submit urlsubmit rss feedadd directory

article

A royal family is the extended family of a monarch. Generally, the head of a royal family is a king or queen regnant. The term "imperial family" more appropriately describes the extended family of an emperor or empress regnant, while the terms "ducal family", "grand ducal family" or "princely family" are more appropriate in reference to the relatives of a reigning duke, grand duke, or prince. Finally, it is proper to refer to the extended relations of a deposed monarch and his or her descendants as a royal family.

A royal family typically includes the spouse of the reigning monarch, any or all surviving spouses of a deceased monarch, the children, grandchildren, brothers, sisters, and cousins of the reigning monarch, as well as their spouses. In some cases, royal family membership may extend to great granchildren and more distant descendants of a monarch. In certain monarchies where voluntary abdication is the norm, such as the Netherlands, a royal family may also include one or more former monarchs. There is often a distinction between persons of the blood royal and those that marry into the royal family. Under most systems, only persons in the former category are dynasts, that is, potential successors to the throne (unless the member of the latter category is also in line to the throne in their own right, a frequent occurrence in royal families which frequently intermarry). This is not always observed; some monarchies have operated by the principle of jure uxoris.

In general, certain relatives of the monarch (by blood or marriage) possess special privileges and are subject to certain statutes, conventions, or special common law. The precise functions of a royal family vary depending on whether the polity in question is an absolute monarchy, a constitutional monarchy, or somewhere in between. In certain absolute monarchies, such as that found in Saudi Arabia or Kuwait, or in political systems where the monarch actually exercises executive power, such as in Jordan, it is not uncommon for the members of a royal family to hold important government posts or military commands. In most constitutional monarchies, however, members of a royal family perform certain public, social, or ceremonial functions, but refrain from any involvement in electoral politics or the actual governance of the country.

More on [ Royal family ]


directory of related categories

 

 

 
 
directory of related topics

Crown :: Government
Windsor :: Monarchy
Monarchy :: Issues
Monarchy

 
Royal_Family RSS feed
BBC News | UK | World Edition

Home repossessions rise by 41%
Fri, 08 Aug 2008 11:28:08 -0000
The number of properties repossessed by mortgage lenders in the UK rose by 41% in the first half of 2008, to 18,900.
Knife killer, 16, jailed for life
Fri, 08 Aug 2008 11:32:16 -0000
A 16-year-old is given a life sentence for stabbing to death a schoolboy he felt had given him a "dirty look".
Apology over prince cancer story
Fri, 08 Aug 2008 10:57:22 -0000
A newspaper issues an unreserved apology over a story that Prince Philip had been diagnosed with prostate cancer.
RBS hit by £691m half-year loss
Fri, 08 Aug 2008 08:11:15 -0000
Royal Bank of Scotland posts a six-month pre-tax loss of £691m, the second-biggest loss in UK banking history.
CCTV setback in rail attack hunt
Fri, 08 Aug 2008 10:15:25 -0000
Police say CCTV images of a woman being pushed onto a rail track at a station in Kent do not show her attackers.
UK scouts hurt in Canada accident
Fri, 08 Aug 2008 11:29:38 -0000
A tour bus carrying a British Scouts group on a tour of Canada is involved in a road crash in Eastern Ontario.

