The Future Monarchs


If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.
L
Doesn't Spanish monarchy follow Asturias-Léon-Castille route so Leonor would be Leonor I since any of these previous kingdoms hadn't queen Leonor IIRC.
Couldn't she also just be Queen Leonor, with no number?
 
LCouldn't she also just be Queen Leonor, with no number?

Possibly but Leonor might follow tradition and her father using a Regnal Number as a sign of continuity.

Eleanor of Navarre was only briefly sovereign of Navarre for a few months in 1479.
Eleanor and her husband Gaston IV, Count of Foix also held vast lands and Estates in France.
 
Besides it isn't the prince deciding. It is the government, the royal family has no say. The only country that changed the laws, retroactively, was Sweden.
Actually, you could say that it changed over a period of one year. For such a significant law to take place, it was required that it be passed by two successive parliamentary readings. The first vote passed easily, and it only remained for the vote to be passed by Parliament in the following year, and that was merely proforma.

During that year Prince Carl Philip was born and declared Crown Prince by his father who seemed to believe that now there was an actual Crown Prince that nothing would change. Unfortunately for him, the Government took the first reading as part of the law (which it actually is) and overruled him, declaring Princess Victoria was now Crown Princess Victoria. King KG is still not reconciled to that decision and often publicly bemoans it.
 
Currently, these are the future monarchs of Europe:

Spain: Leonor
Denmark: Frederik, Christian
Sweden: Victoria, Estelle
United Kingdom: William, George
Netherlands: Catharina Amalia
Belgium: Elisabeth
Norway: Haakon, Ingrid Alexandra
Luxembourg: Guillaume, Charles
Monaco: Jacques
Liechtenstein: Alois, Joseph Wenzel

These are currently those who are expected to inherit the throne in the coming decades in Europe.
They all have different backgrounds, despite some similarities.
Some have or will have military training. Everyone has or will have a university education.
The most unknown of all to the general public will be Joseph Wenzel from Liechtenstein.
 
Possibly but Leonor might follow tradition and her father using a Regnal Number as a sign of continuity.

Eleanor of Navarre was only briefly sovereign of Navarre for a few months in 1479.
Eleanor and her husband Gaston IV, Count of Foix also held vast lands and Estates in France.

Felipe don’t used the numbers for other Felipe in spainish states
 
Currently, these are the future monarchs of Europe:

Spain: Leonor
Denmark: Frederik, Christian
Sweden: Victoria, Estelle
United Kingdom: William, George
Netherlands: Catharina Amalia
Belgium: Elisabeth
Norway: Haakon, Ingrid Alexandra
Luxembourg: Guillaume, Charles
Monaco: Jacques
Liechtenstein: Alois, Joseph Wenzel

These are currently those who are expected to inherit the throne in the coming decades in Europe.
They all have different backgrounds, despite some similarities.
Some have or will have military training. Everyone has or will have a university education.
The most unknown of all to the general public will be Joseph Wenzel from Liechtenstein.
Well, Joseph Wenzel appears on National day in Liechtenstein and he’s not talked about much because Liechtenstein only has one paper and he’s private. Plus his grandfather is still the reigning Prince, in spite of making Alois regent which probably affords Wenzel some more privacy.
 
Well, Joseph Wenzel appears on National day in Liechtenstein and he’s not talked about much because Liechtenstein only has one paper and he’s private. Plus his grandfather is still the reigning Prince, in spite of making Alois regent which probably affords Wenzel some more privacy.

Yes, but Joseph Wenzel never has official events. This year it wasn't even on National Day.
 
Elisabeth and Catharina-Amalia seem to have a close relationship, just like their mothers.
Christian and Ingrid Alexandra also seem to be close.

I can see those two combinations having a joint engagement soon, considering the close relationship of two countries, especially the latter two, maybe accompanying their fathers.
 
LCouldn't she also just be Queen Leonor, with no number?

It'll be likely. The only queen with her name was Leonor of Castile in 1241, two centuries before Spain became a country.

Leonor de Borbon will be the first Spanish queen with that name.
 
It will be interesting to see the new generation of Heirs interacting with each other.
Leonor, Christian, Ingrid Alexandra, Elisabeth, Catharina-Amalia, Estelle, George, Charles, Jacques and Joseph Wenzel.
Elisabeth and Catharina-Amalia seem to have a close relationship, just like their mothers.
Christian and Ingrid Alexandra also seem to be close.
It will be interesting to see how the young Heirs who have reached or are about to reach their 18th birthday will interact with each other at real events over the next few years.

maybe some with the british soon?
 
It'll be likely. The only queen with her name was Leonor of Castile in 1241, two centuries before Spain became a country.

Leonor de Borbon will be the first Spanish queen with that name.


That queen Leonor wasn't reigning queen at least not recognised. On list of Castillian monarchs is not reigning queen Leonor.


And Spanish monarchs count their numbers from monarchs of Asturias and Castille so for example there is Alfonso XII and XIII of Spain since Asturias and Castille had kings called Alfonso.


So next monarch of Spain would be Leonor.
 
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