prince andrew duke of york
Georgiana Of Pippleson
Heir to the throne.
pretender
Charles Stuart (Bonnie Prince Charlie, The Pretender, etc) was a Scottish claimant to the throne of Britain.
The final victory went to a claimant of the Lancastrian family, Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond .He assumed the throne as Richard Vll
Well, I don't know if this is the answer you are looking for, but Richard III was the Yorkist claimant to the throne and therefore the "White Rose". Henry Tudor was the last tangible Lancastrian claimant, seeing as his mother, Margaret Beaufort, was descended from John of Gaunt, a son of Edward III, also the father of Henry IV, the first Lancastrian. The Beaufort's descended from John of Gaunts third marriage to Katherine Swynford and were barred from the throne. However, on the extinction of the male line of the House of Lancaster with Henry VI's murder, Henry VII was the Lancastrian claimant and therefore the "Red Rose"
The American Claimant was created in 1892.
Prince Andrew Duke of York.
Example sentence - The claimant used the wrong form and was disqualified.
Charles Edward Stuart was the exiled Jacobite claimant to the throne of Great Britain and Ireland. He was born in Rome, Italy to a Scottish father and Polish mother.
In order to understand "false pretender" one needs to understand the historical use of the word "pretender" as in " a pretender to the throne". To be a "pretender" does not mean one is necessarily illegitimate. A "pretender to the throne" could be simply "one who claims the throne or the title". A "pretender" could be legitimate royalty. Therefore, a "false pretender" is a claimant who is not genuine, not legitimate. This all gets confusing because the word "pretender" has a different connotation today.
Japan is the only empire today and it's ruled by emperor Akihito. His empress consort is called Michiko. Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna is claimant to the Russian throne, but she is (still) not the Empress.
Henry VII became King at the conclusion of the War of the Roses, as he was the ultimate victor. He defeated Richard III, the Lancastrian claimant of the throne, at the Battle of Bosworth Field.