The Economist: Britain

Energy dilemma: Cheap or green?
Thu, 07 Aug 2008 12:59:56 -0000
When poverty and greenery collideTHE Camp for Climate Action--an annual gathering of anarchists and environmentalists--is fast becoming a summer fixture. Having protested outside Drax (a big coal-fired power plant) in 2006 and Heathrow airport in 2007, this year they are pitching tents in Kingsnorth, an industrial bit of Kent that is the proposed site of what would be the first new coal power station to be built in Britain for two decades. The protesters point out that coal is the dirtiest fossil fuel and argue that, given official pledges to cut carbon emissions, building new plants using it would be "stupid". Their ambition is to shut down the existing Kingsnorth station, which is also coal-fired, for a day. There have already been several arrests and clashes with the police (whom protesters accuse of harassment); more seem likely on August 9th, their officially designated "day of mass action". ...
Catholics and Anglicans: Anyone for Schadenfreude?
Thu, 07 Aug 2008 12:59:56 -0000
What Roman Catholics fear from an Anglican splitTHE Archbishop of Canterbury was not the only church leader to be thankful that the Lambeth conference ended with the Anglican Communion still in one piece. An almost audible sigh of relief could be heard from the Vatican."The last thing the pope would wish to do is support any kind of division," said Keith Pecklers, a Jesuit professor of Liturgy at the Gregorian University in Rome. That may seem odd. If the Church of England splits, Catholicism stands to gain new adherents. Traditionally minded Anglican priests and bishops--and, in some cases, most of their flocks--can be expected to defect to Rome. ...
Northern Rock: Of banks and men
Thu, 07 Aug 2008 12:59:56 -0000
The mortgage lender's cash call is an ominous sign for all British banksSTUDENTS of politics (and more than a few politicians) know only too well the old dictum about lies that are repeated often enough becoming truth. Those foolish enough to believe it should take a look at the sorry tale of Northern Rock, a troubled mortgage lender that failed last September when it ran out of cash. For almost a year afterwards Alistair Darling, the chancellor of the exchequer, repeated, mantra-like, that this was a sound bank brought low by events from afar, and that taxpayers would get back every one of the billions of pounds they lent it. On August 5th Mr Darling was mugged by reality when Northern Rock came to him, cap in hand, again. This time the bank wanted help in shoring up its balance-sheet, which is crumbling thanks to a mortgage book that looks worse by the day. The government, which is still owed some GBP21 billion ($41 billion) by the hapless bank, has agreed to convert as much as GBP3 billion of the debt (as well as some GBP400m in preference shares) into ordinary shares. This urgent need for capital should make those who still think taxpayers will get all their money back think twice. So should those who dare to hope that Britain's banks have seen the worst of the credit crisis. ...
Crossing the Thames: Flying cars
Thu, 07 Aug 2008 12:59:56 -0000
Trouble over bridging watersYOU would not expect Boris Johnson, London's newly elected Conservative mayor, to be popular in Newham, a poor east London borough and Labour stronghold that has become a byword for deprivation and poverty. Yet the shock-haired Mr Johnson will have won at least a few grudging admirers with his opposition to the Thames Gateway Bridge, a GBP455m ($890m), six-lane road bridge across the Thames that was championed by Ken Livingstone, his predecessor.East London has traditionally been poorly served by transport infrastructure. The prospect of hosting the Olympic games in 2012 (see article), and a wider plan to build tens of thousands of new homes on semi-derelict land around them, has finally focused minds on the problem. The bridge nearest the site--Tower Bridge--is several hundred metres upstream and unsuited to the new traffic that redevelopment will bring. Yet Mr Livingstone's big new bridge was unpopular with some residents, who complained that it would send more traffic thundering through their borough. Green groups, too, fretted that extra traffic would mean extra greenhouse gases. ...
Pensions accounting: Choose a number
Thu, 07 Aug 2008 12:59:56 -0000
Silly accounting may be obscuring a black hole in pension fundsUNITED UTILITIES and Scottish and Southern Energy are similar in many respects. Both are energy utilities that supply electricity and gas. Both employ thousands and run huge pension funds. Yet when calculating the cost of those pensions, the similarities end. The two companies have chosen to use very different assumptions--and these choices have a big impact on the pension surplus or deficit on their balance-sheets. When discounting their eventual obligations (figuring out the cost today of paying pensions years in the future), United Utilities has used a rate of 6%, Scottish and Southern one of 6.9%. The difference may not seem much, but Lane Clark & Peacock, a firm of actuaries, reckons that Scottish and Southern's pension liabilities come out about GBP350m lower than if it had used United's rate--a material difference for a fund that in 2007 was GBP92m in the red. ...
The Anglican Communion: The high price of togetherness
Thu, 07 Aug 2008 12:59:56 -0000
The bishops got on fine for a while--but was it only a holiday romance? BY ITS own unusual lights, the Lambeth conference of Anglican bishops was a great success. Its self-imposed task was to avoid any nasty rows between 650 purple-clad gentlemen (and a few purple-clad ladies) who hold widely diverging views on issues which they see as matters of principle, not detail. And a "surprising level of sheer willingness to stay together" was finally reported, on August 3rd, by Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury--after nearly three weeks of well-choreographed confraternity in which participants took no votes and made no firm decisions. (Such a luxury would hardly be possible for a body like, say, the International Telecommunication Union, where success is judged by earthly yardsticks.) Still, the Anglican leader's own standing as a mediator, doing his best to hold together the almost irreconcilable, rose as a result of the gathering. And in a very Anglican way, the thorny issues facing the church were artfully concealed by euphemism and arcane procedures that will unfold over several years. Minds were distracted from trickier subjects by a hyper-inclusive march against poverty. ...

