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  #41  
Old 10-17-2004, 04:43 PM
kelly9480 kelly9480 is offline
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Originally Posted by Julian
The change of name to Mountbatten-Windsor happened in the late fifties, so the Duke of Edinburgh was hardly any crotchety old man then. William's children will all be HRH unless they opt to do what Prince Edward did, ditto Prince Harry's. If Lady Louse is only Windsor and not M-W then likewise any daughters of William's or Harry's will also be only Windsor assuming they are not born styled as princesses. Assuming of course all that happens only after Charles succeeds.
As of right now, only the eldest son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales will be styled HRH automatically (the LP issued by George V). So, unless EIIR alters this, only William's eldest son will be HRH and the other children will be MWs. Harry's children will be MW unless Charles is on the throne. They will be the male-line great-grandchildren, and will be just like Lord Freddie in terms of style.

The MW use only began occuring in the 70s, by which time Philip was a crochety old man.

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Originally Posted by Wymanda
Following the idea that only "male line descendants" retain the name Windsor, Anne is clearly M-W as she is a female line descendant!
Anne is a child of EIIR, so her surname is Windsor, legally. Her children are female-line descendants. The gender of the individual doesn't alter whether they are male or female-line, the gender of the parent does.

For example, my brother and sisters and I are female line descendants of our maternal grandfather because we descend from him through a female (our mother). We are male line descendants of our paternal grandfather because we descend from him through a male (our father). The fact that three of us are female and one is male doesn't affect whether we are male or female line descendants. The gender of the parent we trace the descent through is all that matters.
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  #42  
Old 10-17-2004, 11:01 PM
Julian Julian is offline
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Originally Posted by kelly9480
As of right now, only the eldest son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales will be styled HRH automatically (the LP issued by George V). So, unless EIIR alters this, only William's eldest son will be HRH and the other children will be MWs. Harry's children will be MW unless Charles is on the throne. They will be the male-line great-grandchildren, and will be just like Lord Freddie in terms of style.
That's what I'm talking about, is what they will be styled when Charles is on the throne. The LP of George V is what allowed the younger son of the late Duke of Kent and his daughter to be Prince and Princess of the U.K., as is also the reason why the present Duke of York's daughters are also. Even if William and/or Harry have children during their grandmother's lifetime, and William's younger and Harry's are styled only Lord/Lady or whatever you are alluding to, once Charles succeeds, William is elevated to heir and Harry's children as grandchildren of the new monarch become princes/princesses of the U.K. by right under those LP of GV.

The question mark over all this is the unfortunate one that Edward "Wessex" has created with his choice of (a) waiting for a royal dukedom to be recreated later for him by Charles, supposedly the Edinburgh dukedom and (b) the choice not allow Louise to be styled as a princess of the U.K. albeit she's the daughter of a son of the present monarch and fully entitled to be so. Will this approach create some kind of low key model that Harry for instance will feel forced to follow with his own children? What about Louise herself? It makes no sense to me that she is being called not only not a princess but also only "Lady Louise Windsor" when in fact she's Lady Louise Mountbatten-Windsor, being of the generation when this surname comes into effect. And what about when her own father is elevated to a royal dukedom? Still only "Lady" and still refusing to use "Princess", even though her cousins Eugenie and Beatrice are? Finally, if they really want to be modern, then why not recreate the Edinburgh title so it can be inherited by females as well in case Louise is an only child? There are inconsistencies being created at this point IMO which began with Edward refusing the title of a royal duke at his wedding, and have grown with the choice of styling for his daughter. (I know there can be made a case for her being only "Lady" since she's also the daugher of an earl, but that's the lesser title, and it's unusual at least in the RF to choose to go by a lesser title). All just my perspective of course, and I tend to be surprisingly traditional on this issue!
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  #43  
Old 10-17-2004, 11:47 PM
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Julian,
I agree with you!
I hope that when the Edinburgh dukedom is recreated for Edward that a "special remainder" be created so Louise can inherit
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  #44  
Old 10-17-2004, 11:59 PM
kelly9480 kelly9480 is offline
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It's likely that both W&H will be married fathers before EIIR passes on, so most ppl like to speculate on what will happen then. Sorry for thinking that's what you were talking about.

