Sister Morphine
Heir Apparent
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You keep putting an extra "e" in Cambridge. Stop that! The minor pedant in me gets distracted by it. LOL
Yes. As the wife of the Prince of Wales, Catherine will be HRH The Princess William, Princess of Wales, Duchess of Cornwall, so forth and so on. Camilla will be Queen (she better be, anyway), so she'll cease to have those titles, as her husband will no longer carry them.
You keep putting an extra "e" in Cambridge. Stop that! The minor pedant in me gets distracted by it. LOL
I hope so too. I honestly think Camilla should have been Princess of Wales. Yes it would have caused a stir at first, but things would calm. She is the wife of the Prince of Wales. I hope she takes the title of Queen consort and not princess, when Charles is king. Diana is dead, nothing is bringing her back, and even if it did she'd still be the ex. Will and Harry have accepted her into their lives and family, support her and their father's marriage, and they are Diana's children. I'd be upset if Camilla continues to pander, and does not take the title queen.
Because Prince/Princess of Wales is a peerage. It is like Duke and Duchess of Cornwall, or Earl and Countess of Wessex. If Charles was simply HRH Prince Charles of the United Kingdom, with no peerage, she would be Princess Charles of the United Kingdom. It is a peerage. His children carry the title of prince x of wales, as children of his peerage.
Prince William of Wales is a title not a peerage. Therefore his wife will be Princess William of Wales. If he is given a peerage, say Duke of Camebridge, then she will be entitled to the rank. Camilla is entitled to Princess of Wales, Catherine to her husband's peerage, so Duchess of Camebridge.
I honestly think Camilla should have been Princess of Wales.
Because that's how it's done when a woman marries into a royal family -- she receives the feminine form of her husband's title(s). It would be akin to a woman marrying into your standard run-of-the-mill family and either taking her husband's last name, or hyphenating it with her maiden name.
She can't be Mrs. Catherine Middleton because she's not marrying a man whose last name is Middleton. She's marrying a man who in essence, has no last name at all.
Correct. Although on the banns of marriage, he may do as his aunt and uncle (and I believe his father) did, and list his last name as Mountbatten-Windsor, though I don't think that's required. His signature is just "William", and that's it.
She would be HRH Princess William of Wales, because that's the feminine form of her husband's title/style, which I mentioned above. She would not be Mrs. Catherine Wales, because Wales is not his last name. When he and Harry were in school (much like Beatrice and Eugenie would use York), he would use Wales as a last name if he needed one, but it's not his legal surname.
Camilla is The Princess of Wales, she just chose not to use her senior title out of respect to the memory of Diana, who died styled as Princess of Wales and was the mother of the future king.
When Charles becomes King, as his wife, Camilla is automatically HM The Queen and nothing else applies. It will require an Act of Parliament and consent from the Crown Commonwealth nations for her to be styled as "HRH The Princess Consort" because she can only hold whatever titles her husband does. She does not have a title in her own right.
Actually, The Prince of Wales is not a Peerage. It is a title that is conferred by The Sovereign and is not hereditary. The Dukedom of Cornwall is a Peerage, but one that is restricted to the eldest son of The Sovereign who is the heir to the throne. If the heir dies with male issue, it reverts to the Crown, rather than the next eldest son of The Sovereign.
"Prince William of Wales" is a style conferred by right of birth as a male-line grandson of The Sovereign. It reflects royal rank and precedence but is a courtesy only. Once created a Duke or Earl, William will then have a title.
Prince of Wales is listed as a peerage in burkes. It is one that is a recreated for every single holder, but still is. And I was under the impression those in the male line, are princes of the realm in their own right, not courtesy titles, that is why Will is Prince, and not one of his father's lesser titles, as would be customary for an heir of a Duke or Earl ie. James Wessex being viscount severn.
I doubt the queen will make catherine a princess in her own right.
She would then outrank the princess royal.
HM only daughter.
She will be most likley granted the title HRH which is the most important part.
The queen may bestow a dukedom on her grandson the gift would be for him
And then she would be known as HRH princess william duchess of ........
As far as comparing her to prince phillip.
He is the soveriegns husband much like prince albert.
Queen victoria actually wanted to make him king consort.
I very much doubt HM will make her a princess in her own right.
