Prince William
William would become king should Charles, Prince of Wales and heir to the throne, predecease his mother Queen Elizabeth II.
Elizabeth fell in love with Phillip and did not have an arranged marriage.
Yes Queen Elizabeth can choose to make William the King before she passes away thus by passing Prince Charles. But if she were to pass away without doing such the throne would go to Prince Charles.
The Queen Mum was born 4th Aug 1900 which would make her 101 years old when she died on 30th March 2002.
Answer Queen Elizabeth II is Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - this includes England, but the title "Queen of England" no longer exists. The heir apparent is her eldest son, Prince Charles.
Elizabeth, Regina. Elizabeth, Queen. She is the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom. Her mother, Queen Elizabeth, did not use these letters. She was not the reigning monarch, but was consort to her husband, King George.
William would become king should Charles, Prince of Wales and heir to the throne, predecease his mother Queen Elizabeth II.
Elizabeth fell in love with Phillip and did not have an arranged marriage.
The verb "resemble" (to appear alike) is unwieldy in the passive voice. "Charles resembles Elizabeth" (active voice) is a more natural expression. Otherwise you are saying "Elizabeth is being appeared to be like her by Charles." The synonymous term "looks like" would also be clumsy or impossible.
, this one is a very difficult one as the answer will not yet be known, it has been said that Charles may use a different name as king, but if he does continue to use Charles as his name then the initials would be C.R, which means Charles Reginier C.R. would stand for Charles Rex (King Charles), just as E.R. stands for Elizabeth Regina (Queen Elizabeth), with the Latin II for two between the two letters.
The children share equally in the estate. If there are any children who predeceased the last parent to die and if those children left children of their own, then those grandchildren would inherit the share that their parent would have inherited and he/she not predeceased.
Yes, Charles, Prince of Wales, is next in the line of succession to the British throne.
Maya Angelou would summarize her feelings about discrimination as a behavior predeceased by death.
Anne Boylen's only living child was Queen Elizabeth I. Elizabeth succeeded her sister Queen Mary (Catherine of Aragon's daughter). Elizabeth never married or produced children so she is the last of the Tudor line. King James would succeed her after her death.Anny Boleyn had one child with her husband King Henry III, a daughter named Elizabeth. She would go on to become Queen Elizabeth I.
Every state has laws that determine the distribution of a decedent's property when there is no will so you have to check that state's laws. But generally, spouses and descendants will take first. If there are no spouse and no children and no children of predeceased children, then the estate goes up the line to the parents. If there are no parents the estate goes to the decedent's siblings in equal shares. If there are some living children and some predeceased children, then the children of that predeceased child takes the share that the predeceased child would have taken.
'Right of Representation' distribution under a will means that the children of the beneficiary stand in for any beneficiary who predeceased the testator. It is also referred to as 'Per Stirpes" distribution. If the testator wants the legacies provided in the will to be distributed by right of representation it must be clearly stated in the will.For example, suppose William died and in his will he left all his estate to his two children, Judith and Elizabeth per stirpes. At the time of William's death Elizabeth had already died leaving two children. William's estate would be divided in half and one-half would go to Judith and one-half would be divided between Elizabeth's children.Suppose William died with no children and left his estate to two of his three sisters per stirpes. If one sister had predeceased William, her share would automatically go to her own children.If the right of representation is not set up in the will and a beneficiary has predeceased the testator the gift would lapse and become a part of the residuary estate. Generally, if no residuary beneficiaries are named then that part of the estate would be distributed according to the state laws of intestacy. You can check the laws of your state at the related question link provided below.
Yes Queen Elizabeth can choose to make William the King before she passes away thus by passing Prince Charles. But if she were to pass away without doing such the throne would go to Prince Charles.