I don't know that Ed refused. Supposedly, it was made known to EIIR that the public didn't want another dukedom. Who make that known and what they based it on is beyond me, but that's the rumor going around. Either way, it was felt that since Ed is the only male descendant who bothers with the Award Scheme, and the Award should have a Duke of Edinburgh heading it, Ed should eventually get the Edinburgh title. It was a convenient way of getting around the issue, though it does make me wonder about precedence (dukedoms that leave the royal house have a place in the table of precedence, earldoms do not).

Over at ATR, there's a new school of thought that the press release where EIIR granted her consent that the Wessex spawn be known as Earl's kids has the same effect as an LP. Apparently, any document EIIR issues on titles has the same weight as an LP, despite not being on fancy paper. If that's true (and it's just speculation right now), Louise isn't entitled to be HRH because EIIR said she wanted them styled as Earl's kids. This school of thought cites Blair's making of policy by press release as evidence that EIIR can do it as well. I didn't read all the back and forth on the issue, but if you google the archives, it should be the next most recent time it's been brought up (someone brought it up a day or so ago and was told to google, so that should be the most recent).

I remember reading about Beatrice and Eugenie being "encouraged" to drop their HRHs when they come of age. It was in the Telegraph and Sarah made it clear she intended for her daughters to remain princesses.

If the UK moves to the kind of monarchy where only children of the sovereign and heir-apparent carry out duties, it would make sense to force Harry's kids into permaneny non-royal status. The UK public doesn't like it when RHs are in the commercial world, so if they're to be in the commercial world (and Charles fully intends to shed ppl), they'll need to drop the HRH status. Of course, all of this is up in the air until EIIR dies.
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  #45  
Old 10-18-2004, 04:03 PM
Julian Julian is offline
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Originally Posted by kelly9480
It's likely that both W&H will be married fathers before EIIR passes on, so most ppl like to speculate on what will happen then. Sorry for thinking that's what you were talking about.

I don't know that Ed refused. Supposedly, it was made known to EIIR that the public didn't want another dukedom. Who make that known and what they based it on is beyond me, but that's the rumor going around. Either way, it was felt that since Ed is the only male descendant who bothers with the Award Scheme, and the Award should have a Duke of Edinburgh heading it, Ed should eventually get the Edinburgh title. It was a convenient way of getting around the issue, though it does make me wonder about precedence (dukedoms that leave the royal house have a place in the table of precedence, earldoms do not).

Over at ATR, there's a new school of thought that the press release where EIIR granted her consent that the Wessex spawn be known as Earl's kids has the same effect as an LP. Apparently, any document EIIR issues on titles has the same weight as an LP, despite not being on fancy paper. If that's true (and it's just speculation right now), Louise isn't entitled to be HRH because EIIR said she wanted them styled as Earl's kids. This school of thought cites Blair's making of policy by press release as evidence that EIIR can do it as well. I didn't read all the back and forth on the issue, but if you google the archives, it should be the next most recent time it's been brought up (someone brought it up a day or so ago and was told to google, so that should be the most recent).

I remember reading about Beatrice and Eugenie being "encouraged" to drop their HRHs when they come of age. It was in the Telegraph and Sarah made it clear she intended for her daughters to remain princesses.

