BTW I do like Edward and Sophie but I think the whole issue regarding their childrens titles has been a bit of a mess.
BTW I do like Edward and Sophie but I think the whole issue regarding their children's titles has been a bit of a mess.
I think it might look questionable for Louise to start using the title without doing royal duties, but, if she decides to do both, I don't see a problem. However, she may well be hoping to go on to university, in which case it's going to be nearly 4 years before she'd be in a position to take on a lot of royal engagements.
For her sake, I kind of hope that she decides to lead a private life. If she decides to become a working royal, it won't be long before people are making comments about her clothes, her hair, her weight, etc, and any boyfriends will come under so much scrutiny that they might be put off. But I do think she could do a good job, and another pair of hands in the younger generation would certainly be welcome.
I agree - I understand that there was a request to release a letter patent or that there was a letter patent. But it never happened. I doubt we will ever be told the reasoning of the palace.
Looking back now - if the patent exist. It might have solved many problems - and clarified a lot of issues.
And, 18 years ago, they would have assumed that Harry, Harry's future wife, Andrew and probably Beatrice and Eugenie would all be full time working royals by the time Louise had grown up, meaning that the Wessexes would be well down the list. Yes, Edward's further down the line of succession than he was in 1999, but over half the people ahead of him are aged under 9. Things have a habit of not turning out the way you'd expected!
Although Prince Charles obviously was not yet king when Prince Edward married and the announcement about his future children's titles were made, an anonymous courtier claimed in November 2022 that Charles intended the Wessex children's treatment (as opposed to the York daughters' princess titles) to be the "policy" going forward.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...dinburgh-title-Prince-Edward-slim-effort.html
[A courtier] said: 'The King wants to slim down the monarchy, as is well known. That means it wouldn't make sense to make the Earl the Duke of Edinburgh. It's a hereditary title which would then be passed on to the Earl and Countess of Wessex's son, James, Viscount Severn.
'Essentially, this was accepted by the Earl when he agreed that his children would not be a prince or princess.'
Although the daughters of Edward's elder brother, Princes Andrew, are princesses, that came about long before King Charles's 'slim-down' agenda.
'There was a policy change', the source added.
That whole quote makes no sense because the Prince/Princess issue is completely unrelated to the hereditary title the parent who is the child of a monarch has or does not have. If Edward or Andrew had no hereditary title, their children would still be HRH Prince/Princess as grandchildren of the monarch in the male line, just like Prince Michael of Kent.But a hereditary title is still in place regardless, that doesn't make any sense IMO. Sure you can attempt to set a precedent, but regardless a peerage will be passed on, so what's the point?
That whole quote makes no sense because the Prince/Princess issue is completely unrelated to the hereditary title the parent who is the child of a monarch has or does not have. If Edward or Andrew had no hereditary title, their children would still be HRH Prince/Princess as grandchildren of the monarch in the male line, just like Prince Michael of Kent.
I've always been of the opinion that Charles wanted to limit the HRH Prince/Princess to just the children of the monarch as well as the heir's children and the children of the heir's heir. And, I think Elizabeth agreed, in theory, but didn't want to formally strip those who already had the HRH Prince/Princess titles. The fly in the ointment in all this turned out to be Harry, who clearly didn't agree with his father.
That whole quote makes no sense because the Prince/Princess issue is completely unrelated to the hereditary title the parent who is the child of a monarch has or does not have. If Edward or Andrew had no hereditary title, their children would still be HRH Prince/Princess as grandchildren of the monarch in the male line, just like Prince Michael of Kent.
I've always been of the opinion that Charles wanted to limit the HRH Prince/Princess to just the children of the monarch as well as the heir's children and the children of the heir's heir. And, I think Elizabeth agreed, in theory, but didn't want to formally strip those who already had the HRH Prince/Princess titles. The fly in the ointment in all this turned out to be Harry, who clearly didn't agree with his father.
That whole quote makes no sense because the Prince/Princess issue is completely unrelated to the hereditary title the parent who is the child of a monarch has or does not have. If Edward or Andrew had no hereditary title, their children would still be HRH Prince/Princess as grandchildren of the monarch in the male line, just like Prince Michael of Kent.
I've always been of the opinion that Charles wanted to limit the HRH Prince/Princess to just the children of the monarch as well as the heir's children and the children of the heir's heir. And, I think Elizabeth agreed, in theory, but didn't want to formally strip those who already had the HRH Prince/Princess titles. The fly in the ointment in all this turned out to be Harry, who clearly didn't agree with his father.
Well, Edward and Sophie, different from the Sussexes, have always been and are loyal and actively working members of the Royal Family, which Harry and his wife decided to refuse. That, of course, is a big difference and must certainly also reflect on the children when it comes to titles!I think that the courtier made it clear that the King is opposed to James and Louise being syled Prince/Princess, even though Sophie said they would have the the right to choose to be called that when they turned 18.
