An overjoyed Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are
the proud parents of a healthy baby boy, and the nation celebrates the
birth of a future king.
The couple’s son weighed 8lb 6oz and was delivered
at 4.24 p.m. on Monday at the private Lindo Wing of St Mary’s Hospital
in Paddington, with his proud father, Prince William, looking on.
Her Royal Highness and her child are both doing well and will remain in hospital overnight, said a spokesman for the palace.
The long-awaited baby will be given the title, His Royal Highness and
be known as Prince of Cambridge, after the Queen moved earlier this year
to change almost a century of royal tradition, Mail Online reported.
She issued a formal proclamation in January to end a convention brought
in by George V which meant that a royal title was restricted to the
children of the sovereign and the children of the sovereign’s sons.
The new baby is third in the line of succession, relegating his proud
uncle, Prince Harry to fourth, and great-uncle, Prince Andrew, to sixth –
although he may not become sovereign for half a century or more.
Recent legislation allowing female heirs to automatically accede to the
throne if they are first born will clearly not affect the Cambridge’s
son, but will have a bearing on any of his children.
Although a
cause for national celebration, the baby’s arrival is, more
importantly, a time of overwhelming personal joy for William and Kate,
who made no secret of their desire to start a family when they married
two years ago.
The Queen was, according to protocol, the first
to be informed of the newest addition to her family when William
personally telephoned her from his wife’s delivery suite, followed by
proud grandfather Prince Charles and Kate’s parents, Michael and Carole
Middleton, who are now linked by blood to the British throne.
The birth was announced to the world’s media by a press release from the Palace.
With family – including the entire Middleton clan and new uncle Prince
Harry - set to arrive at the hospital with hours, it is understood that
the couple do not intend to introduce the Queen to her new great
grand-son until the Duchess returns home.
Despite having eight
grand-children and two great grand-daughters already, it will be a
momentous event for the 87-year-old sovereign.
The last time a
still-serving monarch got to meet a great grandchild born in direct
succession to the crown was nearly 120 years ago.
Queen
Victoria, who reigned until 1901, was still sovereign when her great
grandchild Edward VIII, who later abdicated, was born third in line in
1894.
William and Kate’s baby will be the great great great
great great grandchild of Queen Victoria and the present Queen’s third
great grandchild.
It is also likely to have huge resonance for
her personally, marking the emergence of a reinvigorated British Royal
Family after decades dominated by bitter marital strife.
William and Kate are personally determined that their son be allowed to
enjoy as “normal” an upbringing as possible while being taught to
respect and accept his destiny as a future King, head of the armed
forces, supreme governor of the Church of England and head of the
Commonwealth, which covers 54 nations across the world.
The
present Queen is still head of state of 16 countries across the globe
but it is likely that by the time her great grand-son accedes to the
throne, which could be more than fifty or more years from now, precious
little of those will remain.
In an interview to mark their
engagement in 2010, Kate stressed that her own family – parents Michael
and Carole and siblings Pippa and James – were the lynchpin of her
existence.
Asked about her family she said: ‘Yes. It’s very important to me. And I hope we will be able to have a happy family ourselves.’
When asked about his future plans in the military, William added in an
interview last year : “More importantly, I’d rather like to have
children. So that’s the key thing really.”
He also revealed
that he would like two children – while his wife subsequently divulged
that while she wanted a boy, William liked the idea of a girl.
Source: Tribune

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