If the UK moves to the kind of monarchy where only children of the sovereign and heir-apparent carry out duties, it would make sense to force Harry's kids into permaneny non-royal status. The UK public doesn't like it when RHs are in the commercial world, so if they're to be in the commercial world (and Charles fully intends to shed ppl), they'll need to drop the HRH status. Of course, all of this is up in the air until EIIR dies.
Firstly, it is verboten around here to mention other websites. If you don't believe me, I can PM you the messages I got from [moderator] Josefine which went on and on about the exact forum you have just referred directly to above. The funny part is, now that you've brought up a ludicrous argument being made there about the Queen, the PM (politics is supposedly also not allowed here, btw) and how the Queen makes announcements, it goes back to my original point months ago about "consider the source" regarding that newsgroup. Why anyone on this latest occasion would reach the wild conclusion that the Queen is taking her cues from Blair's methods on how she makes her decisions regarding styles and titles in her own family, is beyond me. The nicest I can say is, it's very faulty logic. As you may gather, I never google their archives and I prefer to take my information from credible sources.
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  #46  
Old 10-18-2004, 08:20 PM
kelly9480 kelly9480 is offline
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I didn't say she was following Blair's lead on titles. I said she is suspected to be following his lead on how she releases information -- policy by press release. If that's the case, (and right now, it depends on whether the sovereign has to formally issue LP on fancy paper), then Louise isn't entitled to be HRH because EIIR said she'd be treated like the daughter of an earl. It's purely a legal debate as to whether EIIR has the power to not bother with the LP.

I consider their sources to be very credible when it comes to this. They've apparently looked for anything that states that the monarch can only regulate titles by LP and apparently haven't found any. It's a question of whether it's forbidden even if it's not specifically written down. Which of course brings in English Common Law, and that's where the hang up is. Just because it hasn't been done by monarchs, does that automatically mean it can't be done.
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  #47  
Old 10-18-2004, 08:43 PM
Julian Julian is offline
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"Ididn't say she was following Blair's lead on titles. I said she is suspected to be following his lead on how she releases information -- policy by press release. If that's the case, (and right now, it depends on whether the sovereign has to formally issue LP on fancy paper), then Louise isn't entitled to be HRH because EIIR said she'd be treated like the daughter of an earl. It's purely a legal debate as to whether EIIR has the power to not bother with the LP."

That's what I also meant to say, that she's "suspected" to be following his lead on how he releases information. The sovereign has always done this by LP or Royal Warrant. If she was about to change her procedure, and assuming there was room for her to legally switch away from the normal methods she has used and other sovereigns have used, would there really be no explanation from the Palace on that? I for one can't conceive it.

"I consider their sources to be very credible when it comes to this. They've apparently looked for anything that states that the monarch can only regulate titles by LP and apparently haven't found any. It's a question of whether it's forbidden even if it's not specifically written down. Which of course brings in English Common Law, and that's where the hang up is. Just because it hasn't been done by monarchs, does that automatically mean it can't be done."

You can also reverse the same faulty logic and leave yourself nowhere: i.e., just because it hasn't been done by monarchs, doesn't mean that the silence on this particular issue in law allows the monarch to do it. Or that the monarch would even want to suddenly start doing it.

As to them or their sources, enough said already.
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  #48  
Old 10-18-2004, 11:50 PM
kelly9480 kelly9480 is offline
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That's the heart of the debate, though. Just because it hasn't been done before, does it mean it can't be done at all? If it can be done, does that mean that Louise is not entitled to HRH?

I'm looking forward to the legal arguments for and against the question of whether EIIR can do it (the question is not really whether she has done it with Louise, just if she can). If they post the source and where they got it, there's no problem on sources, though intrepretations of the source may differ in the end.
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  #49  
Old 10-18-2004, 11:58 PM
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I would say the only test would be that when Louise is older if she demanded the HRH as her right. It would then be up to a court to determine if the Press Release was valid in depriving her of it. I know there was some contention as to whether the L'sP depriving the Duchess of Windsor of HRH were legal. When Lady Patricia Ramsay (Princess Patricia of Connaught) gave up her HRH on her marriage she was still entitled to all the rank & privilege of a Princess but was styled as the daughter of an Earl or non royal Duke.
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  #50  
Old 10-19-2004, 12:46 AM
Julian Julian is offline
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There was definitely some contention about the basis for denying the Duchess of Windsor the HRH since this also went to the issue of Common Law and whether the monarch's prerogatives as the "fount of all honours" was something that couldn't trump Common Law in this area. If, of course, they had ever contested it outright, which GVI and his advisors knew would never happen.

