ChatterBank0 min ago
the queen
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could someone please confirm what "ER" stands for, when its associated with the queen.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.it's not strictly a surname - as everyone says, just Latin for king/queen. (Their surname is Windsor.) If you see a postbox with GVIR on it, it's GR for George Rex and the VI is 6, so King George the 6th. Ditto EIIR. I'm not sure why Latin exactly, probably just a hangover from official documents' style in the MIddle Ages.
Windsor is not strictly a surname of the Royal Family either; it is an official designation, as in Royal House of Windsor.
In 1917 the Royal House and Family was renamed Windsor from the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, by an Order-in-Council of King George V.
The Order referred to male-line descendants of Queen Victoria but not necessarily to female descendants. In 1952 Queen Elizabeth II ended confusion over the dynastic name when she declared to the Privy Council her �Will and Pleasure that I and My children shall be styled and known as the House and Family of Windsor, and that my descendants who marry and their descendants, shall bear the name of Windsor.�
In 1960 The Queen issued another Order-in-Council, confirming that she and her four children will be known as the House and Family of Windsor, and that her other male-line descendants (except those who are "HRH" and a Prince or Princess) will take the name "Mountbatten-Windsor".
In 1917 the Royal House and Family was renamed Windsor from the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, by an Order-in-Council of King George V.
The Order referred to male-line descendants of Queen Victoria but not necessarily to female descendants. In 1952 Queen Elizabeth II ended confusion over the dynastic name when she declared to the Privy Council her �Will and Pleasure that I and My children shall be styled and known as the House and Family of Windsor, and that my descendants who marry and their descendants, shall bear the name of Windsor.�
In 1960 The Queen issued another Order-in-Council, confirming that she and her four children will be known as the House and Family of Windsor, and that her other male-line descendants (except those who are "HRH" and a Prince or Princess) will take the name "Mountbatten-Windsor".
In which case it is his surname. Names change. It changed to Windsor from whatever it was that you said it was. The fact that his forebears had/have a different surname is immaterial. A comparable example is when 2 peole marry and combine their surnames into a double-barrelled composite. Your argument would be that a child of the union is actually of the family name applying to the fathe,, whereas his name is actually that he is given on his birth certificate. i.e. the composite name. Surnames are no different to Christian names, in that respect, it is merely the perception that is different.
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