National anthem, stamps, coins and even royal hierarchies and titles. There are and will be many things that will change with the death of Queen Elizabeth. While Prince William, the new heir to the throne, has already formally received his paternal titles of Prince of Wales and Duke of Cornwall (and therefore Kate’s title of princess) from the King, Meghan and Harry’s children, Archie and Lilibet, Lily, become Prince and Princess respectively. at least on a technical level. The Sussex family then has to decide whether or not to agree, and given Harry’s sudden escape from Balmoral, just 12 hours after his belated goodbye to his grandmother, nothing is taken for granted.
Now that London Bridge and Operations Unicorn have begun, let’s take a look how the line of succession is changing now that Charles has become king after 70 years of presidency. With the disappearance of Elizabeth, William became the new heir to the throne, with George, Charlotte and Louis in second, third and fourth place respectively. After little Cambridge we move on to the junior branch of Sussex with Harry, Archie and little Lilibet in fifth, sixth and seventh order. Eighth in the order of succession we find Prince Andrew, followed by his eldest daughter Princess Beatrice and her daughter Sienna Mapelli-Mozzi. In the eleventh and twelfth positions we find Eugenie and her son Augustus Brooksbank, followed by Queen Edward’s fourth child, the Earl of Wessex, and the latter’s children: James Alexander Philip Theo Mountbatten-Windsor, Viscount Severn and Lady Louise Elizabeth Mary Mountbatten-Windsor.
Seventeenth is Princess Anne, Elizabeth’s second child, followed by her son Peter Mark Andrew Phillips, born from her first marriage to Captain Mark Phillips. At position nineteen we find the little girl Savannah Ann Kathleen, who on December 29, 2010, made Queen Elizabeth II a great-grandmother for the first time. Two years later, little Isla Elizabeth Phillips was born, who today ranks twentieth in the line of succession. to the throne. As grandchildren of the only daughter of Elizabeth, the two girls are not and never will be princesses, as is the father, who, as a representative of the female line of the sovereign, will never have the right to a title of nobility.
Source: Elle