Apparently surnames aren't needed on birth certificates for royals, odd as that seems.
George's birth certificate says simply His Royal Highness Prince George Alexander Louis of Cambridge, so, no, surnames are not needed.
Apparently surnames aren't needed on birth certificates for royals, odd as that seems.
That’s actually exactly what I meant. Maybe I just didn’t explain it well enough. Meghan can change her name in US to whatever she wants. She can change it to Minnie Mouse tomorrow if she wished. That has no bearing on her title once married.
From all of this, I guess we can now be quite assured that the British royals not only have titles and styles but also have a legal surname should ever they need one where the titles and styles don't work.![]()
Ah, you are right about where the HRH is at for Kate on the kids’s Birth certificate. But I think the key distinction between married and divorced in the title is HRH.
The key distinction between married and divorced is actually between "HRH The Duchess of Cambridge" and "HRH Diana, Princess of Wales" (Diana is an excellent example because she retained the HRH).
The current wife gets the definitive article, the divorced wife uses her name with a comma. A widow gets to add Dowager.
The key distinction between married and divorced is actually between "HRH The Duchess of Cambridge" and "HRH Diana, Princess of Wales" (Diana is an excellent example because she retained the HRH).
The current wife gets the definitive article, the divorced wife uses her name with a comma. A widow gets to add Dowager.
Actually, that’s not true. Edward’s children has Mountbatten-Windsor on their birth certificate, which makes them official Mountbatten-Windsor. Not the case for those with HRH titles.
When I say official, I mean legally, not what they are known by. For example, Prince Harry is Prince Henry officially, but known as Prince Harry. I don’t consider Harry as official since on official docs he’d still be Henry even if he appears as Harry in CC. The more formal announcements might revert back to official name as we’ve seen with the engagement announcement.
All of the Queen's descendants (Anne's children & grandchildren excepted) are legally M-B per her Order in Council dated 8 Feb. 1960.
What I was reading about citizenship seems to indicate that formal procedures have to occur to claim citizenship for a child born abroad and living abroad with a U.S. citizen parent living abroad. It seems some rules were tightened up and specified February 2001 with the Child Citizenship Act.
That seems to be debatable too. I believe kate was listed as HRH Catherine Elizabeth Duchess of Cambridge on George’s birth certificate. The difference between married and divorced would be the HRH.
the Queen does possess the legal authority to name her grandchildrenDoes the Queen actually possess the legal authority to name her grandchildren by Order-in-Council? Most are adults and therefore capable of choosing their own names whenever they please, and the others have living parents. She seems to have raised a family that will respect her wishes as expressed in the order, but I'm doubtful that it actually means anything legally. If her descendants use Mountbatten-Windsor as a surname, I think it would ultimately be because of their choice, not the royal prerogative. Your "legal" name in most common law jurisdictions is whatever name you choose to use.
Does the Queen actually possess the legal authority to name her grandchildren by Order-in-Council? Most are adults and therefore capable of choosing their own names whenever they please, and the others have living parents. She seems to have raised a family that will respect her wishes as expressed in the order, but I'm doubtful that it actually means anything legally. If her descendants use Mountbatten-Windsor as a surname, I think it would ultimately be because of their choice, not the royal prerogative. Your "legal" name in most common law jurisdictions is whatever name you choose to use.)
What???? I didn't choose my surname. It's the same as my father's and has been since my birth. That's the law. Yes, I can change it but by default it's whatever the law says it is - in this case my father's.
So yes, the Queen's adult children can CHANGE their surnames but until they do that it's legally Mountbatten-Windsor by default.
An Order in Council has the force of law:
https://privycouncil.independent.gov.uk/privy-council/orders/
US citizenship either is or isn't. If it exists, it's automatic and doesn't need to be claimed. It's recommended that parents register foreign births with the US government, as this makes it easier to prove when necessary, but simply being born to a qualifying citizen is all that's needed.
The Child Citizenship Act regards children who weren't born as US citizens. It was passed to make it easier for them to attain citizenship automatically if they ever moved to the United States. (I think it was the result of some very unfortunate cases involving adoptees whose new parents failed to fill out the naturalization paperwork. Some of them made some bad choices as young adults and ended up being deported, despite being raised as Americans by Americans, all because their parents didn't fill out a form. The law made it so that any child of a US citizen who lives in the USA with that parent automatically becomes a citizen, with no naturalization filing required.)
Actually, you can name your kids whatever you want in the U.S.
Not exactly. From the U.S. Department of State official website--
Birth Abroad to One Citizen and One Alien Parent in Wedlock
A child born abroad to one U.S. citizen parent and one alien parent acquires U.S. citizenship at birth under Section 301(g) of the INA provided the U.S. citizen parent was physically present in the United States or one of its outlying possessions for the time period required by the law applicable at the time of the child's birth. (For birth on or after November 14, 1986, a period of five years physical presence, two after the age of fourteen, is required. For birth between December 24, 1952 and November 13, 1986, a period of ten years, five after the age of fourteen, is required for physical presence in the United States or one of its outlying possessions to transmit U.S. citizenship to the child.) The U.S. citizen parent must be the genetic or the gestational parent and the legal parent of the child under local law at the time and place of the child’s birth to transmit U.S. citizenship.
https://travel.state.gov/content/tr...isition-US-Citizenship-Child-Born-Abroad.html
At birth your parents choose your legal name (yes, first and last), but once you have a legal name you can't just change it willy nilly without legal steps taken to do so.
Of course, complicating all of this is that the specific legalities of naming vary from state to state in the US.
For example in some states, parents can choose whatever surname they choose for their child when filling out the birth certificate. In mine the child must share a last name with at least one parent on the certificate; parents wanting to give their child a different last name have to then go through the more complicated legal name change procedure.
https://www.npr.org/2014/09/15/347954339/creating-your-baby-s-last-name-tennessee-says-no
Generally speaking, though, a name change at marriage is a fairly streamlined procedure in most states if the wife opts to adopt the same surname listed for her husband on the marriage certificate. A marriage certificate or register without a last name would mean additional legal hurdles to jump through. So I suspect the specifics of how Harry is named on the marriage register might signal for us what route she's going with her legal identity in the US.
https://brentwoodhomepage.com/brentwood-couple-wins-right-to-pick-their-childs-last-name/
An update on this case. I repeat, in the United States, you can name your kid whatever you want.
Question. If the UK passport follows the traditional way of wording titles, wouldn't Kate's passport state simply HRH The Duchess of Cambridge? I believe the use of a first name and then the title was designated for divorced spouses of a peer such as Sarah, Duchess of York.
If this ruling is followed, wouldn't Meghan's UK passport just read HRH The Duchess of XXXX? This wouldn't work at all though for a US passport, I believe and she'd either have to retain the legal name of Rachel Meghan Markle or change it to Rachel Meghan Mountbatten-Windsor.
Boy is there a lot of confusion about things when a British royal marries an American eh?
Would Meghan even be able to be 'HRH the duchess of X' if she isn't a British citizen yet? What status would that title have (just a 'people like to call you this' versus 'you are the Duchess of X'?). I'm sure there are examples from others within the peerage...