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Queen Consort
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Image:George5queen.jpg Mary of Teck frame|King George V of the United Kingdom and his consort, Queen [[Mary of Teck|Mary.html" title="Meaning of Mary.html" title="Meaning of frame|King George V of the United Kingdom and his consort, Queen [[Mary of Teck|Mary">frame|King George V of the United Kingdom and his consort, Queen [[Mary of Teck|Mary">Mary.html" title="Meaning of frame|King George V of the United Kingdom and his consort, Queen [[Mary of Teck|Mary">frame|King George V of the United Kingdom and his consort, Queen [[Mary of Teck|Mary
A '''queen consort''' is the
wife and
consort of a reigning
monarch king.
In contrast the husband of a reigning queen is usually not called "
king consort," although this was more common in the past; rather, he is popularly called "
prince consort". In the British system, a male consort does not automatically receive the title of "prince" until he is so created by the sovereign.
In general the consorts of monarchs have no constitutional status or power; they have merely the title, though many do have influence over their husband or wife, whether their power is official or not.
There are a few cases in which a married couple ruled a kingdom jointly:
Ferdinand II of Aragon and his wife Isabella, in her own right
Isabella I of Castile, ruled their kingdoms as one dominion. Ferdinand was also called Ferdinand V of Castile. However, the two kingdoms would not be
de jure united until the monarchs' grandson
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, acceded to both thrones as Charles I of Spain.
The daughter of
James II of England, Mary Stuart (
Mary II of England), married her first cousin, William of Orange (
William III of England). Although James II had a son (
James Francis Edward Stuart) from his second wife,
Mary of Modena, the prospect of a prolonged pro-Catholic monarchy was distasteful to many Protestants. A group of Whig and Tory conspirators "invited" William to invade England in order to dethrone James II. After James fled the country, Parliament was forced to offer the crown to William and Mary jointly, as neither would accept Mary ascending alone. Mary and William were made co-monarchs by Parliament. William ruled alone after Mary's death when the future
Queen Anne deferred her claims.
There have also been a number of cases when the queen consort of a deceased king (the
Queen Dowager or
Queen Mother) had served as
regent while her child, the heir to the throne, was still a minor—for example,
Catherine de Medici and
Marie de Medici in France, or, more recently,
Maria Christina of Austria Queen Maria Christina of Spain.
Besides these examples, there have been many cases of queens consort being shrewd stateswomen and, albeit unofficially, being among the king's major advisors. In some cases, the queen consort has been the chief power behind the throne; example
Henrietta Maria.
A notable exception to this rule is that of
Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, wife of
Charles, Prince of Wales. It was announced that, in the event of Charles's ascent to the British throne, Camilla would assume the title of
Princess Consort, not Queen Consort (although the legality of this under existing statutes has been called into question).
Similarly, the wife of an emperor is an '''empress consort'''. Apart from being higher in rank than a queen consort (since an emperor precedes a king), it is much the same position - an empress consort is still an empress by virtue of marriage alone, does not hold any concrete constitutional power, and becomes an '''empress dowager''' or '''empress mother''' should her husband die before her, just as a queen consort would become
queen dowager or
queen mother. The wife of a
King-Emperor is a '''queen-empress consort''' - again, apart from status, her role does not differ from that of an empress consort or queen consort.
Examples of queens consort
'''Past Queens Consort''':
* Queen
Mary of Teck Mary, consort of King
George V of the United Kingdom
* Queen
Alexandra of Denmark Alexandra, consort of King
Edward VII of the United Kingdom
* Queen
Marie José of Belgium Maria José, consort of King
Humbert II of Italy Umberto II of Italy
* Tsaritsa
Giovanna of Savoy Ioanna, consort of Tsar
Boris III of Bulgaria
'''Present Queens Consort''':
* Queen
Queen Paola of Belgium Paola, consort of King
Albert II of Belgium Albert II of the Belgians
* Queen
Queen Rania of Jordan Rania, consort of king
Abdullah II of Jordan
* Queen
Queen Silvia of Sweden Silvia, consort of King
Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden
* Queen
Sofía of Spain Sofia, consort of King
Juan Carlos I of Spain
* Queen
Queen Sonja of Norway Sonja, consort of King
Harald V of Norway
Because queens consort lack an
ordinal number ordinal with which to distinguish between them, many historical texts and encyclopedias refer to deceased consorts by their pre-marital or maiden name or title, not by their marital royal title.
Thus:
* Queen Mary, consort of King
George V of the United Kingdom, is usually called
Mary of Teck
* Queen Maria José, consort of King
Humbert II of Italy Umberto II of Italy, is usually called
Marie José of Belgium
* Queen Catherine, first consort of King
Henry VIII of England, is called
Catherine of Aragon.
Category:Queen consorts *
see
Queen consort
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