By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Daily LondonDaily London
Font ResizerAa
  • UK & Europe News
  • World Affairs
  • Tech & Innovation
  • Culture & Society
  • Voices of London
Reading: Former prince Andrew’s name changes again after royal decree found
Share
Font ResizerAa
Daily LondonDaily London
  • UK & Europe News
  • World Affairs
  • Tech & Innovation
  • Culture & Society
  • Voices of London
Search
  • UK & Europe News
  • World Affairs
  • Tech & Innovation
  • Culture & Society
  • Voices of London
Follow US
© 2025 Daily london. All Rights Reserved.
Daily London > World Affairs > Former prince Andrew’s name changes again after royal decree found
World Affairs

Former prince Andrew’s name changes again after royal decree found

Daily London
By Daily London
Published: November 12, 2025
Share

Daily London

He’s lost his titles, his house and his reputation, but the former Prince Andrew has gained a hyphen.

The disgraced royal is now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and not – as previously announced – Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.

The change makes the name’s style conform to the double-barreled surname chosen by the late Queen Elizabeth II for her descendants 65 years ago.

The former prince now known only as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. (AP)

It combines the royal family’s name of Windsor, chosen by King George V in 1917, with Mountbatten, the surname of the queen’s husband, Prince Philip.

The queen had initially decided to use Windsor alone, leading her husband to complain that he was the only man in England not allowed to give his children his name.

Elizabeth relented, and in an official declaration on February 8, 1960 – days before her son Andrew was born – said: “My descendants other than descendants enjoying the style title or attribute of Royal Highness and the titular dignity of Prince or Princess and female descendants who marry and their descendants shall bear the name of Mountbatten-Windsor.”

Royals mark Remembrance Sunday

The hyphen has been added after palace officials studied the 1960 declaration.

King Charles III announced on October 30 that he was removing his brother’s titles and evicting him from his royal residence near Windsor Castle over his relationship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Pressure had been growing on the palace to oust the 65-year-old prince from his Royal Lodge home over new revelations about his friendship with Epstein and renewed attention on sexual abuse allegations by one of Epstein’s victims, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, whose posthumous memoir was published last month.

The king went even further to punish Mountbatten-Windsor for serious lapses of judgment by removing the title of prince that he had held since birth.

Mountbatten-Windsor has always denied Giuffre’s allegations.

You Might Also Like

More than half of drivers admit to hitting another car and not leaving a note, study claims
Putin says US plan could form the basis for a final peace settlement
MP Colin Boyce to challenge David Littleproud after Coalition split
Rose Byrne, Jacob Elordi lead Aussie charge for Oscars
Alleged childcare paedophile hit with 83 new charges
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp Email Print
Previous Article Jeffrey Epstein claimed Trump ‘knew about the girls’, in newly released emails
Next Article Storms to hammer Australia from top of NT to bottom of SA

Stay Connected

16k Like
85k Follow
45.6k Subscribe
Telegram Follow
- Advertisement -

Latest News

Interstate crews brought in to help firefighters battle massive blaze
World Affairs
International Olympic Committee grills organisers at Milan meeting
World Affairs
Search for vulnerable woman who disappeared from bus stop nearly two months ago
World Affairs
Man arrested after allegedly mimicking shooting near footbridge
World Affairs

Daily London – The Global Pulse from the UK

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

[email-subscribers-form id=”1″]

Daily LondonDaily London
© 2025 Daily London. All Rights Reserved.