Welcome to Louis Arthur Charles! Kate and William reveal the name of their new royal baby in a touching nod to Charles and Philip’s beloved ‘Uncle Dickie’ who was killed by the IRA
- Royalists and bookmakers alike have been waiting patiently to find out the name
- The baby will be known as His Royal Highness Prince Louis of Cambridge
- The bookies’ favourites had included Arthur, James, Albert, Philip and Alexander
- More than 100,000 bets placed across the UK betting industry on the baby name
Having kept the world waiting for four tantalising days, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have finally revealed their newborn son is called Louis Arthur Charles.
Royalists and bookmakers alike have waited patiently since Monday to find out the name of the new arrival and fifth in line to the throne.
The baby will be known as His Royal Highness Prince Louis of Cambridge.
The name serves as a poignant tribute to Prince Charles’ beloved great-uncle, mentor and ‘honorary grandfather’, Lord Mountbatten, who was killed in 1979 when the IRA placed a bomb in his fishing boat.
More than 100,000 bets were placed across the UK betting industry on the baby name, with both Albert and Arthur leading the way as the bookmakers’ favourite.
But William and Kate have plumped for a moniker used for centuries across the Channel by the French, who have had 18 kings called Louis.
Bookies are now quids-in after William and Kate chose the name which had odds of 20/1.
Millions of people around the world watched as the newborn prince was brought out onto the steps outside the hospital on Monday
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with their newborn son outside the Lindo Wing at St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington
THE WAIT FOR ROYAL NAMES
Royals traditionally keep the public guessing before revealing their choice of name.
William and Kate took two days to announce both George and Charlotte’s names, informing the Queen of their choice beforehand.
Mike and Zara Tindall used Twitter to unveil their daughter’s name six days after she was born in 2014.
Princess Beatrice’s name was announced two weeks after her birth in 1988.
In 1982, the Prince and Princess of Wales waited seven days before announcing Prince William’s name.
The first Louis I, known as ‘Louis the Pious’, reigned between 778 and 840.
The most famous was Louis XIV, known as the Sun King, whose reign started aged four and lasted 72 years and 110 days – the longest recorded of any monarch of a sovereign country in European history. Queen Elizabeth’s reign is currently in its 66th year.
The last one was Louis XVIII – who reigned for a year until Napoleon took power for a second time in 1815 and ensured the monarchy was destroyed.
Earlier this week Prince William teased his newborn could be given the name Alexander or the rather less traditional moniker, Jerry.
As he arrived for an Anzac Day service at Westminster Abbey on Wednesday, Prince William playfully joked about potential names.
Australia’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Alexander Downer, suggested to Prince William he should call the boy Alexander.
‘Have you thought about the name Alexander for him?’ the former foreign minister asked.
Prince Williams appeared keen on the idea.
‘Well, it’s funny you should say that. It’s a good name,’ he said.
Alexandra is the middle name of the baby boy’s great-grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, and Alexander is also the middle name of the newborn’s older brother Prince George.
However, Prince William agreed the name ‘Jerry’ was a ‘strong name’ after Mr Downer suggested his New Zealand counterpart, Sir Jerry Mateparae, would also like to see the baby named after him.
Australia’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Alexander Downer, suggested to Prince William he should call the boy Alexander during an Anzac Day service at Westminster Abbey
The Duke of Cambridge joked with people outside Westminster Abbey who were excitedly trying to find out his son’s name
The Duke of Cambridge was joined by Prince Harry and Meghan Markle at Westminster Abbey for the traditional service
Meeting a number of people in a line-up at the door of Westminster Abbey, William could be heard joking with one man that his son has a ‘strong name’
His Royal Highness Prince Louis of Cambridge
The newest member of the royal family is His Royal Highness Prince Louis of Cambridge
The newest member of the royal family has been named Louis Arthur Charles.
The baby will be known as His Royal Highness Prince Louis of Cambridge.
Louis: The name is French in origin and has a suitably strong meaning as ‘Famous in Battle’.
It is one of William’s middle names, and Prince George also has it as a middle name.
Lord Mountbatten was born Prince Louis of Battenburg in Windsor in 1900. His great-grandmother was Queen Victoria and his sister was Princess Alice of Battenberg, Prince Philip’s mother.
