Monday, March 8, 2021

What was George V thinking?


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On November 30, 1917, King George V issued a Letters Patent that limited and redefined royal titles, thus limiting the size of the Royal Family.

The Letters Patent was published in the London Gazette on December 14, 1917.

"Whitehall, 11th December 1917.
The KING has been pleased by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, bearing date the 30th ultimo, to define the styles and titles to be borne henceforth by members of the Royal Family. It is declared by the Letters Patent that the children of any Sovereign of the United Kingdom and the children of the sons of any such Sovereign and the eldest living son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales shall have and at all times hold and enjoy the style, title or attribute of Royal Highness with their titular dignity of Prince or Princess prefixed to their respective Christian names or with their other titles of honour; that save as aforesaid the titles of Royal Highness, Highness or Serene Highness, and the titular dignity of Prince and Princess shall cease except those titles already granted and remaining unrevoked; and that the grandchildren of the sons of any such Sovereign in the direct male line (save only the eldest living son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales) shall have the style and title enjoyed by the children of Dukes."


This Letters Patent limited the title Prince or Princess of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (now Northern Ireland) to the children of the Sovereign, the grandchildren of the Sovereign in the male line, and the eldest son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales (the heir apparent).

This meant that great-grandchildren in the male line would no longer be titled Prince or Princess with the rank of Highness, which had been the case.  In fact, no previous Letters Patent had limited royal titles in the male line although, only the children of the Sovereign, the grandchildren in the male line, and the children of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales were entitled to Royal Highness.  Other great-grandchildren in the male line (and further down, as was the case of the descendants in the male line of King Ernst August of Hanover, Duke of Cumberland, the 5th son of King George III, had the style of Highness and title of Prince or Princess of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

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 In February 1864, Queen Victoria issued a Letters Patent that gave the HRH to the Sons of the Sovereign's sons.   This meant that the children of the Prince of Wales and the Dukes of Edinburgh, Connaught, and Albany would have the style of royal highness.


"Whitehall, Feb. 3.
The Queen has been pleased by letters patent under the Great Seal, to declare her Royal will and pleasure that, besides the children of the Sovereigns of these realms, the children of the sons of any Sovereign of Great Britain and Ireland shall have, and at all times hold and enjoy, the style, title or attribute of Royal Highness with their titular dignity of Prince or Princess prefixed to their respective Christian names, or with their other titles of honour; and further to declare her will and pleasure that the Earl Marshal of England, or his Deputy for the time being, do cause the said letters patent to be recorded in Her Majesty's College of Arms to the end that the officers of arms, and all others, may take due notice thereof."



None of Victoria's immediate predecessors lived long enough to witness the birth of a great-grandchild in the male line.   Victoria's first great-grandchild, Princess Feodora of Saxe-Meiningen, was born shortly before her 60th birthday in May 1879 and was in the female line.  Feo was the only child of Princess Charlotte of Prussia, the second child of Princess Victoria, Princess Royal, and Friedrich III of Germany.  Victoria was the eldest of Queen Victoria's nine children.



 The first male line great-grandchild was born on June 23, 1894, and was named Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David.   The infant prince, the eldest child (and son) of Prince George, Duke of York, son of the Prince of Wales, and Princess Mary of Teck.  The infant prince was styled HH Prince Edward of York.  He was third in line to the throne.

The Duchess of York would give birth to two more children (Albert (December 14, 1895) and Mary (April 25, 1897) who were styled as Highness, until May 31, 1898, when Victoria issued a new Letters Patent.

"Crown Office, May 31, 1898
The Queen has been pleased by letters patent under the Great Seal, to declare that the children of the eldest son of any Prince of Wales shall have, and at all times hold and enjoy, the style, title, and attribute of "Royal Highness"."


This new Letters Patent established that the children of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales would also be entitled to the HRH.  Other great-grandchildren would remain styled as Highness, until 1917, when George V issued his Letters Patent.

The caption is not correct.  Alistair was not HRH, but HH.  


