Prince William of Wales
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Prince William | |
---|---|
Prince William of Wales | |
Full name | |
William Arthur Philip Louis | |
Titles | |
HRH Prince William of Wales | |
Royal house | House of Windsor |
Father | Charles, Prince of Wales |
Mother | Diana, Princess of Wales |
Born | 21 June 1982 (age 24) St Mary's Hospital, London |
Baptised | 4 August 1982 Buckingham Palace, London |
Occupation | H.M. British Army - Cornet, Blues and Royals |
Prince William of Wales (William Arthur Philip Louis; born 21 June 1982) is the elder son of Charles, Prince of Wales and the late Diana, Princess of Wales. He is second in the line of succession to the British throne and thrones of each of the other Commonwealth Realms. As the son of the Prince of Wales and grandson of Queen Elizabeth II, Prince William is a member of the British Royal Family. He has recently graduated as an army officer at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and is due to enter the Blues and Royals regiment of the Household Cavalry of the British Army like his younger brother Prince Harry. His official name as an army officer is Second Lieutenant William Wales.[1] He is 6ft 3in (1.90m) tall.[2]
Contents |
[edit] Birth, family, and childhood
Prince William was born on 21 June 1982 at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington, West London, England. His father is Charles, Prince of Wales, the eldest son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. His mother is the late Diana, Princess of Wales, youngest daughter of the 8th Earl Spencer. As a grandchild of the British monarch and son of the Prince of Wales, he is styled His Royal Highness Prince William of Wales. As a child, he was affectionately called by his parents Wombat or Wills.
He was christened on his great-grandmother's 82nd birthday on 4 August 1982 in the Music Room at Buckingham Palace by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Robert Runcie. His godparents are: King Constantine of Greece, Sir Laurens van der Post, Princess Alexandra, the Duchess of Westminster, Lord Romsey and Lady Susan Hussey.
Through his grandfather on his mother's side, Prince William is descended from King Charles II of England and King James II of England. William, should he become King, would be the first monarch since Queen Anne to be a direct descendent of Charles I of England.
He has a younger brother, Prince Harry. His father's second wife, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, is their stepmother, giving the princes a step-brother, Tom Parker Bowles, and step-sister, Laura Lopes.
On 1 March 1991 (St. David's Day), Prince William made his first official public appearance during a visit to Cardiff, the capital city of Wales. After arriving by plane, the eight-year-old prince was taken by his parents to Llandaff Cathedral. After a tour of the cathedral, he signed its visitors' book, demonstrating that he was left-handed. Photographs of the Prince taken during his visit are on permanent display at the cathedral. On his departure, numerous school children and local residents from the surrounding area presented gifts to him, which he received with a smile and the whispered words "thank you".
On 3 June 1991, Prince William was admitted to the Royal Berkshire Hospital after being hit on the side of the forehead by another pupil wielding a golf club. The Prince did not lose consciousness, but suffered a depressed fracture of the skull and was operated on at the Great Ormond Street Hospital. A slight scar is still visible today.
The prince has been a keen fan of Aston Villa F.C. since childhood.
[edit] Death of Diana, Princess of Wales
On 31 August 1997, Prince William's mother, Diana, was killed in a car accident in Paris, France. Her death came days after she spent a holiday in southern France with both Prince William and Prince Harry. Both princes were staying with the Queen at Balmoral Castle at the time. Their father, Charles, woke them from their sleep to tell them the news.
At Diana's funeral, Prince William accompanied his father, brother, his grandfather Prince Philip and his uncle Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer in a walk behind Diana's funeral cortege from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey. During his eulogy, the Earl Spencer promised that the Spencer family would take an active interest in looking after Diana's children, although William has seen little of him since then and also had little contact with Frances Shand Kydd, Diana's mother, before her death[citation needed].
[edit] Education
Prince William attended independent schools in southern England. In his early years he was a pupil at Mrs Jane Mynors' nursery school and the pre-preparatory Wetherby School, both in West London. In 1987, he also joined Fun With Music, a music appreciation class conducted by Ann Rachlin. Then, he attended Ludgrove School in Berkshire, a preparatory school. After passing an entrance exam, he went on to Eton College in Berkshire. Whilst there, he studied geography, biology and history of art at A-level.