Arthur: Arthur is William’s middle name and a link to the legendary King Arthur adds a special Royal pedigree. The name means ‘Bear’ – currently a popular baby name in its own right – and the ‘Art’ link suits this pair of History of Art graduates perfectly.
Charles: Charles is a time-honoured Royal name and ever popular with the upper classes, making it the perfect way to honour William’s father. It means ‘man’ or ‘warrior’ and suits our new Bonnie Prince.
Lord Louis Mountbatten, who was a British statesman and naval officer
Lord Louis Mountbatten , the last Governor General from Britain waving a cheery farewell to the crowds in Delhi
William and Kate have plumped for a name used for centuries across the Channel by the French, who have had 18 kings called Louis.
The first was Louis I, known as ‘Louis the Pious’, who reigned between 778 and 840.
The most famous was Louis XIV, known as the Sun King, whose reign started aged four and lasted 72 years and 110 days – the longest recorded of any monarch of a sovereign country in European history. Queen Elizabeth’s reign is currently in its 66th year.
The last one was Louis XVIII – who reigned for a year until Napoleon took power for a second time in 1815 and ensured the monarchy was destroyed.
The name serves as a poignant tribute to Prince Charles’ late uncle, Lord Mountbatten, great- grandson of Queen Victoria and uncle to Prince Philip.
His full title was Admiral of the Fleet Louis Francis Albert Victor Nicholas Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma.
In 1979, Mountbatten, his grandson Nicholas, and two others were killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), which had placed a bomb in his fishing boat, Shadow V, in Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland.
Lord Louis Mountbatten wearing the Veterans of Foreign Wars Merit Award
Other famous Louis:
The name is also shared by Louis Tomlinson, the singer-songwriter from One Direction. The 26-year-old was born in Doncaster before joining the boyband, who went onto worldwide fame after appearing on the X Factor.
He later appeared as a guest judge on the show before launching a number of solo projects. He has a son with now-ex-girlfriend Briana Jungwirth.
Louis Armstrong was a world-renowned musician and singer, perhaps best known for his rendition of What a Wonderful World.
Born and raised in New Orleans, USA, his instantly recognisable gravelly voice and unparalleled trumpet skills saw him rise to prominence in the jazz scene during the 1920s.
He enjoyed a long career spanning five decades, culminating with his induction into the Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame in 2017.
Fashion-conscious Kate may have been influenced by one of her favourite luxury fashion houses, Louis Vuitton.
The 164-year-old French label, named after its founder, has become one of the world’s leading retail companies and was valued at £13.7billion in 2017.
The French fashion designer lived from 1821 to 1892. He went from poverty in rural France and trekked into Paris before becoming the apprentice to a box-maker.
He later launched his own brand and was hired as personal box maker and packer to the Empress of France, under Napoleon III. Since his death, a fashion brand bearing his name has become a global brand.
Prince takes his place in royal order of succession as fifth in line to the throne
The new Prince of Cambridge has become the fifth in line to the throne, pushing Prince Andrew out of the top six for the first time.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s third child – a younger sibling to Prince George and Princess Charlotte – is now the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh’s sixth great-grandchild.
The boy, weighing 8lbs 7oz, is also a great-great-great-great-great-grandchild of Queen Victoria.
Here is how the line of succession looks now that Kate and William’s new royal baby has been born
Following the baby’s arrival, Prince Harry shifts down the line of succession to sixth place.
The Duke of York, who was born second in line, has moved to seventh and Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie to eighth and ninth.
Andrew falling out of the top six means he will no longer have to ask the Queen for permission to marry – unlike Charles, William, George, Charlotte and Harry.
The first six people in the line of succession must have the Queen’s consent before they can marry on May 19, as set out by the Succession to the Crown Act 2013.
The act’s introduction also saw sex removed as a determining factor in the line of succession.
It has also been claimed that the royal baby has been born a commoner.
Royal historian Marlene Koenig told Town and Country: ‘It sounds complicated, but in the UK, the only people who are not commoners are the Sovereign and peers of the realm, (people with titles like) Duke, Marquess, Earl, Viscount, and Baron.’
It was always thought that William and Kate would go on to have three children.
