Tatiana Maria
Majesty
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2013
- Messages
- 7,156
- City
- St Petersburg
- Country
- United States
The Royal Decree refers retroactively to the lady whom is -at present- in married state and therefore a Mevrouw/Madame.
I agree that the royal decree refers to her married state. Mevrouw/Madame can be used when addressing unmarried women, but the court addresses fiancées as Juffrouw/Mademoiselle.
I was alluding to the difference between the greeting cards (Princess Elisabetta) and the royal decree (Mrs. Elisabetta Maria Rosboch von Wolkenstein), which corroborates that the title "Princess Elisabetta" is a courtesy title as opposed to a legally recognized one.
Technically, under the new 2015 royal decree, Princess Elisabeth's civil name for example is
Her Royal Highness Élisabeth Thérèse Marie Hélène, Duchess of Brabant, Princess of Belgium.
"Prince(ss)" is also inserted before the given names, e.g. "Zijne Koninklijke Hoogheid Prins Amedeo, Prins van België" in the decree concerning his marriage or "H.R.H. Prince Albert, Felix, Humbert, Theodore, Christian, Eugene, Marie, Prince of Liege, Prince of Belgium" in the Constitution.
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