and his family (
pictured) all use
royal highness as
princes and
princesses of the United Kingdom. In
British constitutional law, use of the style HRH or simply "Royal Highness" may only be conferred by
letters patent. Since 1917, the style has usually been restricted to children of the monarch, or to male-line grandchildren (i.e., the children of the monarch's sons). It is typically associated with the rank of
prince or
princess (although this has not always applied, an exception being
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, who received the style in 1947 prior to his marriage to
Princess Elizabeth but was not formally created a British prince until 1957). When a prince has another title such as
Duke (or a princess the title of Duchess), they may be called
HRH The Duke of .... For instance HRH
The Duke of Connaught was a prince and a member of the
royal family. When
Edward VIII abdicated the throne in 1936 he was granted the style and title of HRH The Duke of Windsor. The woman he then married became the
Duchess of Windsor, but she was denied the style HRH. Edward for much of the rest of his life attempted unsuccessfully to persuade the crown to grant her the style. According to letters patent issued by
King George V in 1917, the sons and daughters of sovereigns and the male-line grandchildren of sovereigns are entitled to the style. It is for this reason that the daughters of
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor (formerly, the Duke of York),
Princess Beatrice and
Princess Eugenie, carry the HRH status, but the children of
Anne, Princess Royal,
Peter Phillips and
Zara Tindall, do not. Louise and James, the grandchildren of
Queen Elizabeth II, at the request of their parents,
Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh and
Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh, are styled as the children of a duke, and thus are known as
Lady Louise Mountbatten-Windsor and
Earl of Wessex. Under George V's letters patent, only the eldest son of the eldest living son of the
Prince of Wales was also entitled to the style, but not younger sons or daughters of the eldest living son of the Prince of Wales. Queen Elizabeth II changed this in 2012 prior to the birth of
Prince George so that all children of the eldest living son of the Prince of Wales would bear the style, returning to the position
Queen Victoria had instituted in 1898. On 18 January 2020, Queen Elizabeth II announced that Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, would no longer use the style of
His/Her Royal Highness due to their decision to step down as working members of the royal family, though they are still legally entitled to the style. On 13 January 2022, it was announced that the then
Prince Andrew, Duke of York would no longer use the style, following
a lawsuit against him. On 30 October 2025, Buckingham Palace announced that
King Charles III had started a "formal process" to remove Andrew's style, titles, and honours; as part of this process, he issued letters patent on 3 November that formally removed the style from Andrew. Letters patent dated 21 August 1996 stated that the wife of a member of the royal family loses the right to the style of HRH in the event of their divorce. == See also ==