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Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by hugoboss. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well if his mum lives as long as his gran then he'll be in his 70's. There are only a few ways Charles will not be the next King:
1. He dies before the Queen
2. He adbicates his sucession rights
3. The monarchy is abolished
4. We are invaded by a forigen power and their system imposed on us, similar to what the EU are doing now!
There is a lot of romantic bull being talked about William leapfrogging Charles but constitutionally it is very unlikely. Charles has been prepared all of his life for the role and barring the above he will be the next monarch.
The question of who becomes heir apparent is usually decided either by custom, convention, or by law. Monarchies traditionally gave male children (and their children) precedence on the order of succession ahead of female children, with the oldest male child becoming heir apparent. Hence in the United Kingdom, though she is Queen Elizabeth II's second oldest child, Princess Anne is the lowest ranking in the order of succession of the Queen's children, behind Princes Charles, Andrew, Edward and their children.
In primogeniture, the position of Heir Apparent does not descend to each of the monarch's children in turn, but through the direct, legal line from the initial heir apparent. So for example, were the current British heir apparent, Charles, Prince of Wales either to die before becoming monarch, or become legally debarred, his oldest son, William, would become heir apparent.
Prince Charles, of Wales (Duke of Rothesay in Scotland) is the heir-apparent to the Thrones of the United Kingdom and of fifteen other Commonwealth Realms. A change in succession needs the assent of all Commonwealth members.
Queen Mary I said no good would come of a King named Charles sighting King Charles I who was responsible for the countries Civil War and was executed. His son, Charles II, was a closet Catholic who spent the first 11 years of his reign following his father�s execution in exile; he practiced subterfuge and �converted� to Catholicism with his last breath. Charles II asked Lord Rochester to write his epitaph and here�s what Rochester came up with, "Here lies our sovereign Lord the King, Whose word no man relies on; Who never said a foolish thing, And never did a wise one." Queen Mary had a point.
The Prince of Wales will be King Charles III of England, unless he changes his name.
http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page389.asp