Kate is one of three and had a happy home life with her sister, Pippa Matthews, and brother, James Middleton, and is close to both of her siblings.
But William may need to adjust to caring for a newborn once again.
Kate joked in the months leading up to her due date that her husband was ‘in denial’ about having a third.
By having more than two children, William and Kate are following in the footsteps of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, who went on to have four children – although there was a gap of 10 years between their second child, Anne, and third, Andrew.
As a sibling to both future king George and ‘spare to the heir’ Charlotte, the new baby is unlikely ever to be crowned sovereign.
The Duke of York is the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh’s third child, but when Andrew was born in 1960 he leapfrogged his older sister, Princess Anne, in the line of succession.
The Cambridges’ third child will no longer be allowed to jump ahead of older sister Charlotte in the line of succession.
Previously, under the ancient rules of male primogeniture, royal sons took precedence over their female siblings, even leapfrogging first-born royal daughters.
But a radical shake-up of the royal succession rules removed discriminatory male bias and came into force in March 2015, affecting babies born after October 28 2011.
The Succession to the Crown Act 2013 has already affected the Duke of Gloucester’s granddaughters, Senna Lewis and Lyla Gilman, whose younger brothers, born in 2012, now follow them in the line of succession.
The new baby will be a prince or princess thanks to the Queen, who stepped in ahead of Prince George’s birth to ensure all William’s children would become HRHs with fitting titles.
The Queen issued a Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm in December 2012 when Kate was just a few months pregnant, declaring ‘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’.
A Letters Patent in 1917, issued by George V, limited titles within the royal family, meaning daughters born to William or Kate would not have been an HRH but Lady (forename) Mountbatten-Windsor instead and second or later-born sons would also have lacked the HRH title and become Lord (forename) Mountbatten-Windsors rather than princes.
His Royal Highness Prince George of Cambridge
George Alexander Louis: His full title is His Royal Highness Prince George of Cambridge
William and Kate’s first child born on July 22, 2013 was given the name George Alexander Louis.
His full title is His Royal Highness Prince George of Cambridge.
It is understood he was named after his great-great-grandfather, King George VI – the Queen’s father.
The name George was first used in 1280 by George I of Bulgaria. Other royal figures with the moniker include King George VI, Prince George of Denmark, Prince George William of Hanover and George I of Greece.
The name did not become popular in the UK until the accession of George I of England in the 18th century.
Prince George’s first official photograph featured him alongside his mother and father, their pet dog Lupo and the Middleton family dog Tilly at the Middleton’s home in 2013
It is understood George was named after his great-great-grandfather, King George VI – the Queen’s father
George is also a tribute to Prince Charles, who has it as one of his middle names.
Saint George is said to have overcome a fire-eating dragon, and has been the patron saint of England since the 14th century.
The name George is from the Greek name Georgios, from georgos, meaning ‘farmer, earthworker’, which is from ge, meaning ‘earth’ and ergon, meaning ‘work’.
Source: Baby Centre
Her Royal Highness Princess Charlotte of Cambridge
Charlotte Elizabeth Diana was born on May 2, 2015. Her full title is Her Royal Highness Princess Charlotte of Cambridge
Princess Charlotte was pictured in her first official photograph with her older brother
Charlotte Elizabeth Diana was born on May 2, 2015.
Her full title is Her Royal Highness Princess Charlotte of Cambridge.
A French name, Charlotte is the feminine form of the name Charles, meaning ‘free man’.
The name Charlotte has a long Royal heritage. The name was made popular by England’s Queen Charlotte in the 18th century.
Princess Charlotte’s christening at the Church of St Mary Magdalene on the Sandringham Estate in July 2015
The name Charlotte has a long Royal heritage and was made popular by England’s Queen Charlotte in the 18th century
Born in Germany in 1744, Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz married George III in September 1761 a few hours after meeting him.
The couple also had a daughter they named Charlotte, who went on to become Queen of Wurttemberg.
William IV’s first-born daughter was named Charlotte but she died in infancy in 1819.
Source: Baby Centre
What were the names in the running? Here are some of the contenders:
THE ORDER OF SUCCESSION
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s third child – a younger sibling to Prince George and Princess Charlotte – is now the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh’s sixth great-grandchild.