Like a growing number of British teenagers, Prince William chose to take a gap year after finishing Eton College. He took part in a British Army training exercise in Belize. He spent the final stage of his gap year in southern Chile as a volunteer with Raleigh International. Pictures of the prince cleaning a toilet were broadcast around the world. [1]
After his gap year, Prince William attended the University of St Andrews in Fife, Scotland from 2001, graduating in 2005. He embarked on a degree course in Art History, but later changed his main subject to Geography. William earned a Scottish Master of Arts degree with upper-second class honours, the highest academic achievement of any heir to the British and other Commonwealth Realm thrones. At St Andrews, the Prince used the name William Wales.
In January 2006, Prince William began his cadet course at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst to train as an Army Officer. William joined his brother who had been there since May 2005.
[edit] Royal duties and career
In July 2005, William carried out his first official engagements representing Elizabeth II, as Queen of New Zealand, at World War II commemorations in New Zealand. In the autumn of 2005, the prince took two work placements. He initially worked in land management at Chatsworth House, a Peak District estate of the Duke of Devonshire. William's second work placement was with the HSBC Group in London.
William's first patronage was to the UK charity Centrepoint, [3] which works with homeless young people. During his mother's patronage to the charity, William would occasionally accompany her on visits. William is also patron of the Tusk Trust, an African conservation charity based in the UK.
The British journalist Johann Hari has argued in Le Monde that William does not want to be King. He writes: "Nicholas Davies, the royal expert, has revealed that during one holiday in his mid-teens, William was tobogganing down a steep hill in the dark. When he neared the bottom of the slope, where cars were passing, a detective leapt out, seemingly from nowhere. He threw himself on to the sledge and sent William hurtling into a pile of snow. William screamed, "Why do I have to be surrounded by policemen all the time? Why won't you just let me be a normal person?"" [2]
The prince has been the president of England's Football Association since May 2006. In August 2006 it was announced that he would become Vice Royal Patron of the Welsh Rugby Union from February 2007, supporting his grandmother the Queen, who is Patron of the WRU.
In August of 2006, the Queen appointed Prince William to two patronages of the Royal Navy. William is Commodore-in-Chief for Scotland and Commodore-in-Chief for submarines.
Like many of his predecessors, Prince William has chosen to serve in the Armed Forces. On 15 December 2006, Prince William graduated from the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (RMAS). The passing out parade was attended by the Queen and Prince Charles, along with other members of the Royal Family and Kate Middleton, Prince William's current girlfriend. Prince William officially received his commission as a 2nd Lieutenant at a midnight ceremony on 15 December 2006. Following the announcement in September, Prince William followed his younger brother into the Blues and Royals (Royal Horse Guards and 1st Dragoons) as a troop leader. Prince William will now spend four months at Bovington Camp in Dorset, training to become a troop commander in an armoured reconnaissance unit.
Prince William and Prince Harry have both indicated that they would be prepared to undertake active service. Given his position in the succession and the reluctance of previous British governments to allow the heir to the throne to be put into dangerous situations, it remains to be seen if this wish will be fully realised. However, Major General Sebastian Roberts, general officer commanding the Household Division, indicated it was possible that the prince could be deployed to a conflict zone. There seems to be further proof as Prince Harry is scheduled to be deployed to Iraq in May of 2007.
Unlike Prince Harry, who will continue as a career soldier, Prince William will go on to spend time with both the RAF and the Royal Navy to prepare him for his future role. He will also increasingly carry out public engagements in parallel to his military career.
[edit] Girlfriends
William's love life has been the subject of much conjecture. In the latter part of 2005, the media began intensively reporting his long-term relationship with current girlfriend Kate Middleton, formerly one of his university flatmates, whom he began dating in November or December 2003. There has been no statement from the Queen or the Prince of Wales regarding their views of the relationship or a possible marriage.
Kate Middleton attended Prince William's passing out parade at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst on 15 December 2006. That was the first occasion that Middleton has attended a high-profile public event as Prince William's guest. Middleton was accompanied by both her parents and the prince's private secretary Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton. It was reported by Daily Mail, a British tabloid newspaper, that she was invited by the Queen to Christmas lunch in 2006, which, would make her the first unmarried partner of a royal to be asked to the festive celebrations at the royal estate of Sandringham House near Sandringham, Norfolk. Middleton declined the offer, preferring to spend Christmas with her own family. Middleton made it clear that she will not attend any future gathering with the Queen and royal family unless she and William are married. [4]According to a 2006 December issue of People, a palace spokesman stated that Middleton is not at this time being groomed nor being advised to be a future princess. The royal family would prefer to see Prince William take the relationship slowly and not rush into a permanent commitment [5] . It is also to be noted that he has professional obligations, such as his military service, which would not be conducive to starting a family. Despite media speculation concerning the couple's future together, Prince William himself has stated that he does not intend to marry until he is at least 28 [6][7]. Media interest in Middleton greatly increased at the time of her 25th birthday. There were eliciting requests from Prince Charles, Prince William and her lawyers that she should be left alone. A decision was made by two newspaper groups, News International and The Guardian, to refrain from publishing paparazzi photographs of her. However, as there is still no engagement and no funding for Middleton's security, the media and the paparazzi still continue to follow her every move.
