Why princess annes children are not titled




















The lack of royal title has certainly not held Zara back in life — and the talented horse-lover won a silver medal at the London Olympics in the GB Eventing Team. She has benefited from it in all sorts of ways. Princess Anne set a precedent for working as a senior royal and establishing private finances. And this freedom from the public purse - and intense gaze - has also benefited Zara and Peter , who also have to earn a living. The Princess is one of the most down-to-earth members of the royal family, and is often seen running around after her four young granddaughters, walking her dogs in the countryside, and cheering on daughter Zara Tindall at horse trials.

What's more, when Anne became a mum, she and Mark Phillips decided that they wanted their children to lead as normal lives as possible. However, the Queen still offered courtesy titles to both Mark when he married Anne, and their children, which the Princess declined.

Princess Anne's children and grandchildren don't have royal titles. Rather than feeling excluded without a royal title, Zara often speaks out about the benefits her parents' decision gave her. The royal also told Times in "I'm very lucky that both my parents decided to not use the title and we grew up and did all the things that gave us the opportunity to do. Both Mia, five, and baby Lena don't have titles, and neither do their cousins, Savannah Phillips, eight, and Isla Phillips, six.

More info. Princess Anne is the Queen's second eldest child, and as Princess Royal, is one of the hardest working in The Firm's upper-senior ranks. Although not the eldest of Queen Elizabeth II 's brood, she was the first to have children.

However, neither of them, despite being in line to the throne, has an honourary title equivalent to those of Princes Harry or William. Princess Anne's children, Peter Phillips and Zara Tindall formerly Phillips , did not receive princely titles at birth. Archaic royal rules mean only the offspring of male royal heirs may pass on their honours, making them princes or princesses. For the likes of Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, the title essentially ends at them, meaning their children do not become a prince or princess at birth.

That is unless the Queen decides to bestow an earldom on Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi or Jack Brooksbank which is unlikely now given this is usually granted upon marriage. So, why did King George V want to slim down the monarchy? The timing of the Letters Patent, of course, is significant. In , there were multiple things at play in Europe that were surely on George V's mind, not least the fall of multiple other monarchies, most prominently Russia's Tsar and Tsarina and their children.



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