Showing posts with label Royal Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Family. Show all posts
Friday, October 25, 2013
Official photo shows rare British royal gathering
LONDON—Britain’s monarchy has released a rare photo celebrating the christening of Prince George that shows four generations of royals gathered together.
The image released Thursday shows Queen Elizabeth II and three future kings: her son Prince Charles, her grandson Prince William, and her great-grandson, three-month-old Prince George.
The infant is pictured perched on the knee of his mother Catherine — William’s wife, the Duchess of Cambridge — and surrounded by family who’d gathered at St. James’s Palace on Wednesday for George’s christening.
The queen’s husband, Prince Philip, is pictured, along with a grinning Prince Harry and Charles’ wife, Camilla.
The Duchess of Cambridge’s parents, sister and brother also are in the photograph.
George was christened by Justin Welby, the archbishop of Canterbury, with water brought from the River Jordan.
source: newsinfo.inquirer.net
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
William and Kate show off royal baby boy
LONDON—Britain’s Prince William, his wife Kate and their newborn baby son were spending their first day at home as a family Wednesday, a day after the royal couple showed off the future monarch to the world.
A smiling Kate told the massed ranks of international media on Tuesday that motherhood was “very emotional”, while William said they were still choosing a name and revealed that he had already changed the baby’s nappy.
The new third-in-line to the throne raised a tiny hand above his white blankets but remained peaceful, despite deafening cheers from well-wishers and the shouts of photographers outside St Mary’s Hospital in London.
Special time
“It’s a special time,” said the 31-year-old Duchess of Cambridge, who was wearing a cornflower-blue dress with her brunette hair loose. “I think any new parent would know what this feeling feels like.”
The duke, also 31, told reporters that “he’s got her looks, thankfully” as Kate playfully demurred, then added: “He’s got a good pair of lungs on him, that’s for sure”.
The royal baby’s birth at 4:24pm (1524 GMT) on Monday sparked a global media frenzy, fuelled by the fascination that has surrounded the couple ever since they married in April 2011.
The first photographs of Britain’s new prince dominated newspaper front pages on Wednesday, with the sapphire ring formerly belonging to William’s late mother Diana conspicuous on the hand of new mother Kate.
Many of the papers, including the Daily Mirror, the Daily Mail and the Times, carried a picture of the day-old baby apparently waving to the throng of photographers and well-wishers on Tuesday.
First royal wave
“Baby’s first royal wave” said the Daily Mail’s “magical picture souvenir” edition, while the Daily Mirror ran a similar headline: “Royal wave? I’ve cracked it mom.”
The Daily Telegraph argued that the birth had secured the monarchy “for another century at least.”
Congratulations have poured in from around the globe for the baby, a great-grandchild of Queen Elizabeth II, who is set to one day reign over Britain and the Commonwealth realms around the world.
The Duchess initially held the baby as the royal couple emerged from the front door of the hospital’s exclusive Lindo Wing, before passing him to her husband, who was dressed in a blue shirt and jeans.
The scene was reminiscent of when William was introduced to the world by his parents Prince Charles and Princess Diana outside the same hospital wing in 1982.
Balding William joked that, despite the baby boy’s own thin wisps of hair, “he’s got way more than me, thank God”.
Hands-on royal dad
Asked about changing the nappies of his son, who weighed in at a healthy eight pounds six ounces (3.8 kilograms) when he was born, the prince said: “We’ve done that already”.
“He’s done his first nappy already,” added Kate.
The traditional names George and James have been favored by bookmakers as fit for a king, but the royal couple gave nothing away.
“We are still working on a name so we will have that as soon as we can,” William said.
After speaking briefly to the press, the royal couple re-emerged from the hospital with their son in a car seat, which William secured in their vehicle before driving his new family back to their home at Kensington Palace.
Kate’s sister Pippa was reportedly waiting for them there.
Enduring appeal
Hordes of journalists had camped outside the hospital for three weeks waiting for the baby, testament to the enduring appeal of the British monarchy and particularly the glamorous William and Kate.
Cannon fire salutes rang out on Tuesday at the Tower of London and Green Park in celebration of the royal birth, while the bells at the 11th century Westminster Abbey pealed across the capital for three hours.
The couple had earlier received their first visitors when Kate’s parents Michael and Carole Middleton, self-made millionaires who run a party supplies business, arrived at the hospital in a humble black London taxi.
“He’s absolutely beautiful. They’re both doing very well and we’re so thrilled,” a beaming grandmother Carole said afterwards.
Charles arrived around two hours later with his second wife Camilla in a chauffeur-driven limousine.