Recently, it was reported in the DNA INDIA and Daily Mail, that the Prince was seen at an upscale London club kissing 22 year old Tess Shepherd while Middleton was on vacation in Barbados with her family.[8] A few weeks later, the Prince was also photographed "groping" eighteen year old, Ana Ferreira's breast at Elements night club in Bournemouth, Dorset.[9]
[edit] Titles, styles, honours and arms
Styles of HRH Prince William of Wales |
|
---|---|
Reference style | His Royal Highness |
Spoken style | Your Royal Highness |
Alternative style | Sir |
[edit] Titles
[edit] Styles
[edit] Surname usage
Under an Order-in-Council in 1960, the non-titled descendants of Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh were given the surname Mountbatten-Windsor, combining the surnames of Elizabeth and Philip. However, although titled, the Queen's children have all decided to use the surname also in honour of their father. For their banns for their first marriages, both William's aunt, Anne, Princess Royal and his own father, Charles, Prince of Wales, used Mountbatten-Windsor rather than Windsor. Mountbatten-Windsor is now officially treated as being the surname of all descendants of the Queen and the Duke except those, like the children of the Princess Royal, who have a new paternal surname (in that case, "Phillips").
As with Royal Family tradition, Prince William used "Wales" as a last name during his years of education, as has Prince Harry. William's York cousins in turn use "York" (other Royal Families also use their parents' title as their own working surname). Past precedent, however, is that such title-surnames are dropped from usage in adulthood, with either title alone or name and Mountbatten-Windsor being used on legal documents and banns of marriage.
[edit] Future
Upon the presumed accession of his father to the throne, William will automatically, and immediately, inherit the titles of Duke of Rothesay and Duke of Cornwall and it is expected that he will be invested by the king as Prince of Wales, although this is not automatic.
Should his father predecease the Queen, leaving William as first-in-line to the throne, she may choose to create him Prince of Wales in his own right.
The issue of what title, if any, Prince William might receive prior to his father's accession to the throne is more problematic - Buckingham Palace has refused to speculate as to what title might be given to Prince William in the future.
As the eldest son of the current Prince of Wales, William is also expected to ascend to the respective thrones of the United Kingdom and the other 15 Commonwealth Realms. Were William to decide to use his first name as his regnal name, he would be known as William V. However, William is free to use any one of his Christian names as a regnal name, as per Edward VII (Prince Albert) and George VI (also Prince Albert). Were he to decide on any of the three (Arthur Philip Louis), their usage would be the first for a regnal name in usual reckoning. (Although Philip II of Spain was a King consort of England, and Louis VIII of France, was proclaimed King of England in London in 1216; the semi-mythical King Arthur would certainly not count, as reckoning of regnal numbers begins usually with the Norman Conquest of 1066. There is also the possibility that his father could reign as either Philip or Arthur, meaning that if William were to do so he would be the second incarnation of that name.)
[edit] Arms
On his 18th birthday, Prince William was granted his own personalized coat of arms. His arms are those of the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom with a label for difference: Quarterly (by quarters):
- 1st and 4th, Gules three Lions passant guardant in pale Or (England). (The first and fourth quarters display the three lions, representing England).
- 2nd quarter is of a lion rampant within a Double Tressure floury counterflory Gules (Scotland). (The second quarter, displays a red lion in a yellow field with a double border coloured red, this represents Scotland).
- 3rd, Azure a Harp Or stringed Argent (Ireland). (The third quarter shows a harp against a blue background, this represents Ireland).
The whole differenced by a Label of three points Argent the central point charged with an Escallop Gules. The Escallop Gules is in reference to his mother, the late Diana, Princess of Wales, as the Escallop appears in the Spencer coat of arms. As the eldest son of the eldest son of the sovereign, his arms are differenced by a label of three points unlike the arms of other grandchildren of the sovereign (if granted) which are differenced by a label of five points.
