Donate SIGN UP

Royal Question

Avatar Image
Cardonaldthistle | 15:45 Tue 16th Nov 2010 | News
36 Answers
Is Prince William able to marry a "commoner" and still become King....?
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 36rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Cardonaldthistle. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
yes as long as she is a Protestant
if he is given another title like Earl or Duke like Prince Edward then she will no longer just be a commoner but a Countess or Duchess,otherwise she will have to be known as Princess William (same as Princess Michael is now)
even nobility are technically commoners but with a title. This has happened before - wit Diana and also the Queen Mum.....both minor noble commoners.

The other prerequisite is that William would have had to seek the blessing of the Queen, as well as Kate's father, before proposing. Re the Queen they call it a quota or spot technically I think....
I am wrong its just the blessing. A roiyal prince in line to the throne can marry a female of another religious persuasion, as long ashe converts by the way......
Question Author
Thanks to you all...was Diana's father not an Earl though...?
still a commoner though - so was the Queen Mum's father....
I thought he did need the Queen's permission under the Royal Marriages act of 1772

http://en.wikipedia.o...al_Marriages_Act_1772
yes I pointed this out before - thanks for the link though
there is an over-rider to the Monarch's consent or, rather, lack of it - "Any member of the Royal Family over the age of 25 who has been refused the sovereign's consent may marry one year after giving notice to the Privy Council of their intention to so marry, unless both houses of Parliament expressly declare their disapproval. There is, however, no instance in which the sovereign's formal consent in Council has been refused"
Question Author
Oh I see...even if you receive a title you are still a commoner unless you have the bloodline.
Thanks again :-)
He will probably be given a royal dukedom in order for his wife to be styled duchess, as there is no special title for the eldest son of the Prince or Wales. The eldest son of Edward VII, while he was still Prince of Wales, was given the title of Duke of Clarence (died prematurely).
-- answer removed --
shame they cant give him St Andrews given that fine institution (also my own alma mater) is where they romanced; that title went to Prince George, 4th son of George V and has come down through to the Duke and Duchess of Kent's son. Betting would favour Cambridge - or perhaps Lancaster????
Amusingly I rather suspect that an heir to the throne who's marriage was not approved of by the monarch could appeal under human rights legislation with a good chance of success.
Cambridge, Clarence, Albany or Sussex would be my guess, but definitely not Lancaster. That title is reserved for the Sovereign, a relic of the Wars of the Roses. The present holder is the Queen.
true you are right on Lancaster - and as to the Duchy
Without being too crude, as they have been living together, how will she pass the Virgin test, which I thought they all had to do.
wonder how long this one will last?
I don't think they have to pass a virgin test - Camilla would have failed miserably.
What's the pass mark on the virgin test?

What do you have to score for a B ?

1 to 20 of 36rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Royal Question

Answer Question >>