The changes were immediate with the new Letters Patent.  His Highness Prince Alistair Arthur of Connaught, the only child of TRH Prince and Princess Arthur of Connaught, who was a great-grandson in the male line, ceased to be a prince.  His mother, Princess Alexandra (elder daughter of Princess Louise, Duchess of Fife, Princess Royal) was a peeress in her own right, having inherited her father's peerage, the dukedom of Fife by special remainder following his death in 1912.   

 Three-year-old Alistair would now be styled as the Earl of Macduff, the secondary title for the Fife dukedom, as he was the heir apparent.  He was also second in line for his maternal grandfather, the Duke of Connaught's peerages.

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The Titles Deprivation Act stripped HRH Prince Charles Edward, Duke of Albany, grandson of Queen Victoria, and HRH Prince Ernst August, Duke of Cumberland, a great-grandson of King George III, of their British peerages and princely titles.


Ernst August, the Duke of Cumberland, was the son of Georg, the last King of Hanover, and was a great-grandson of the Sovereign, which meant that he and his male-line descendants were no longer entitled to the title Prince or Princess of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.   This was also the case for Carl Eduard's children.

Not all of the Hanover descendants lost their British princely titles because of the 1917 Letters Patent. Less than a month before Britain entered World War I, King George V issued a Letters Patent for the children of the Duke and Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg which gave the HH and title Prince or Princess of the United Kingdom and Ireland to their children.  This was moot however as the Duke of Brunswick's children were already princes and princesses of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland due to their male line descent from George III.   The Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg was the first cousin of King George V as their mothers were sisters.

The Duchess of Brunswick (Princess Viktoria Luise of Prussia) gave birth to a son, Prince Ernst August in March 1914.

Whitehall, July 15, 1914.
The King has been pleased to declare and ordain that the children born to their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Brunswick and Lüneburg shall at all times hold and enjoy the style and attribute of 'Highness' with their titular dignity of Prince or Princess prefixed to their respective Christian names, or with any titles of honour which may belong to them; and that the designation of the said children shall be a Prince (or Princess) of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. And to command that the said Royal concession and declaration be registered in His Majesty's College of Arms."




As the Brunswick children - Ernst August, Georg Wilhelm, Friederike, Christian, and Welf Heinrich - were not children of the Sovereign or grandchildren of the Sovereign in the male line, they also lost their British HH and their royal titles.  Some may disagree with this, but the precedence is HH Prince Alistair of Connaught, who was demoted to Earl of Macduff with the surname Windsor, following the 1917 Letters Patent.

[In the 1930s, Ernst August's son, Prince Ernst August of Hanover, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, who was married to Kaiser Wilhelm II's only daughter, Princess Viktoria Luise,  issued a non-binding decree that his male-line descendants would continue to be styled as Prince or Princess of Great Britain and Ireland because of their direct male line descent from George III.   It should be noted that King George V and his successors, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II, have challenged that decree.  When Ernst August's son, Ernst August was married in 1951 to Princess Ortrud of Schleswig-Holstein, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth sent a congratulatory telegram to the couple, addressing them with their British titles.]

Prince Ernst August, the one married to Viktoria Luise, abdicated as Duke of Brunswick in November 1918.

Carl Eduard's male-line descendants dropped the use of British titles after 1917.



The 1917 Letters Patent has an obvious loophole.  It seems to me that George V did not consider the possibility that there would be a repeat of three heirs in the line of succession as was the case in 1894 with the birth of his son, Edward.  He was the father of three sons and one daughter when he became the heir apparent on January 22, 1901, when Queen Victoria died and was succeeded by her eldest son, Albert Edward, who reigned as Edward VII.

Now let's look at this from a different scenario.  What if the Duke of Clarence and Avondale (the Prince of Wales's eldest son) had not died in January 1892?  His marriage to Princess Mary of Teck would have taken place with great fanfare.  Their eldest son would have been third in line.  There is also no doubt that Queen Victoria would have issued a similar Letters Patent, extending the RH to the children of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales, as she did in 1898.

The Duke of York would have married another princess, but their children would have remained styled as Highness until Edward VII succeeded to the throne, when they would gain the style of royal highness as grandchildren in the male line of the sovereign.

