theroyalforums.com/foru...elgian-royal-family-38975-17.html#post2186635
Will the Palace likewise give William Isvy the courtesy style of Prince William Isvy or Prince William after marriage? Probably not, as there is little to no modern precedent in the nobility for a man to be addressed with his spouse's title even as a courtesy, but unlike the nobility, the royal family has introduced gender-equal succession for the descendants of King Albert II.
The possible future children of the marriage:
Any children from the marriage will almost certainly take their surname from their father. It remains exceedingly rare for a Belgian woman to transmit her surname to her children, and I believe it is even rarer amongst the nobility.
Any children also will not inherit their mother's HRH or territorial designation "of Belgium". The predicate HRH and the title Prince/ss of Belgium are no longer hereditary, except for the children and grandchildren of the King or Crown Princess, under the Royal Decree of November 24, 2015.
https://www.ejustice.just.fgov.be/c..._date=2015-11-24&numac=2015021075&caller=list
However, Article 4 of the decree refers to "Princes and Princesses" who descend from King Leopold I but are not Princes and Princesses "of Belgium". Prince Amedeo's children appear to fall under that category, as his daughter Anna Astrid was entered into her birth certificate as "Her Imperial and Royal Highness Princess Anna Astrid Marie Archduchess of Austria-Este (Habsburg-Lorraine)" (emphasis added). Moreover, the Royal Palace has always given her the style of Princess Anna Astrid (rather than Archduchess Anna Astrid).
https://www.lesoir.be/53935/article...ur-les-princes-qui-ne-seront-plus-de-belgique
https://www.theroyalforums.com/foru...elgian-royal-family-38975-16.html#post2117594
But it is unclear if Princess Maria Laura's possible children would be styled in the same way, being children of a Princess instead of a Prince. Although Article 4 of the Royal Decree says nothing about "male line", titles of nobility such as Prince/ss are normally transmitted in the male line only.
https://diplomatie.belgium.be/en/services/Protocol/nobility_and_honorary_distinctions/nobility/faq
Most likely she will remain known as prinses Maria Laura, like her aunts are always referred to as prinses Marie-Christine, prinses Maria Esmeralda and prinses Margareta. Her sister-in-law is usually mentioned as prinses Elisabetta.
Who is Margareta? But yes, the Palace refers to her great-aunts as Princess Esmeralda and Princess Marie-Christine. However, Esmeralda (who lives in England) and Marie-Christine (who lives in the United States) use their husbands' surnames in their private lives.
Her mother Princess Astrid, who as I said above is known officially as HRH Princess Astrid, and who lives in Belgium, does not use her husband's surname and signs her correspondence "Astrid of Belgium".
Margareta is a daughter of Maria Laura's Luxembourg grandparents Jean and Joséphine-Charlotte. She is married to a Liechtenstein Prince but usually she is popularly referred to as prinses Margareta. .
The Children of Prince Amadeo are not Princes of Belgium anymore
Princess Maria Laura will keep her title her whole life.
It will be Monsieur William Isvy et la Princesse Maria Laura.
Such as Sir Salvador Moncada and Princess Esmeralda.
It will be Monsieur William Isvy et la Princesse Maria Laura.
Such as Sir Salvador Moncada and Princess Esmeralda.
Yes Princess Marie-Esméralda of Belgium has the additional British title of Lady Moncada as the wife of a knight.
Prince Lorenz uses 4 tittles abroad .
Does Prince Lorenz's wife Princess Astrid use four titles abroad?
So, it is interesting that the surname did appear in the royal decree declaring the king's consent to Princess Maria Laura's marriage (which I will write about shortly in her engagement thread).
Interestingly, even in the Dutch version of the decree, the French version of the princess's surname is used.
(The links to the decrees are in the previous post.)
De door artikel 85, tweede lid, van de Grondwet voorziene toestemming tot het huwelijk van Hare Koninklijke Hoogheid Prinses Maria Laura d'Autriche-Este (Habsbourg-Lorraine), Prinses van België, met de Heer William Isvy, wordt verleend.
Est accordé le consentement prévu à l'article 85, alinéa 2, de la Constitution au mariage de Son Altesse Royale la Princesse Maria Laura d'Autriche-Este (Habsbourg-Lorraine), Princesse de Belgique, avec Monsieur William Isvy.
(The consent as foreseen in Article 85, second paragraph, of the Constitution is given for the marriage of Her Royal Highness Princess Maria Laura d'Autriche-Este (Habsbourg-Lorraine), Princess of Belgium, to Mr. William Isvy.)
I would be interested in knowing why the legal surname was used for Maria Laura but omitted for her brother Amedeo, especially seeing as Amedeo has used both "of Belgium" and "of Habsburg" professionally, whereas Laura has used only "of Belgium".
And why is the French version of the surname used in the Dutch version of the decree? The proper Dutch translation would be "van Oostenrijk-Este (Habsburg-Lotharingen)".
Princess of Austria-Este is wrong anyway as it then not Princess but Archduchess and not Royal Highness but Imperial and Royal Highness.
It must be read as princesse (Belgian title of nobility) in combination with d'Autriche-Este (surname). After the comma follows the "functional title" princesse de Belgique.
But Belgium is not known for being precize. It looks inconsistent.