Royal Wedding

William to become a duke, but of where?

Thursday, April 28, 2011
Britains Prince William laughs during a visit at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum, in Gosport, south England, Tuesday June 10, 2008. The Prince toured HMS Alliance, a WWII submarine, and saw the Royal Navys first ever submarine, the Holland 1, before opening the Area of Remembrance. William began his two-month attachment with the Royal Navy, undergoing basic naval training, to learn core skills like navigation and sea safety. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, pool)

Britain's Prince William laughs during a visit at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum, in Gosport, south England, Tuesday June 10, 2008. The Prince toured HMS Alliance, a WWII submarine, and saw the Royal Navy's first ever submarine, the Holland 1, before opening the Area of Remembrance. William began his two-month attachment with the Royal Navy, undergoing basic naval training, to learn core skills like navigation and sea safety. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, pool)

If past is prologue, Prince William will become a duke when he marries, and his bride will thus become a duchess.

Why a duke? "It's traditional," says Charles Kidd, editor of Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage. Kidd has surveyed the most likely candidates among the currently vacant titles, including a few with a less than enticing history:

CAMBRIDGE - The second Duke of Cambridge, Prince Adolphus Frederick, was the seventh son of King George III. Defying the Royal Marriage Act, he married his mistress, Sarah Louisa Fairbrother, an actress and a commoner, in 1847. Since the marriage wasn't legal, his children were all illegitimate.

SUSSEX - Conferred upon Prince August, sixth son of King George III, in 1801. Neither of his two marriages were recognized by the king, and the title lapsed at his death in 1843.

CONNAUGHT and STRATHEARN - Conferred upon Prince Arthur, third son of Queen Victoria in 1867. He died in 1942, and was succeeded by his grandson, Alastair, second Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, who died on active service in 1943.

CLARENCE and AVONDALE - The Dukedom of Clarence dates to the 14th century, when the title was given to Lionel of Antwerp, third son of King Edward III. Prince Albert Victor, a grandson of Queen Victoria, was created Duke of Clarence and Avondale in 1890. He died unmarried two years later.

However, Kidd notes, Queen Elizabeth II could also create a new title for William.

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england, london, prince william, kate middleton, royal wedding
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