Why Prince Harry And Meghan Markle’s Romance Feels So Refreshingly Modern
The brutal answer is that, by the standards of British royal
protocol, the former Hollywood star lacks "royal blood".
That means that she cannot call herself Princess Meghan.
The arcane rules mean that Meghan will be compelled to
follow the example of her future sister-in-law.
When Catherine Middleton and Prince William were pronounced
"man and wife" in 2011, she automatically become Her Royal Highness, Princess
William of Wales. The overwhelming likelihood is that the new royal fiancee
will in turn become HRH Princess Harry of Wales. Officially, We can forget
about Princess Kate and we can forget about Princess Meg.
The reason for this is simple: Catherine Middleton was not
of royal blood, and what applies to her will also apply in the case of Meghan
Markle.
Royal blood meant that the Queen's late sister Margaret was
entitled to call herself Princess
Margaret. Likewise the Queen's daughter is Princess Anne and her granddaughters
are Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie.
Royal blood made them princesses in their own right.
But Sarah Ferguson was never Princess Sarah and Sophie
Rhys-Jones - the wife of Prince Edward - is not Princess Sophie.
The rules also meant - to the consternation of many - that
Lady Diana Spencer was never officially Princess Diana. She was the Princess of
Wales and, after her divorce from Prince Charles, she was Diana, Princess of
Wales.
As the BBC's Nicholas Witchell explained at the time of William
and Kate's engagement in 2011, the Royal Family has not flourished for 1,000
years or so without finding a solution to this somewhat baffling and arguably
meaningless issue of what people should be called.
From the point of view of Buckingham
Palace, handy titles or "handles" are required for the members of
the family who occupy prestigious but somewhat peripheral roles to the main
business of monarchy.
The Queen's first cousins are, respectively, the Dukes of
Gloucester and Kent, and when her disgraced uncle abandoned the throne to
marry an American divorcee in 1936, he became the Duke of Windsor.
Such ducal titles are frequently bestowed upon marriage, our
correspondent reported, precisely because they give the new entrant to the
family a grand-sounding
title without making them princesses or princes in their own right.
So when Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson in 1986, the
Queen made him Duke of York, thus she became the Duchess of York - a title she
continues to hold despite her divorce.
Similarly, when Prince Edward married Sophie Rhys-Jones, he
became the Earl of Wessex and his new wife the Countess of Wessex.
It could be that the Queen makes the same kind of move in
the cases of Kate and Meghan, and dusts off a long-defunct royal dukedom -
Sussex (the favourite for Harry and Meghan), Albany, Connaught, Clarence and
Cambridge are among the vacant ones.
But as with many things connected to British
royal protocol, there is always an exception to the rule - the Queen's husband
Philip married into the royal family, and yet he is a prince.
When he married the then Princess Elizabeth in 1947, the
then British King, George VI, created him "Duke of Edinburgh".
He only became Prince Philip in February 1957 when the Queen
"accorded him the style and title of a Prince of the United Kingdom".
She could also make both Kate and Meghan
princesses in their own right - but such are the rigid traditions
surrounding this issue that Britain's first Princess Meghan is likely to be
some time away.
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