This is pure speculation on my part as Queen Victoria, knowing that George's children would also be grandchildren of the King, could have issued another Letters Patent that extended the RH to all of the male-line grandchildren of the Prince of Wales.

The changes made in the Letters Patent are reflected today in how members of the Royal family and their descendants are styled.

The present Dukes of Gloucester and Kent are grandsons of a sovereign (George V).  They are royal.  Their children are not.   Their eldest sons are styled as the Earls of Ulster and St. Andrews.  Their daughters are styled as daughters of a duke: Lady Davina, Lady Rose, and Lady Helen Windsor.  The Duke of Kent's younger son is styled as the younger son of a Duke: Lord Nicholas Windsor.

These two royal dukedoms will cease to be royal when the peerages pass to their heirs apparent.  The new dukes will be addressed as Your Grace.

The children of the Duke of Kent's younger brother, Prince Michael, who is not a peer, are styled as a younger son of a duke and daughter of a duke:  Lord Frederick and Lady Gabriella Windsor.

This brings us back to the 1917 Letters Patent.  George V's children were born with the princely title so why limit the royal style for the children of the next eldest son of the Prince of Wales?

Perhaps for George V, Victoria's long reign was an anomaly, which would not be repeated any time soon so he saw no reason to include royal status for all of the children of the sons of the Prince of Wales.  He may have assumed that the Prince of Wales would have succeeded to the throne before he had grandchildren.  Yet, there is the example of his own children -- the first three -- and how their status was changed by Queen Victoria, their great-grandmother.

King Edward VII reigned for only nine years.  He was sixty-eight when he died on May 6, 1910.    His eldest male line grandson, Prince Edward of Wales, was a month short of his 16th birthday at the time of King Edward's death.  King George V lived to celebrate his Silver Jubilee in May 1935.  He died on January 20, 1936, at the age of 70, and was succeeded by his eldest son, David, who reigned as Edward VIII until December 11, 1936, when he abdicated and was succeeded by his brother, Bertie (George VI).

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At the time of King George V's death, the eldest male line grandchild was Princess Elizabeth of York, the nine-year-old daughter of the Duke of York.  She was third in line to the throne at the time of "Grandpa England's death."

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George VI was only 56 years old when he died on February 6, 1952.   His elder daughter, HRH Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh, succeeded him as queen.  At the time of his death, George VI had only one male line grandson, HRH Prince Charles of Edinburgh, who was then only three years old.


The 1917 Letters Patent did not provide for the possibility of a female heir in the male line so in 1948, not long before Princess Elizabeth gave birth to Prince Charles, George VI issued a Letters Patent that gave royal status to her children.


Whitehall, November 9, 1948.
The KING has been pleased by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm bearing date the 22nd ultimo to define and fix the style and title by which the children of the marriage solemnized between Her Royal Highness The Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh and His Royal Highness Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, shall be designated. It is declared by the Letters Patent that the children of the aforesaid marriage shall have and at all times hold and enjoy the style title or attribute of Royal Highness and the titular dignity of Prince or Princess prefixed to their respective Christian names in addition to any other appellations and titles of honour which may belong to them hereafter.


Without this Letters Patent, Charles and Anne would have been styled as the Earl of Merioneth and the Lady Anne Mountbatten, taking their titles and rank from their father, HRH The Duke of Edinburgh, until Elizabeth succeeded to the throne.

The 1917 Letters Patent has not been superseded except for one clause, which I will shortly refer to in another paragraph.

Queen Elizabeth II has three sons so the grandchildren in the male line are princes and princesses with the rank of royal highness.   Yes, the children of Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, are STYLED as Lady Louise Windsor and Viscount Severn, but they are technically royal as the Queen never issued a Letters Patent that changed how male-line grandchildren are styled.

On April 29, 2011, Prince William of Wales, eldest son of the Prince of Wales, became the first male grandson of the living Sovereign to marry since July 6, 1893, when Prince George, Duke of York (George V) married Princess Mary of Teck.   Fast forward to December 33, 2012, when Kensington Palace announces that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are expecting their first child in the summer of 2013.

