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Prince of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is aroyal title normally granted to sons and grandsons of reigning and pastBritish monarchs, plus consorts of female monarchs (byletters patent). The title is granted by the reigning monarch, who is thefount of all honours, through the issuing of letters patent as an expression of the royal will.
Individuals holding the title ofprince will usually also be granted the style ofHis Royal Highness (HRH).
When a British prince marries, his wife becomes aBritish princess; however, she is addressed by the feminine version of the husband's senior title on his behalf, either a princely title or a peerage. Traditionally, all wives of male members of theBritish royal family, the aristocracy, and members of the public take the style and title of their husbands. An example of this case isPrincess Michael of Kent, the wife ofKing Charles III's first cousin once removedPrince Michael of Kent.[1]
There is also the case when a princess of blood royal marries a British prince. She also becomes a princess by marriage and will be addressed in the same way. An example of this situation was the latePrincess Alexandra, Duchess of Fife: when she married her mother's cousin,Prince Arthur of Connaught, she became Princess Arthur of Connaught, Duchess of Fife.
If a British prince has apeerage, then the princess is addressed by the feminine version of her husband's peer title; an example of this case is the wife ofPrince William, who was officially styledHis Royal Highness The Duke of Cornwall and Cambridge while his wifeCatherine becameHer Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall and Cambridge, omitting both the 'prince' and 'princess' titles and their first names. When William was then createdPrince of Wales, that became the senior title held in his own right, and he and Catherine are styledHis/Her Royal Highness The Prince/Princess of Wales.[2]
Before 1714, the title of prince and the style ofHRH was not customary in usage. Sons and daughters of the sovereign were not automatically or traditionally called a prince or princess. An exception was thePrince of Wales, a title conferred on the eldest son of the sovereign since the reign of KingEdward I of England.[3] In the Kingdom of Scotland, even though an honorific principality was created by King James VI, the heir-apparent was only referred to asDuke of Rothesay. Some others include John, brother of KingRichard I and later KingJohn, who is sometimes called Prince John.
After the accession of KingGeorge I of Great Britain (the first monarch from theHouse of Hanover), it became customary for the sons of the sovereign and grandsons of the sovereign in the male line to be titledPrince and styledHisRoyal Highness (abbreviatedHRH). Great-grandsons of the sovereign were princes styledHisHighness (abbreviatedHH).
Victoria issued letters patent in 1864 which formally confirmed the practice of calling children and male-line grandchildrenRoyal Highness with the titular dignity ofPrince orPrincess prefixed to their respective Christian names.[4] The letters patent did not address the styling of great-grandchildren or further descendants asHis/Her Highness orPrince orPrincess.
Subsequent to 1864 some amendments regarding princes were made, with the issuance of specific letters patent changing the title and style of the following groups:
The male-line descendants ofErnest Augustus, Duke of Brunswick, head of the House of Hanover bear the title Prince or Princess of the United Kingdom with the style of Royal Highness as a secondarytitle of pretence.
Of the 58 British princes listed here, two are spouses of a reigning queen, eight lost their title after World War I, and one lost title in 2025.
† – Inletters patent dated 20 November 1917, King George V restricted the title of Prince to the children of the sovereign, the children of the sovereign's sons, and the eldest living son of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales.
‡ – By anOrder in Council dated 28 March 1919, as authorised by theTitles Deprivation Act 1917, King George V suspended the British peerage titles and honours of those who sided with Germany in World War I.
