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Prince George’s royal dilemma: What surname to use at school | Prince George’s royal dilemma: What surname to use at school |
(35 minutes later) | |
Prince George enjoys a bizarre assortment of powers and privileges other four-year-old’s could not even fathom. Not only did he spend his childhood roaming the 770-odd-room palace of the Queen but he is exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. | Prince George enjoys a bizarre assortment of powers and privileges other four-year-old’s could not even fathom. Not only did he spend his childhood roaming the 770-odd-room palace of the Queen but he is exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. |
Nevertheless, it would be wrong to assume the third in line to the throne has a life free of quandaries. The son of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, who recently turned four, is currently struggling to choose which surname to pick. | Nevertheless, it would be wrong to assume the third in line to the throne has a life free of quandaries. The son of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, who recently turned four, is currently struggling to choose which surname to pick. |
After all, it might be a little odd for all involved if the teacher says "Prince George" while reading the register. | After all, it might be a little odd for all involved if the teacher says "Prince George" while reading the register. |
The younger royal, who is due to start school in September, could either opt for “Wales”, “Cambridge” or the double barrelled mouthful that is “Mountbatten-Windsor”. | The younger royal, who is due to start school in September, could either opt for “Wales”, “Cambridge” or the double barrelled mouthful that is “Mountbatten-Windsor”. |
When Prince George was born in 2013 - to the sound of a 41-gun salute from soldiers on horses - the official announcement stated his name as “George Alexander Louis”. | When Prince George was born in 2013 - to the sound of a 41-gun salute from soldiers on horses - the official announcement stated his name as “George Alexander Louis”. |
While that includes a first name and two names there is, of course, no surname. | While that includes a first name and two names there is, of course, no surname. |
This whole dilemma stems from the fact the royal family do not really have a firm second name. | This whole dilemma stems from the fact the royal family do not really have a firm second name. |
“Members of the Royal Family can be known both by the name of the Royal house, and by a surname, which are not always the same. And often they do not use a surname at all,” explains the Royal Family’s website. | “Members of the Royal Family can be known both by the name of the Royal house, and by a surname, which are not always the same. And often they do not use a surname at all,” explains the Royal Family’s website. |
Before 1917, the royals did not have a surname and only had the name of the house or dynasty to which they belonged. | Before 1917, the royals did not have a surname and only had the name of the house or dynasty to which they belonged. |
Prince George will be starting Thomas’s Battersea, which is just a few miles from his family residence in Kensington Palace, in September. The private primary school costs £6,110 a term and it discourages children from having best friends - its first rule is to “be kind”. | Prince George will be starting Thomas’s Battersea, which is just a few miles from his family residence in Kensington Palace, in September. The private primary school costs £6,110 a term and it discourages children from having best friends - its first rule is to “be kind”. |
A representative for Kensington Palace declined to comment on the matter. |
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