 
Subscribe to United_Kingdom RSS feed

directory of related sites

The British Monarchy - The official UK monarchy website covers the monarch's role and the history of the monarchy; biographies of the Royal Family, tourist information for Royal estates and the Crown Jewels.
Meta Description: [ The official web site of the British Monarchy. Information on the history of the Monarchy, today's royal family and the Royal Art and Residences ]

Ananova - Up to the minute breaking news on the UK's Royal Family.
Meta Description: [ Ananova: News on the move from the leading site for breaking UK and world news, sport, entertainment, business and weather stories and information. ]

BBC News: Our Monarchy: The Next Fifty Years - Interactive website including background information, a quiz, articles, read audio of a debate on the future of the monarchy and other resources. Companion to the BBC special broadcast hosted by David Dimbelby.

British Royalty - Royal facts, quizzes, profiles and polls, mostly relating to the current royal family.
Meta Description: [ british royalty site. un-official resource on british royalty. current royal family past monarchs royal birthdays star signs and other royal facts. ]

Deb's Royalty Pinbacks - Pinbacks of various royals from 1800's to present day.

HRH Prince Michael of Kent - Official website with backgrounds of both prince and princess, his engagment diary and list of supported charities.
Meta Description: [ The Official Website of HRH Prince Michael of Kent ]

HRH The Earl of Wessex - The British Monarchy website page for His Royal Highness The Earl of Wessex a.k.a The Prince Edward.
Meta Description: [ An introduction to The Earl of Wessex. ]

Kings and Queens Index - A concise set of biographies of Britain's kings and queens, and some of their courtiers. Courtesy of the UK and Ireland Genealogical Information Service and Colin Hinson.

Prince Michael of Albany - Information about a Stuart pseudo claimant, based in Belgium.

Royal Insight - Archives from April 1999 to January 2002 of the monthly guide to the official activities of Britain's Royal Family. No longer updated.
Meta Description: [ Home page for Royal Insight, the Royal news magazine on the Internet. ]

Royalty Monthly Magazine's Official Website - News, Interviews and Pictorial Coverage on UK and Overseas Royals. The worlds biggest source for books/magazines on Princess Diana and Royal Families worldwide.
Meta Description: [ The latest Royal news and photo stories from around the world. Online features plus online subscription and bookclub. ]

Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York - The life of Fergie, the Duchess of York.
Meta Description: [ The life of Sarah Ferguson, the duchess of York; books about Fergie. ]

Team Highgrove - Unofficial Prince Charles Online plus Will and Harry Unlimited. Offers royal news and photos.
Meta Description: [ A british royalty domain containing great sites Prince William, Prince Harry, and Prince Charles. ]

The English Royal Family - A brief but interesting look at the British royal family.
Meta Description: [ All about the royal Windsor family of Great Britain. ]

The Royal Archive - Interactive biography project on UK Royalty including Prince William, Queen Elizabeth II, Princess Margaret and others.
Meta Description: [ Biographical project on British Royalty including Prince William, Prince Charles and Queen Elizabeth II. Active discussion boards, photo galleries and interactive features ]

The Royal Collection Shop - The online shop of the Royal Collection of the British Monarchy one of the finest art collections in the world. The shop sells commemorative gifts and merchandise to help support its work of conservation, and display.

The Royal Connection - Features information and pictures on the most popular royals of the british royal family.

The Royalist - A web magazine of news, gossip and features, covering the Royal Family at work and at play.
Meta Description: [ Updated daily, The Royalist provides news, essays, articles, and gossip about the world of royalty, with exclusive footage of the royals at work and at play., the row over the pictures of prince harry grabbing the breast of natalie pinkham reignites with news the daily mail is being sued for repu... ]

Yvonne's Royalty Home Page - Personal site describing the family history of the current British monarchy and the line of succession.

Royal_Family related videos
seas royal caribbean cruises cruise video BHS BHS brookwood hs royal caribbean cruise video songs animoto cruisecritic ...
Next Video

 

HOMEADVERTISINGABOUT US

articlesartsbusinesscomputersgameshealthhospitalshomekids & teensnewsmobilephysiciansrecreationreferenceregionalscienceshoppingsocietysportsworld


Submit a Site About Become an Editor