Royal advisers blew the dust off the 1917 Letters Patent and read the bit about the eldest son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales having royal status, but ducal status for siblings.  What if the Duchess gives birth to a daughter?  The new Succession to the Crown Act, which would establish the succession of the firstborn, regardless of sex, was moving closer to the final passage and a Royal Assent (which came in April 2013.)

A daughter, even first in line, would be styled as the Lady Christian name Mountbatten-Windsor.   A younger son would be HRH Prince Christian name of Cambridge. 

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 A solution was found as the Queen issued a new Letters Patent in December 2012 that gave royal status to all of the children of the eldest son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales.

"The Queen has been pleased by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm dated 31 December 2012 to declare that all the children of the eldest son of The Prince of Wales should have and enjoy the style, title, and attribute of Royal Highness with the titular dignity of Prince or Princess prefixed to their Christian names or with such other titles of honour."


Please note the subtle difference in the wording between the 2012 and 1898 Letters Patents.   The newer one refers to the Prince of Wales, which Victoria states is any Prince of Wales.

But what about the status of the male-line grandchildren of younger sons of the Prince of Wales?  Bertie had only one surviving son, George when he succeeded to the throne.  George's children received the style of royal highness thanks to their great granny's 1898 Letters Patent.

The present Prince of Wales has two sons and two male-line grandchildren of the Queen.  The 2012 Letters Patent only refers to the eldest son's children and not the children of younger sons of the Prince of Wales.   Was this Letters Patent a not-so-subtle statement that the children of younger sons of the Prince of Wales would not be royal even if they were born when their grandmother, the Queen, was still alive?

The downsizing of the Royal Family has been a topic of discussion since the late 1990s with the now-defunct Way Ahead group, which included seniors of the Royal Family and advisers.   I expect it was decided a long time ago that the RH and the title of Prince or Princess will be further limited when Charles succeeds to the throne.

I believe he will issue a new Letters Patent that will limit the royal titles to the children of the sovereign, the children of the eldest child of the Sovereign, and the children of the eldest child of the eldest child of the Sovereign.   (I used the eldest child rather than Prince or Princess of Wales) as it has not been determined how a female heir apparent will be styled.)

The announcement on the morning of Prince Edward's wedding in June 1999 that stated his new titles and the style and titles of any possible children was necessary because of the 1917 Letters Patent.  Louise and James are grandchildren in the male line, and thus, would have been styled as HRH and Princess and Prince if not for the official announcement that they would be styled as children of an earl.

The press release included these words:  The Queen "decided" and Edward and Sophie "agreed" to their children having the style of children of an earl in the peerage of the United Kingdom.

(Several years ago, in an interview, their mother, Sophie, told a reporter that she knew that her kids were royal, despite their style.)

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No such announcement was needed for the Duke of Sussex's children because the 1917 Letters Patent states that great-grandchildren in the male line (except for the children of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales)  .... shall have the style and title enjoyed by the children of Dukes.

Harry's eldest son will be styled as the Earl of Dumbarton.  Daughters and younger sons will have the courtesy title Lady and Lord before their Christian names.   If the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have only daughters, the peerages will revert to the Crown when Harry dies.  The Succession to the Crown Act applies solely to the succession to the throne.   Parliament has been unable to pass gender-equal legislation for succession to peerages.

[update: May 8, 2019.  The Duchess of Sussex gave birth to a son, Archie Harrison on May 6.  The Duke and Duchess have decided that he will not be styled for as the Earl of Dumbarton, but Master Archie Mountbatten-Windsor. as they want him to have a more private life.]

Queen Elizabeth's 2012 Letters Patent focused on the eldest son's children, not the children of all the sons of the Prince of Wales.   If Charles and the Queen wanted Harry's future children to be royal as well, the 2012 Letters Patent would have established the HRH and title Prince for the children of all of the sons of the Prince of Wales, instead of focusing on fixing the issue with the other children of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales. Within the royal house, it has probably been known for some time that Harry's children will not be royal.





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23 comments:

Kalnel said...

As things stand now, won't Harry's children automatically be elevated to HRH when Charles takes the throne? (Unless they apply a style like the Wessex children.)

Also, I wonder how they interpret the phrase "eldest son" of the Prince of Wales -- is it eldest son in birth order or eldest living son?