| Full name | Arms | Lifespan | Royal lineage | Right | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| George Augustus later, King George II | 1683–1760 | Only son ofKing George I | Created Prince by the sovereign |
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| Frederick Louis | 1707–1751 | 1st son ofKing George II |
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| George William | 1717–1718 | 2nd son of King George II | Prince from birth |
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| William Augustus | 1721–1765 | 3rd son of King George II |
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| George William Frederick later, King George III | 1738–1820 |
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| Edward Augustus | 1739–1767 |
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| William Henry | 1743–1805 |
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| Henry Frederick | 1745–1790 |
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| Frederick William | 1750–1765 |
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| George Augustus Frederick later, King George IV | 1762–1830 | 1st son of King George III |
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| Frederick Augustus | 1763–1827 | 2nd son of King George III |
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| William Henry later, King William IV | 1765–1837 | 3rd son of King George III |
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| Edward Augustus | 1767–1820 | 4th son of King George III |
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| Ernest Augustus Later, Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover | 1771–1851 | 5th son of King George III |
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| Augustus Frederick | 1773–1843 | 6th son of King George III |
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| Adolphus Frederick | 1774–1850 | 7th son of King George III |
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| Octavius | 1779–1783 | 8th son of George III |
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| Alfred | 1780–1782 | 9th son of King George III |
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| William Frederick | 1776–1834 |
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| George Frederick Alexander Charles Ernest Augustus Later, George V, King of Hanover | 1819–1878 |
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| George William Frederick Charles | 1819–1904 |
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| Francis Albert Augustus Charles Emmanuel | 1819–1861 | Husband of Queen Victoria | Created Prince by the sovereign |
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| Albert Edward Later, King Edward VII | 1841–1910 | 1st son of Queen Victoria | Prince from birth |
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| Alfred Ernest Albert | 1844–1900 | 2nd son of Queen Victoria |
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| Arthur William Patrick Albert | 1850–1942 | 3rd son of Queen Victoria |
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| Leopold George Duncan Albert | 1853–1884 | 4th son of Queen Victoria |
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| Ernest Augustus William Adolphus George Frederick | 1845–1923 |
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| Albert Victor Christian Edward | 1864–1892 | 1st son of King Edward VII |
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| George Frederick Ernest Albert Later, King George V | 1865–1936 | 2nd son of King Edward VII |
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| Alexander John Charles Albert[15] | 1871–1871 | 3rd son of King Edward VII |
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| Alfred Alexander William Ernest Albert | 1874–1899 |
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| Arthur Frederick Patrick Albert | 1883–1938 |
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| Carl Eduard Georg Albert Leopold | 1884–1954 |
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| Georg Wilhelm Christian Albert Edward Alexander Friedrich Waldemar Ernst Adolf | 1880–1912 |
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| Christian Friedrich Wilhelm Georg Peter Waldemar | 1885–1901 |
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| Ernst August Christian Georg | 1887–1953 |
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| Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David later, King Edward VIII | 1894–1972 | 1st son of King George V |
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| Albert Frederick Arthur George later, King George VI | 1895–1952 | 2nd son of King George V |
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| Henry William Frederick Albert | 1900–1974 | 3rd son of King George V |
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| George Edward Alexander Edmund | 1902–1942 | 4th son of King George V |
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| John Charles Francis | 1905–1919 | 5th son of King George V |
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| Alastair Arthur | 1914–1943 |
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| Johann Leopold William Albert Ferdinand Victor | 1906–1972 |
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| Dietmar Hubertus Friedrich Wilhelm Philipp | 1909–1943 |
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| Ernst August Georg Wilhelm Christian Ludwig Franz Joseph Nikolaus Oskar | 1914–1987 |
| Created Prince by the sovereign |
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| George Wilhelm Ernst August Friedrich Axel | 1915–2006 |
| Prince from birth |
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| Philip | 1921–2021 | Husband ofQueen Elizabeth II | Created Prince by the sovereign |
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| William Henry Andrew Frederick | 1941–1972 |
| Prince from birth | ||
| Richard Alexander Walter George | 1944–present |
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| Edward George Nicholas Paul Patrick | 1935–present |
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| Michael George Charles Franklin | 1942–present |
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| Charles Philip Arthur George later, King Charles III | 1948–present | 1st son of Queen Elizabeth II |
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| Andrew Albert Christian Edward | 1960–present | 2nd son of Queen Elizabeth II | |||
| Edward Antony Richard Louis | 1964–present | 3rd son of Queen Elizabeth II |
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| William Arthur Philip Louis | 1982–present |
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| Henry Charles Albert David | 1984–present |
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| James Alexander Philip Theo | 2007–present |
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| George Alexander Louis | 2013–present |
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| Louis Arthur Charles | 2018–present |
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| Archie Harrison | 2019–present |
| Prince since the accession of his grandfather |
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