[edit] Ancestry
Prince William of Wales | Father: Charles, Prince of Wales |
Paternal Grandfather: Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh |
Paternal Great-grandfather: Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark |
Paternal Great-grandmother: Princess Alice of Battenberg |
|||
Paternal Grandmother: Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom |
Paternal Great-grandfather: George VI of the United Kingdom |
||
Paternal Great-grandmother: Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon |
|||
Mother: Diana, Princess of Wales |
Maternal Grandfather: John Spencer, 8th Earl Spencer |
Maternal Great-grandfather: Albert Spencer, 7th Earl Spencer |
|
Maternal Great-grandmother: Cynthia Spencer, Countess Spencer |
|||
Maternal Grandmother: Frances Shand Kydd |
Maternal Great-grandfather: Maurice Burke Roche, 4th Baron Fermoy |
||
Maternal Great-grandmother: Ruth Burke Roche, Baroness Fermoy |
[edit] Popular culture references
- In the fictional Princess in Waiting book, Princess Mia meets Prince William at the Farewell Ball that Genovia throws for her before her return to America. He briefly says something polite to her before turning away, and Mia is temporarily dazzled by his eyes. Prince William is also referred to at other instances in the book series.
- On Instant Star, Jamie claims sarcastically that if Tommy resembles Johnny Depp, then he is William, to which Sadie replies that Tommy looks nothing like Johnny Depp.
- Paris, on Gilmore Girls, contacts Rory through her boyfriend Dean's cell phone and to alleviate Rory's surprise, Paris says that she will no longer call "Prince William" on his cell.
- A 50-year-old deposed Prince William is a recurring character in the American Flagg! comic book series from the 1980s. He had been living in Oklahoma since 1996, and was commonly known as "Bill" though his formal name was William Windsor-Jones.
- Lizzie McGuire's cartoon alter-ego, while Lizzie walks down the red carpet leading to a ceremony in the movie named after her receives a call from William on a cell phone. Caught up in the glamour of the moment, she puts him on hold.
- What a Girl Wants finds Daphne Reynolds strutting down the catwalk in a fashion show which both Harry and William attend. Eventually, after thanking London, Daphne falls off the stage and onto their father's lap.
- In Princess Diaries 2, Prince William is included in the line-up of photos where Princess Mia (Anne Hathaway) must choose her future husband. After Mia exclaims, "Oh, yes, yes! I—I absolutely accept!" She is informed that because William is in line for the British throne, he is ineligible.
[edit] See also
- Royal William, a German red rose named after Prince William shortly after his birth.
- British prince
[edit] External links
- Royal.gov.uk - Prince William
- Prince of Wales.gov.uk - Prince William
- Monarchy Wales - leading campaign organisation
- Illustrated biography of Prince William
- Prince William graduates from RMAS
- Prince William of Wales at the Internet Movie Database
- Profile of William by a republican journalist
[edit] Notes
- ^ William joining Harry's regiment
- ^ In Pictures: William's Sandhurst parade
- ^ Prince William Patron of Centrepoint. Retrieved on March 21, 2006.
- ^ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=423135&in_page_id=1770
- ^ http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,1564163,00.html
- ^ http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,1564163,00.html
- ^ thesun.co.uk : I'm Too Young to Marry. Retrieved on January 21, 2007.
- ^ http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1084285]
- ^ http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2007140253,00.html
Preceded by The Prince of Wales |
Line of succession to the British Throne | Succeeded by Prince Henry of Wales |
Preceded by Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex |
United Kingdom order of precedence Gentlemen |
|
Preceded by Charles, Prince of Wales |
United Kingdom order of precedence Gentlemen in current practice |
Succeeded by Prince Andrew, Duke of York |
HRH The Duke of Edinburgh · HRH The Prince of Wales, Duke of Rothesay · HRH The Duke of York · HRH The Earl of Wessex
HRH Prince William of Wales · HRH Prince Henry of Wales · HRH The Duke of Gloucester · HRH The Duke of Kent · HRH Prince Michael of Kent
Titles and honours · Duchy of Cornwall
Family: The Duchess of Cornwall · Prince William · Prince Harry · Diana, Princess of Wales
Events: War of the Waleses · Camillagate · Squidgygate · Second Wedding
Charities: The Prince's Trust · Prince's Foundation for the Built Environment
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since March 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Charles, Prince of Wales | Diana, Princess of Wales | 1982 births | Living people | People from London | Mountbatten-Windsor family | House of Glücksburg | English and British princes | Old Etonians | Sandhurst graduates | British Army officers | English polo players | Alumni of the University of St Andrews | Presidents of the Football Association | Future national leaders