Imagine a scenario where William predeceases his father. Although William's children would be next in line, Harry would then be the "eldest son" of the Prince of Wales. Would Harry's children be elevated then?

All speculation, I know, just interesting to think about.

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

I do not believe that there will be an elevation as I said in the article. I believe there will be new LP when Charles is king that further limits titles. eldest son in birth.

Robbie said...

I wonder if Prince George and his future wife only had one child (male or female), that would only make HRH apart from his brother and sister.....that would be a very small Royal Family.

Thanks again for your fantastic articles.

Royal Travel and Events said...

But wopuld children of harry and Meghan not autmaitc become Prince/Princess when the Queen dies and Charles becomes King. So a Letters patent to limit the Tiitle Prince/Princess would have to be issued under the Queen#' reign or Harry's children would became Pricne/Pricness and have the title later removed from them.

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

that is the loophole -- nothing about upgrades if you are born before you become a grandchild in the male line so I say that Harry's kids will never be royal.

Shinjinee said...

Sorry but my phone has been swallowing comments. Lastly, *60th birthday* in 1879 for Feodora's birth.

I find it interesting that King George V and Queen Elizabeth II have implicitly allowed the House of Hangover their British titles while denying the Gloucester's and Kent scions the princely rank and qualification of HRH.

I believe that George V in 1917 and the Way Ahead group of recent decades are using the earlier usage of prince in the medieval kingdoms of England and Scotland. At that time it was restricted to the sons of a reigning king if I judge by Edward I and Edward III and Albany scions in Scotland.

Shinjinee

John said...

were they able to still wear the coronet of their previous HH rank? Or did they wear peer coronets?

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

John the only person who lost his HH was Prince Alistair who was three years old. He did become a peer until 1942

Andrew said...

Interesting to contrast with Sweden, where daughters now pass on Prince and Princess to grandchildren of the King (Princess Madeleine's children are not O'Neills.

Also, in the Netherlands, Queen Juliana's grandchildren (via Princess Margriet) are Princes and Princesses although Queen Beatrix's (via Princes Friso and Constantijn) are not.

Such Princes and Princesses are not necessarily Royal Highnesses. Please correct me if I have this wrong.

- said...

Did the children of the Duke and Duchess of Brunswick from the 1914 LP by George really lost their titles per the 1917 LP? Yes, the 1917 LP limited the degrees of kinship which automatically grants royal status and titles so they wasn't entitled to them by birth anymore but in that odd 1914 LP they were given them, I don't known how to cal it, personally, specifically?

B said...

It will be interesting to see how all of this plays out in the future. Charles is speaking of slimming the monarchy down, but with the alleged racism towards Archie, it may look bad to exclude him. We shall see.

MrDannyDetail said...

I've always tended to assume that the fact he does not use the Earl of Dumbarton courtesy title suggests that he will in fact be 'upgraded' when Charles becomes king. This is because the alternative would be for him to use the courtesy title during a part of his childhood, but then, because royals don't use courtesy titles, he would then appear to have it 'taken away' from him at the time of the upgrade, although it would in reality be ceasing to need to use it rather than it actually being taken away. So perhaps it was thought better for him to just not use it, and then wait however many years for the upgrade. But personally I do feel that even if this is the explantion, that it would still be better to at least style him as Lord Archie Mountbatten-Windsor. It is completely illogical that the sons of HRH Duke of Gloucester and HRH Duke of Kent, who are in the same genealogical position, albeit from a former rather than current monarch, do get styled as children of a Duke, and even the children of the Earl of Wessex 'fall back' on being styled as children of an Earl, in place of using the HRH and Prince(ss) that is rightfully theirs, but that Archie has no 'fall back' at all and instead falls down a crack between the two different style possiblities for sons of Royal Dukes. Previously the only real explanation was that Duke and Duchess themselves chose this state of affairs, but my understanding of the Duchess' recent comments in the Oprah interview was that they in fact did not choose this, which now begs the question of who is preventing Archie from being styled as the son of a Duke? Or is no-one actually preventing him from using the style, and could it in fact stem from some sort of big misunderstanding of some sort between the monarchy and the Duke and Duchess.

