| Styles of Queen mother |
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| Reference style | Her Majesty |
|---|---|
| Spoken style | Your Majesty |
| Alternative style | Ma'am |
Queen mother is defined as "a queen dowager who is the mother of the reigning sovereign".[1][2] The term has been used in England since at least 1577[1] and Samuel Pepys refers to Charles II's mother Henrietta-Maria as the "Queene Mother".[1] Further, she was described as the Queen Mother in early editions of the Book of Common Prayer and subsequent queen mothers were also so described in later editions.[3]
It is not clear whether earlier English queen mothers were ever referred to by that term, or only as "dowager queen". Elizabeth Woodville was sometimes called "queen dowager".[4]
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A queen mother is therefore a person satisfying the following criteria:
Contrary to myth, queen mother does not mean mother of the Queen and applies irrespective of whether the monarch is male or female.
A queen mother retains the style of Her Majesty that she enjoyed as queen, but there is no further coronation ceremony to reflect her changed status.
In the Middle Ages, monarchs often had mothers alive. Sometimes they even served as regents. Then, for centuries, there were only a few queen mothers according to the above definition in the Kingdom of England (up to 1707), the Kingdom of Great Britain (1707–1800), the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1801–1927) and the modern United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (post-1927).
This is somewhat uncommon, as in history women often lived as widows. For most of the time in the 20th century, there was a queen mother; three people had that status, but only the most recent queen mother actually used that title. As discussed below, it is not clear when there will be one again in the United Kingdom.
Following is a list of women who, on the above definition, were entitled to be known as queen mother at some point in their lives.
Following is a list of wives and mothers of English and British monarchs, with an explanation of why each was or was not a queen mother.
There was one queen mother during the period of the House of Lancaster.
There was one queen mother (for just two months) during the period of the House of York.
There were no queen mothers during the Tudor period.
There was only one queen mother in this period.
There were no queen mothers among the Hanoverians.
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There is little likelihood that there will be another British queen mother in the near future. In the highly unlikely event that Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom decided to abdicate in favour of her son Charles, Prince of Wales,[5] it is possible that she would be given the title of queen mother. However, she would not fit into the accepted definition (not being a dowager queen), and there is no precedent for this. Otherwise, assuming that Charles succeeded through her death, he would of course have no mother alive.
If either Prince William of Wales or Prince Harry of Wales were to succeed to the throne (subsequent to Charles or directly), they would have no mother alive, as Diana, Princess of Wales predeceased them in 1997. Their stepmother Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall would presumably not be eligible for the title, since no stepmother has held it before.
William's future wife could become the next queen mother, by surviving him and having an heir on the throne. It is also possible that if someone else were to succeed, then an existing member of the Royal family would become Queen mother. For example, if Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex succeeded to the throne, and were then outlived by his wife and succeeded by his own child, his wife Sophie, Countess of Wessex would be queen mother.
| “ | "It's not like a normal job, it's a job for life. [The vows made on Coronation Day were] so deep and so special [to the Queen] ... She wouldn't consider not continuing to fulfil those vows until she dies."
When asked by BBC royal correspondent Nicholas Witchell if she was categorically saying the Queen would neither retire nor abdicate, but would remain in the role until her death she said: "Yes, I'm perfectly sure that's what will happen." |
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—The Hon Margaret Rhodes, BBC News |
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