The King or Queen of the United Kingdom, as the sovereign, is always first in the order of precedence. A king is followed by his
queen consort, the first in the order of precedence for women. The reverse, however, is not always true for
queens regnant. There is no established law of precedence for a
prince consort, so he is usually specially granted precedence above all other males by
letters patent; if he is not specially provided for, he may rank lower than the heir apparent or the heir presumptive, even if the heir is his own son (eg Edward VII—as Prince of Wales—outranked his father, Prince Albert).
Current practice •
Letters patent dated 31 December 2012 declared all the children of the eldest son of the
Prince of Wales should have and enjoy the style, title, and attribute of
Royal Highness with the titular dignity of
Prince or
Princess prefixed to their Christian names or with such other titles of honour. Before
Charles III's accession to the throne, all of
Prince William's, then
Duke of Cambridge, children were known as prince or princess. However, as
Prince George, the eldest son of the Prince of Wales, has no children, no person presently qualifies for HRH status under these letters patent. • There is no specific place in the order for a great-grandchild of the sovereign (no matter how senior in the
order of succession). The sons of a
duke of the blood royal are entitled to precedence after all non-royal dukes, pursuant to the unrevoked Lord Chamberlain's Order of 1520 as amended in 1595. The daughters have the equivalent position in the women's order. ==Officers of state==