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

Meghan was so misinformed and provided so much incorrect information. Archie is in the same position as the children of the Dukes of Kent and Gloucester: male line great-grandchild of a sovereign. He should be styled as the Earl of Dumbarton or at least as Lord Archie Mountbatten Windsor, but it was announced when he was born that his parents did not want to have their son styled with a courtesy title and be Master Archie. They were already making plans to leave the RF. James and Louise do not have a Right to be styled as HRH Prince/Ess. That is the prerogative of the Sovereign. The Queen decided and Edward and Sophie agreed that their children will not have royal titles .. no LP is needed, actually, as nothing needs to be approved by Parliament. There is the possibility that Harry's kids would get the upgrade when Charles is king, but unlikely. We have the precedent of Edward's kids and the decision made by the Way Ahead group in the late 90s that the RF will be smaller. Harry has known that kids would not royal. One of the biggest clues was in 2012 when the queen changed the wording of the eldest son of the eldest son of the Pow to all of the children of the eldest son of the eldest son of the POW. It was the decision of the Sussexes to use no title - this was made clear in the announcement that the Sussexes "have chosen not to give him a courtesy title at this time." It is inevitable that Charles will issue a new LP as king. He has to because the 1917/2012 LPs are not gender equal. My prediction: HRH/Prince for children of the sovereign, the heir apparent's children and the heir apparent's eldest child's children. Peerages for the other sons & daughters of the sovereign.

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

No racism at all. Harry's kids were never going to be royal. Meghan is so wrong and appears to have limited knowledge of the family that she married into in Mau 2018. Edward's kids are styled as royals and they are grandchildren in the male line.

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

Yes, the Hannovers lost their British titles - and the 1914 LP was for the children only not further generations, but the British sovereign has "accepted" that the Hanovers continue to use older British title (Ireland, not northern Ireland)

Hairybob010 said...

Thank you very much for your explanation, very clarifying.
Robert Ligthelm

John said...

how cute would it have been to have Lord Archie Mountbatten! too bad the parents are denying him that.

Unknown said...

Re: Archie's title. In any case I don't see what relevance a British title has when a child is estranged from the family, his country and his heritage. It is his parents that have denied him this privilege.

Unknown said...

thats against protocol then, from the history that am reading from this article- that Archie will never be a prince. what an anomaly that the 6th or 7th in line to the throne is not a prince but the 10th and 11th (eugenie and beatrice) are princesses. (not sure i got the 10th and 11th right) but you get the gist.

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

Nothing to do with protocol. It was decided in the late 1990s that in the fulness of time, there will be fewer royals -- Harry's line will not be royal. The precedence was set im 1999 with Prince Edward's children

Unknown said...

Eugenie & Beatrice are Princesses because they are grandchildren of the Queen. Archie is great grand of Queen. When Charles becomes King then Archie will become Prince IF Charles does not issue new Letters Patent. Prince & Princess is for grandchildren. As I understand it no great grandchild of Elizabeth has Prince/Princess titles except Williams children.

Marlene Eilers Koenig said...

Unknown .. Yes and no. Prince Edward's children are grandchildren in the male line, but are styled as children of an earl, not as HRH Princess and Prince ...this was done without a letters Patent. The queen issued a Letters Patent before George was born to change one part of the 1917 Letter Patent. If Charlotte had been born first, she would have been styled as Lady Charlotte not a Princess, and George if born second would have been HRH Prince George and the Lord Louis ... so the queen fixed that issue. It was at this time, that I realized Harry's kids would never be royal because she could have changed the wording to all of children of sons of the Prince of Wales would be HRH Prince and Princes, not just the eldest son. Harry's kids should be styled as children of a duke, as the Earl of Dumbarton and Lady Lilibet Mountbatten-Windsor, but Harry and Meghan chose not do to this. They will not be royal nor will they have a role in the monarchy, They will grow up as Americans.

Britty said...

That was what I thought when I heard the announcement how Archie would be styled. Pursuit of more a private life and longing for a royal title and style make a contradiction. I have no clue on recent gossips on titles of Harry's kids.