HRH Kerry
Royal Highness
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Thanks Iowabelle and Lady Jennifer. I thought I already knew but wanted to know from the experts to be sure.
Here's the relevant part from the Act of Settlement:morhange said:...to actually be able to assume the throne, you have to in communion with the Church of England.
If the spouse has converted prior to the marriage then he/she is not Catholic, and the disqualification provisions of the Act of Settlement don't apply.iowabelle said:I'm pretty sure that a British royal can't marry a Catholic, even one who converts, and remain in the Line of Succession.
iowabelle said:The reason I'm stuck on this is that I was playing "What if..." I'm Catholic, and it startled me to see that, even if I "made the sacrifice" and converted, my husband would lose his spot in the Line of Succession. (And it seems pretty unfair that only Catholics are singled out in this way. If Gabriella Windsor marries her BF, is she going to lose her spot in the Line of Succession? -- I'm assuming her BF is not a Christian. -- I don't think so.)
I think the framers of the Act of Succession were concerned that a Catholic might make a subterfuge of a conversion... and then raise the children to be Catholic. I'm not sure that Queen Henrietta Maria was required to convert to the Church of England (my guess is NO, although I don't know for sure), but it is undeniable that her background as a French Catholic princess strongly influenced the later actions of her sons, Charles II and James II... bringing on the Glorious Revolution and the effective end of the House of Stuart in England.
HM Queen Elizabeth II would be in the line of succession if HM is not The Queen and still a princess and if and only if HM is not married to a Roman Catholic as HM is a princess through the male line.If HM marries a Roman Catholic,she as well as any kids that she bear would automatically be struck off the line of succession.Next Star said:I wonder if Queen Elizabeth II were not Queen and if she was still a princess where would she be if she were in the line of Succession?
Next Star said:I wonder if Queen Elizabeth II were not Queen and if she was still a princess where would she be if she were in the line of Succession?
srivishnu said:HM Queen Elizabeth II would be in the line of succession if HM is not The Queen and still a princess and if and only if HM is not married to a Roman Catholic as HM is a princess through the male line.If HM marries a Roman Catholic,she as well as any kids that she bear would automatically be struck off the line of succession.
Both your situation involves two royal princes who married a Roman Catholic not royal princesses.chrissy57 said:The children aren't barred so long as they are raised Protestant.
E.g. Prince and Princess Micheal of Kent's children are in the line of succession but he lost his place when he married her. The same with Ernst of Hannover - he lost his place but, I believe that his daughter by Caroline is being raised Protestant and as a result she is in the line of succession, as, of course, are his older children.
Yes, Chrissy57's real-life example involved two princes, but it makes no difference whether they are princes or princesses, dukes or duchesses or misters or misses. The Act of Settlement is concerned with maintaining the Protestant succession, not with gender or titles.srivishnu said:Both your situation involves two royal princes who married a Roman Catholic not royal princesses.
Norway had to add an extra clause "For those born before the year 1971, Article 6 of the Constitution as it was passed on 18 November 1905 shall, however, apply. For those born before the year 1990 it shall nevertheless be the case that a male shall take precedence over a female. " So Haakon got to keep his position of heir apparent.
wbenson said:There is currently dispute as to whether ot not the law actually prevents the monarch him or herself from marrying a Roman Catholic. One of the prevailing views is that no person shall accede to the throne who has married or is a Roman Catholic, but the law does not govern post-accession marriages. In something I read about Edward VIII, it said that the Prime Minister tricked him into asking for constitutionally-binding advice that he did not have to seek in order to marry, as it was not technically necessary for the King himself to need permission to marry.
Elspeth said:Depends on the circumstances by which you envisage her being a princess and not a queen. If Edward VIII hadn't abdicated, she'd be Queen now anyway since Edward was childless. If he'd had children, or if George VI had had sons, her position in the line of succession would depend on how many offspring those hypothetical royals might have had.
Here are the relevant parts of the Act of Settlement:wbenson said:There is currently dispute as to whether ot not the law actually prevents the monarch him or herself from marrying a Roman Catholic. One of the prevailing views is that no person shall accede to the throne who has married or is a Roman Catholic, but the law does not govern post-accession marriages.
It's subject to debate, but the opinion is that once out of the Line of Succession, there can be no restoration.Suonymona said:If a Catholic marries someone in the line of succession and later converts to the Church of England (but before any children are born), does the person they marry still lose the succession or is it restored?
Obviously if they convert before children are born (and raised presumably in the COE), the children are still eligible/in line.