“Marvelous, thank you very much, absolutely wonderful,” said Charles.
At Buckingham Palace, crowds straining for a glimpse of the official birth announcement on a gold easel in the forecourt were treated to a special edition of the Changing the Guard ceremony featuring the Cliff Richard song “Congratulations”.
His Royal Highness
The baby will be titled His Royal Highness, Prince (name) of Cambridge — the blank to be filled in when his name is announced.
William’s name was not announced for a week, while the world had to wait a whole month when Charles was born in 1948.
It is the first time since 1894 that three direct heirs to the throne have been alive at the same time. The 87-year-old Queen said she was “delighted” at the birth of her third great-grandchild, reportedly telling a guest at a palace function that “the first-born is very special”.
William and Kate are hugely popular and have been widely credited with revitalizing the British royals following decades of scandal and the death of William’s mother Diana in a car crash in 1997.
US President Barack Obama led the international messages of congratulations, which also poured in from Australia, New Zealand, Canada, France, Israel, Japan and Singapore.
source: newsinfo.inquirer.net
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
A name for Baby Cambridge: William and Kate’s big decision
LONDON — Prince William and his wife Kate have yet to announce a name for their new newborn son — but bookmakers have tipped George and James as likely contenders for Britain’s new third in line to the throne.
Choosing a name can be agonizing for any new parents, but the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are burdened with the added knowledge that their child’s name is headed for the history books.
Experts say the couple are guaranteed to plunder William’s illustrious family tree in picking a name for the little prince, but will settle on one that is in keeping with their image as “modern” royals.
“I do think that Prince William is quite a traditionalist — that’s my feeling,” said Charles Kidd, editor of the Debrett’s genealogical guide to the British aristocracy.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if they use a name that is already familiar in the royal family — something that has royal associations.”
But royal-watchers may have a while to wait for the big announcement.
William’s name was not revealed until a week after his birth in 1982 — and when Charles was born in 1948, the wait lasted an entire month.
There was “no news on names” on Tuesday, a royal official said.
“The royal family quite like to do things slowly,” said Kidd.
“It’s quite dignified to have a bit of breathing space between the birth and the announcement of the name.”
But he added: “The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge seem very organized. I would be surprised if it took them longer than a week.”
The royal family tree is full of boys’ names still popular among British parents today, including George, James, William and Richard — but there are also plenty that have gone out of fashion, such as Ethelred or Athelstan.
Bookmakers have been doing a roaring trade in bets on the baby’s name.
The majority of punters will now be cursing after putting money on a girl’s name — Irish bookmakers Paddy Power said around 60 percent of gamblers had guessed the baby would be female.
But there is still time to win back their losses if they pick the lucky boy’s name.
George is now the Paddy Power favorite at 6/4 followed by James (11/4), Alexander (7/2) and Louis (8/1).
But James, the name of Kate’s brother, is the “red-hot” favorite with Ladbrokes, although the odds on Henry — the formal name of William’s brother Prince Harry — have been slashed from 50/1 to 5/1.
At the other end of the spectrum, Wayne is trading at 250/1 — although a bet was earlier placed on Kai, the name of footballer Wayne Rooney’s son, at 1000/1.
There have been six British king Georges, including the current queen’s father George VI, whose story was brought to life in the Oscar-winning 2010 film “The King’s Speech.”
Royal experts say the name emphasizes the continuity of the monarchy, while it also seems modern — it was the 9th most popular choice for baby boys born in 2011, according to the Office for National Statistics.
James is more problematic. There have been two British kings with the name, the second of whom was deposed in 1688 after he sparked a constitutional crisis with his pro-Catholic policies.
Other names also have unlucky royal connotations — there was the so-called “bad” king John who ruled from 1199 to 1216, while William’s father Charles, heir to the throne, bears the name of Charles I, who was beheaded in 1649.
The royal naming game is made more complicated by the fact that by tradition, British princes have a string of middle names.
Edward VIII was among the unluckiest in this regard — his full name was Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David, the last four after the patron saints of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales.
His family called him simply David.
William has three middle names: Philip after his grandfather, Queen Elizabeth II’s husband Prince Philip; Arthur, like the legendary 5th century British king; and Louis after Philip’s uncle Louis Mountbatten, who was Charles’s mentor.
When William was born, it was rumored that his mother Princess Diana wanted to call him Sebastian or Oliver, while his father preferred Albert.
Ultimately, if Baby Cambridge is not keen on his name, he can always change it later — all monarchs are free to choose a new name once they rise to the throne. The queen’s father was called prince Albert before reigning as George VI.
source: lifestyle.inquirer.net
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