The boy, weighing 8lbs 7oz, is also a great-great-great-great-great-grandchild of Queen Victoria.
Following the baby’s arrival, Prince Harry shifts down the line of succession to sixth place.
The Duke of York, who was born second in line, has moved to seventh and Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie to eighth and ninth.
Andrew falling out of the top six means he will no longer have to ask the Queen for permission to marry – unlike Charles, William, George, Charlotte and Harry.
The first six people in the line of succession must have the Queen’s consent before they can marry on May 19, as set out by the Succession to the Crown Act 2013.
Alexander
Alexandra is the name of the baby boy’s great-grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, and the middle name of the newborn’s older brother Prince George.
There has never been an English king called Alexander but three medieval Scottish kings ruled as Alexander.
Alexander I reigned from 1107 to 1124, Alexander II from 1214 to 1249 and Alexander III followed him from 1249 to 1286.
Alexander derives from the Greek word meaning protector of men, with Alexander the Great one of its most famous exponents.
Arthur
One of Charles’s middle names, Arthur is also one of William’s middle names and was a middle name of the Queen’s father, George VI.
The legendary King Arthur was the mythical leader of the knights of the Round Table, who supposedly lived in the 5th or 6th century.
Once popular, the name fell out of fashion but has had a revival in recent years. Former prime minister David Cameron has a son called Arthur.
The famous mosaic Alexander’s battle in the House of Fawn at the archeological site of Pompei
The legendary King Arthur was the mythical leader of the knights of the Round Table, who supposedly lived in the 5th or 6th century
Albert
Queen Victoria used to insist that the name Albert was used as a middle name by her descendants, if not a first, in honour of her much-loved consort Prince Albert.
By choosing Albert or Bertie for a boy, William and Kate would be honouring Queen Elizabeth II’s father, George VI, who was actually Albert Frederick Arthur George but always known to his family as Bertie.
Shy, stammering Bertie was forced to become king when his brother Edward VIII abdicated, but won the nation’s affection by standing firm in London during the Second World War.
Queen Victoria used to insist that the name Albert was used as a middle name by her descendants, if not a first, in honour of her much-loved consort Prince Albert (pictured together)
ODDS ON THE NAME OF THE ROYAL BABY
Albert – 1/3
Arthur – 11/4
Alexander – 8/1
James – 10/1
Philip – 12/1
Louis – 14/1
Henry – 16/1
Frederick – 20/1
Thomas – 20/1
Edward – 20/1
25/1 bar
Odds supplied by Ladbrokes
Philip
A lasting tribute to the Duke of Edinburgh could see a Prince of Cambridge called Philip.
Both Charles and William have Philip as a middle name.
The Duke – known for his dedication to duty and his acerbic wit – has been married to the Queen for more than 70 years and is the nation’s longest serving consort.
Frederick
A Prince Freddie of Cambridge would have a historical link to the 1st Duke of Cambridge.
Prince Adolphus Frederick lived from 1774 to 1850 and was a son of George III.
He was apparently very fond of interrupting church services by bellowing out ‘By all means’ if the priest said ‘Let us pray’.
A lasting tribute to the Duke of Edinburgh could see a Prince of Cambridge called Philip
Charles
William may have chosen to pay tribute to his father – but perhaps as a middle name as it may be considered to similar to Charlotte.
William may have chosen to pay tribute to his father – but perhaps as a middle name as it may be considered to similar to Charlotte
James
James could have been chosen to signify Kate’s affection for her brother, the baby’s uncle, James Middleton.
William already has a cousin James, the Earl and Countess of Wessex’s son, Viscount Severn.
James is a Stuart name. James I, son of Mary, Queen of Scots, had been king of Scotland for 36 years as James VI when he became king of England in 1603.
James could have been chosen to signify Kate’s affection for her brother, the baby’s uncle, James Middleton (pictured in 2011 on his sister’s wedding day)
Other names
They could have chosen William as a middle name, but also perhaps Michael as a middle name out of respect for Kate’s father.
Kate’s grandfather on her paternal side was called Peter, while on her maternal side, her grandfather was Ronald.
Thomas also appears several times in Kate’s family tree as does Francis.
Source: Read Full Article