The present case of Lady Louise seems very unique though and with no exact basis of comparison to know how her style has been reached nor where what it may become in future. If they want to keep it low-key, then they'll keep on finding reasons to leave her as Lady Louise even after Edward becomes Duke of Edinburgh which IMO will just be very strange as well. If they want to be modern then indeed let them also be consistent about it and also recreate Edward's Edinburgh and Wessex titles as inheritable by Louise by special remainder, and let her use Countess of Wessex as the courtesy title.
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  #51  
Old 10-19-2004, 10:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kelly9480
It's a question of whether it's forbidden even if it's not specifically written down. Which of course brings in English Common Law, and that's where the hang up is. Just because it hasn't been done by monarchs, does that automatically mean it can't be done.
When the English royal family died out in 1603 the throne passed to James VI, King of Scots who became the first King of Great Britain. The Kingdom of England as people knew it ceased to exist and was replaced by the United Kingdom therefore English common law has no jurisdiction over the U.K. monarchy. Unfortunately, as is typical in the so-called "United" Kingdom, England simply breakes, changes or ignores the rules as it sees fit.
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  #52  
Old 10-22-2004, 07:43 PM
Julian Julian is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Iain
When the English royal family died out in 1603 the throne passed to James VI, King of Scots who became the first King of Great Britain. The Kingdom of England as people knew it ceased to exist and was replaced by the United Kingdom therefore English common law has no jurisdiction over the U.K. monarchy. Unfortunately, as is typical in the so-called "United" Kingdom, England simply breakes, changes or ignores the rules as it sees fit.
Iain, this didn't happen until 1707, during the reign of Queen Anne. Until then, all the Stuart monarchs from James I and VI to Anne I were styled as King/Queen of England, Scotland, Ireland, and France. The Act of Union (1707) transformed Queen Anne into Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, Queen of France. If you check on the current validity or use of English Common Law within the bounds of England, I think you'll probably find many instances where it continues to come into play as a matter of still valid law.
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  #53  
Old 10-27-2004, 09:23 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Julian
Iain, this didn't happen until 1707, during the reign of Queen Anne. Until then, all the Stuart monarchs from James I and VI to Anne I were styled as King/Queen of England, Scotland, Ireland, and France. The Act of Union (1707) transformed Queen Anne into Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, Queen of France. If you check on the current validity or use of English Common Law within the bounds of England, I think you'll probably find many instances where it continues to come into play as a matter of still valid law.
Julian, I perhaps didn't make myself clear. When James VI became King of England he was called "King of Great Britain" A title he himself is said to have thought up. You are right to say that the United Kingdom came into being in 1707 but Queen Anne on the other hand became Queen of the "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland." Either way, English law should have had no bearing on the new order.
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  #54  
Old 05-10-2005, 01:14 PM
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rouyal house does that mean the same family
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  #55  
Old 05-11-2005, 06:54 AM
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the Danish are the oldest European royal family but i think the Japanese are the oldest royal family...i heard something on TV about that...but i'm not 100% sure...
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  #56  
Old 05-11-2005, 09:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hillary_nugent
the Danish are the oldest European royal family but i think the Japanese are the oldest royal family...i heard something on TV about that...but i'm not 100% sure...
Yes, you're right. The Imperial Japanese Family are the oldest royal family.
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  #57  
Old 05-11-2005, 10:51 AM
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I have a question & I'm sure one of your posts answered it but I didn't understand it.
What's the point of naming Lady Louise Mountbatten Windsor if she's only going to get married and take on her husbands name. Do they expect her husband to take the name Mw?
I'm confused.
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  #58  
Old 05-12-2005, 02:55 AM
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the japanese royal family is the oldest and continuously reigning royal family. in the middle east, there are royal/noble families that can trace their lines as far back to the Prophet Mahommad and to ancient kings and queens of persia, mesopotamia, egypt, etc.
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Old 05-12-2005, 10:09 AM
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