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What is the last name of the Queen of England, and Prince Charles?

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What is the last name of the Queen of England, and Prince Charles?

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  1. As titled royals they do not have a last name. However, Queen Elizabeth II is a member of the House of Windsor and Charles has indicated he will be the first member of the House of Mountbatten-Windsor (Mountbatten was Prince Philip's surname when he became a naturalised British citizen.


  2. Technically she doesn't have a surname she is HM Queen Elizabeth II. She is a member of the House of Windsor. Her son, The Prince of Wales has indicated that when he inherits the throne it may become the House of Mountbatten-Windsor. It would have become the House of Mountabatten but George V indicated that he'd like Windsor to remain.

    Queen Elizabeths father was born Albert Frederick Arthur George Saxe-Coburg-Gotha

    Prince Philip was a member of the German House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg

    Prince Philip was required to convert from Greek Orthodoxy to Anglicanism, to renounce his allegiance to the Hellenic Crown, and to become a naturalised British subject.  He renounced his Greek and Danish royal titles on 18 March 1947 and decided to take the name Mountbatten

    However the royalty took on the name Windsor to distance themselves from their German heritage.

  3. Queen Elizabeth II's maiden name was Windsor. High anti-German feeling among the people during WWI prompted the Royal Family to abandon all titles held under the German crown and to change German-sounding titles and house names for English-sounding versions from Wettin to Windsor. The current official surname used for the House of Windsor is Mountbatten-Windsor.The Queen's children and grandchildren are from the House of Mountbatten (the royal house to which Prince Philip belonged). Prince Charles will officially change to House of Mountbatten-Windsor when he becomes King.

  4. Elizabeth Alexandra Mary, and Charles Philip Arthur George.

  5. They don't have a last name. Last names are for commoners. The last name for any of their descendants without a title is Mountbatten-Windsor.

  6. they're from house  of Windsor

  7. Mountbatten-Windsor

  8. Queen Elizabeth II doesn't use a last name,but she is of The Royal House of Windsor. Most Royals do not use a last name. Charles can be known by the name of Windsor or Mountbatten-Windsor,but since he is heir to the throne,he is also from The Royal House of Windsor. From http://www.royal.gov/uk

    "Members of the Royal Family can be known both by the name of their Royal house, and by a surname, which are not always the same. And often they do not use a surname at all.

    People often ask whether members of the Royal Family have a surname, and, if so, what it is.

    The situation of members of the Royal Family is more complex than for most people, as they can be known both by the name of the Royal house, and by a surname, which are not always the same.

    Before 1917, members of the British Royal Family had no surname, but only the name of the house or dynasty to which they belonged.

    Kings and princes were historically known by the names of the countries over which they and their families ruled. Kings and queens therefore signed themselves by their first names only, a tradition in the United Kingdom which has continued to the present day.

    The names of dynasties tended to change when the line of succession was taken by a rival faction within the family (for example, Henry IV and the Lancastrians, Edward IV and the Yorkists, Henry VII and the Tudors), or when succession passed to a different family branch through females (for example, Henry II and the Angevins, James I and the Stuarts, George I and the Hanoverians).

    Just as children can take their surnames from their father, so sovereigns normally take the name of their 'House' from their father. For this reason, Queen Victoria's eldest son Edward VII belonged to the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (the family name of his father Prince Albert). Edward VII's son George V became the second king of that dynasty when he succeeded to the throne in 1910.

    In 1917, there was a radical change, when George V specifically adopted Windsor, not only as the name of the 'House' or dynasty, but also as the surname of his family. The family name was changed as a result of anti-German feeling during the First World War, and the name Windsor was adopted after the Castle of the same name.

    At a meeting of the Privy Council on 17 July 1917, George V declared that 'all descendants in the male line of Queen Victoria, who are subjects of these realms, other than female descendants who marry or who have married, shall bear the name of Windsor'.      

                

    The Royal Family name of Windsor was confirmed by The Queen after her accession in 1952. However, in 1960, The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh decided that they would like their own direct descendants to be distinguished from the rest of the Royal Family (without changing the name of the Royal House), as Windsor is the surname used by all the male and unmarried female descendants of George V.

    It was therefore declared in the Privy Council that The Queen's descendants, other than those with the style of Royal Highness and the title of Prince/Princess, or female descendants who marry, would carry the name of Mountbatten-Windsor.

    This reflected Prince Philip's surname. In 1947, when Prince Philip of Greece became naturalised, he assumed the name of Philip Mountbatten as a Lieutenant in the Royal Navy.

    The effect of the declaration was that all The Queen's children, on occasions when they needed a surname, would have the surname Mountbatten-Windsor.

    For the most part, members of the Royal Family who are entitled to the style and dignity of HRH Prince or Princess do not need a surname, but if at any time any of them do need a surname (such as upon marriage), that surname is Mountbatten-Windsor.

    The surname Mountbatten-Windsor first appeared on an official document on 14 November 1973, in the marriage register at Westminster Abbey for the marriage of Princess Anne and Captain Mark Phillips.

    A proclamation on the Royal Family name by the reigning monarch is not statutory; unlike an Act of Parliament, it does not pass into the law of the land. Such a proclamation is not binding on succeeding reigning sovereigns, nor does it set a precedent which must be followed by reigning sovereigns who come after.

    Unless The Prince of Wales chooses to alter the present decisions when he becomes king, he will continue to be of the House of Windsor and his grandchildren will use the surname Mountbatten-Windsor."

    Incidentally, the names Windsor and Mountbatten were changed from the more Germanic sounding names of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and Shlessweig-Holstein-Sonderberg-Glucksbur... because of anti-German feelings stirred up by World War II, particularly the bombing of London by 24 GOTHA war planes!

  9. They belong to the House of Windsor, and take that as their last name.  That was not their original name, though--during WWI, they had a Germanic last name, since Victoria had been married to Albert, who was a German prince, but with the anti-German sentiment of the time, they changed it to Windsor.

  10. Windsor.

    They had a German name, but changed it aorund WW1

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