| Princess Royal | |
|---|---|
since 13 June 1987 | |
| Style | Her Royal Highness |
| Residence | St James's Palace |
| Appointer | Monarch of the United Kingdom |
| Term length | Life tenure or until accession to the throne |
| Inaugural holder | Mary, Princess Royal and Princess of Orange |
Princess Royal is atitle customarily (but not automatically) awarded byBritish monarchs to their eldest daughters. Although purely honorary, it is the highest honour that may be given to a female member of the royal family.[1] There have been seven Princesses Royal;Princess Anne became Princess Royal in 1987.[2]
The titlePrincess Royal came into existence whenQueen Henrietta Maria (1609–1669), daughter ofHenry IV, King of France, andwife ofKing Charles I (1600–1649), wanted to imitate the way the eldest daughter of the King of France was styled "Madame Royale".[3] Thus,Princess Mary (born 1631), the daughter of Henrietta Maria and Charles, became the first Princess Royal in 1642.
It has become established that the title belongs to no one by right, but is given entirely at the sovereign's discretion. Princess Mary (laterQueen Mary II) (1662–1694), the elder daughter ofKing James II, andPrincess Sophia Dorothea (1687–1757), the only daughter ofKing George I, were eligible for this honour but did not receive it. At the time they respectively became eligible for the style, Princess Mary was alreadyPrincess of Orange, and Sophia Dorothea was alreadyQueen in Prussia.[1] A Princess Royal has never acceded to the British throne;Princess Victoria, the eldest daughter ofQueen Victoria, was the only Princess Royal to simultaneously be heiress presumptive, until she was displaced by the birth of her brother Prince Albert Edward (laterKing Edward VII).
Princess Louisa Maria (1692–1712), the youngest daughter ofKing James II (died 1701), born after he lost his crown in theGlorious Revolution of 1688–1689, was considered to be Princess Royal during James's exile byJacobites atSaint-Germain-en-Laye and was so called by them, even though she was not James's eldest living daughter at any time during her life.[3]
The title is held for life, even if the holder outlives her parent the monarch. On the death of a Princess Royal, the style is not inherited by any of her daughters; instead, if the monarch parent of the late Princess Royal has also died, the new monarch may bestow it upon his or her own eldest daughter. Thus,Princess Louise was granted the style ofPrincess Royal by her fatherKing Edward VII in 1905; she retained it until her death in 1931, more than twenty years into the reign of her brotherKing George V. Only upon Louise's death did the title become available for George's own daughter,Princess Mary, who was granted the title in 1932, retaining it until her death in 1965. Because Mary outlived not only her father but also her brotherKing George VI, the title was never available during George VI's reign to be granted to his elder daughterPrincess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II), though she would otherwise have been eligible to hold it.[1]
Customarily, when a princess marries, she takes on her husband's title. If her husband has a lower title or style, her style as a princess remains in use, although it may then be combined with her style by marriage, e.g.HRH ThePrincess Louise, Duchess of Argyll orHRHPrincess Alice, Countess of Athlone – if that princess had a territorial designation, she may cease its use. Exceptionally, however, a princess who has been granted the title ofHRH The Princess Royal will not customarily combine it with her style by marriage. For example, Princess Anne has beenHer Royal Highness The Princess Royal since being given the title in 1987; prior to that, her formal title wasHer Royal Highness The Princess Anne, Mrs Mark Phillips.[4]
The following is a complete list of women formally styledPrincess Royal:
Until Elizabeth gave her the title, Anne's correct form of address had been a mouthful, 'Her Royal Highness the Princess Anne, Mrs Mark Phillips'.