Sister Morphine said:Even if the Queen made Catherine a princess in her own right, she wouldn't outrank the Princess Royal. With or without that distinction, Catherine's place in the Order of Precedence is determined by the rank of her husband. So where William ranks in the Order of Gentlemen is where Catherine's rank in the Order of Ladies will be. Now, when Charles is King, Catherine I believe would outrank her, as the wife of the heir to the throne. However right now, she would not..
Sister Morphine said:I don't see how William could take precedence over his uncles -- they are sons of the sovereign, he isn't. Now, when Charles is king, he will take precedence over them, as they will be just brothers of the sovereign.
At official occasions, if Camilla ranks second behind the Queen as wife of the heir to the throne, wouldn't the Countess of Wessex follow, with Anne and then Catherine following her?
Lady Gudgeon said:I'm so confused about the order of precedence. Is it just completely different then from the order of succession? Is it just different so the Queen can put people in any order she likes (if, say, a ne'er do well cousin were the heir)?.
I'm so confused about the order of precedence. Is it just completely different then from the order of succession? Is it just different so the Queen can put people in any order she likes (if, say, a ne'er do well cousin were the heir)?
I think the Queen's visit to Cambridge a few days before the wedding is a sign and she'll make the big announcement there...so I'm voting for a Dukedom of Cambridge for Wills, making Kate a Duchess April 29 seems so far away...I'm so impatient.
Yes precedence and succession are 2 different things and the short answer is yes the Queen can issue LPs to change the order of precedence when she wants but not succesion.....
Iluvbertie said:The Queen doesn't issue LPs to change precedence but it is determined by the monarch although there are rules that normally apply - e.g. children of the monarch always ahead of grandchildren.
What the Queen did with the announcement about Anne and Alexandra being ahead of Camilla was unusual but wasn't done by LPs - just an announcement to put royals born ahead of royals by marriage.
It's not that she will "most likely" be granted the style HRH, she will get it.
Whilst I am quite sure that Catherine will be created 'HRH', the example of the Duchess of Windsor would appear to indicate that although a wife marrying into the Royal Family is entitled to use her husband's 'style and title' [the same as any other English lady who marries - (the rules are slightly different in Scotland) for example Miss Susan Johnson marries Mr Edward Smythe and therefore is entitled to be known as Mrs Edward Smythe], Wallis Simpson, although she became Duchess of Windsor, was expressly NOT granted the right to use the honorific HRH'
Alex
I do not think that Catherine will be made a princess in her own right. For a start, it is not the custom of the British Royal Family to honour new members in this way.
As to whether Prince Williams is made a Royal Duke, could I, with appropriate humility as this is my first post, make a couple of points?
1. To me, there seems to be a slight trend to moving away from creating Royal Dukes; when Prince Edward was about to be married, there was speculation that he would be created Duke of Sussex / Cambridge etc. In the end, as we know, he was created Earl of Wessex, which I think took most royal watchers by surprise, not only because he was not created a Royal Duke [although he is in line to inherit the title of Duke of Edinburgh when that title reverts to the Crown on the death of his father] but also because Wessex was not an existing English County.
My second reason is this: Prince William is currently a serving RAF Officer. Over the past few months, I have detected another trend, namely for him to be living very much more of what I will have to call a 'private' type of life in his 'non-royal working life'. For example, a few weeks ago, it was recorded that Prince William and Catherine [when at their home in Wales] like to 'look after themselves' and do not wish to have staff. It is also a fact that they have been seen doing their own shopping in nearby towns and villages etc. This, if you think about it, is quite a departure from the traditional way that newly-married royalty has conducted their lives in even the more recent times.
Of course we cannot know what is in the Queen's mind, but I would not be totally surprised if the young couple are not given such a formal 'handle' right at the start of their married life together. The Queen will of course be able to bestow whatever Royal Title she feels appropriate at at an appropriate time - this might, for example, be at the end of Prince William's immediate service career as a serving officer or perhaps when the couple have children.
Alex
The reason Wallis Simpson was expressly NOT granted HRH was the Royal Family was very angry with the Duke for abdicating the Throne, as well as concerns that the marriage wouldn't last and if they divorced, Wallis would be able to take her "HRH" with her. There's a lot more information about this in the thread on the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.
You can't really compare Wallis to Catherine though--she WILL get HRH, if only in formal occasions. They may not use that all the time, but they will have it. By default, a woman marrying into the Royal Family always get her husband's titles and styles, including HRH if her husband is a HRH. But they can choose not to use the titles or styles if they don't want to.
So it's really just apple and orange comparison.