It is unfortunate because the King is following a double standard with James/Louise on one hand and his own grandchildren, Archie and Lilibet, on the other. The argument that Beatrice and Eugenie are "different" because they already used the title of Princess before the King's "slimming down" agenda is not consistent in my opinion with the fact that Archie and Lilibet did not use the same titles until the last week, which is already six months into the new reign. Why are Archie and Liilibet different from James and Louise then other than the fact that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex insist on their children being styled Prince/Princess whereas the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh do not?
It is also interesting to note the difference in the way the Sussexes and the Wessexes (now the Edinburghs) have approached the issue of their children's titles. The Sussexes, like Sophie, said that the children would have "the choice" to use the title or not when they came of age, but the Wessexes decided, on behalf of their children, to style them as children of an earl only while they were underage, while the Sussexes decided the opposite, i.e. that the children should be Prince/Princess and could then "drop" the title if they wished, rather than picking it up, when they grew up.
[.....]
Well, Edward and Sophie, different from the Sussexes, have always been and are loyal and actively working members of the Royal Family, which Harry and his wife decided to refuse. That, of course, is a big difference and must certainly also reflect on the children when it comes to titles!
I do not get the hullabaloo about the Edinburgh Dukedom being non-hereditary. Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster will be the next Duke of Gloucester. George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews will be the next Duke of Kent. I fail to see why James Mountbatten-Windsor, Earl of Wessex can not be the next Duke of Edinburgh.
What is the "gain" for him not inheriting a ducal title while there are no less than 30 dukes walking around? From all these ducal peerages, only the Edinburgh one is not hereditary. I honestly fail to see any advantage, gain or "modernity" to that.
I do not get the hullabaloo about the Edinburgh Dukedom being non-hereditary. Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster will be the next Duke of Gloucester. George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews will be the next Duke of Kent. I fail to see why James Mountbatten-Windsor, Earl of Wessex can not be the next Duke of Edinburgh.
What is the "gain" for him not inheriting a ducal title while there are no less than 30 dukes walking around? From all these ducal peerages, only the Edinburgh one is not hereditary. I honestly fail to see any advantage, gain or "modernity" to that.
Later we will see a Duke's son surrounded by Northumberland, Montrose, Beaufort, Norfolk, Marlborough, effortlessly inherited their titles and oh yes... no, James, no... "we are modernized, you can not inherit your father's dukedom. And yes, your cousin Archie will be a Duke. You will not become a Duke. We are Modern now, you see?"
I think that is precisely the point. There are only, I believe, 24 dukedoms in the UK that are currently held by people other than members of the Royal Family. As with other hereditary peers, the "modern" approach is that the class of non-royal dukes should be a closed one, and not grow over time (only possibly shrink). Three out of the six extant royal dukedoms, namely Sussex, Gloucester and Kent, will, however, pass to non-royals (that is, individuals who are not princes) in one or two generations, meaning that the class of non-royal dukes will grow by 3 (all other titles staying the same and not becoming extinct themselves, which of course is possible as there are extant non-royal dukedoms currently without heirs).
Cambridge will most likely return to the Crown when the title holder becomes King and York, by sheer luck, has no heirs. By making Edinburgh a life peerage, it is guaranteed that this new title will not add to the existing stock of non-royal dukes in the future either. Besides, Edinburgh will be available to be used in another generation by someone close to the throne (e.g. a son or maybe even a daughter of the monarch) other than staying with a family that, over time, might be removed from the reigning monarch by various degrees of kinship.
I do not get the hullabaloo about the Edinburgh Dukedom being non-hereditary. Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster will be the next Duke of Gloucester. George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews will be the next Duke of Kent. I fail to see why James Mountbatten-Windsor, Earl of Wessex can not be the next Duke of Edinburgh.
What is the "gain" for him not inheriting a ducal title while there are no less than 30 dukes walking around? From all these ducal peerages, only the Edinburgh one is not hereditary. I honestly fail to see any advantage, gain or "modernity" to that.
I don't see the advantage either.
If James is to inherit the title of earl, why not that of duke?
It is quite obvious. Charles clealry has issues and reservations about that title, he does not want it to pass out of the RF/he is wary because its a high Scottish titlle. Edward worked as a royal with the title of earl for 20 years, if James wants to work as a royal, he can do the same. if he does not, odds are he would rather be an earl than a duke.
Because Charles wants to cut down on hte number of Dukes, nad particuarly I think he wants to hold onto Edinburgh. possbily he will decide if Louis gets a dukedome when he marries, to only make it a life peerage.
That is an aasumption. We simply do not know. And what is the point of withholding a dukedom to James when he will become hereditary Earl of Wessex and Forfar, Viscount Severn anyway? It is hard to see any logic to this.
That is an aasumption. We simply do not know. And what is the point of withholding a dukedom to James when he will become hereditary Earl of Wessex and Forfar, Viscount Severn anyway? It is hard to see any logic to this.
Yes, but no money or property accompanies the title.
So, why would a ducal title have more of an impact?
It's really just a name, right?