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{{Infobox royalty
| name          = William VI
| title          = [[Duke of Hanover|Duke of Hanover]]
| image          = NoG.jpg


| image_size    = Medium
| succession  =
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{{Collapsible list |title={{wp|Queen of the United Kingdom|King of the British}} and of the People of his other {{wp|Commonwealth Realms|Realms}}|titlestyle=background:transparent;text-align:center;padding-center:1.0em;
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        |col1style=padding-right:0.5em;
        |{{wp|Canada}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Australia}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|New Zealand}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Jamaica}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Barbados}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|The Bahamas}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Grenada}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Papua New Guinea}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Solomon Islands}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Tuvalu}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|St. Lucia}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|St. Vincent and the Grenadines}}                                      | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Belize}}                                      | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Antigua and Barbuda}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|St. Kitts and Nevis}}                                        | 1997-2017
|{{wp|Puerto Rico}}                                        | 1997-2017
}} }} }}
| moretext    =
| reign        = 15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017
| reign-type  = Reign
| coronation  = 20 March 1997
| cor-type    = Coronation
| predecessor  = [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|Charles III]]
| pre-type    = Predecessor
| regent      = {{list collapsed|title=''See list''|1={{wp|John Major}}<br>{{wp|Tony Blair}}<br>{{wp|Gordon Brown}}<br>{{wp|David Cameron}}}}
| reg-type    = {{nowrap|{{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Ministers}}}}
| successor    = [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Alexandra]]
| suc-type    = Successor
| succession1  =
| moretext1    =
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| reign-type1  =
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| birth_name    = William Frederick Francis Albert Charles
| birth_date    = {{birth date and age|1950|12|17|df=yes}}
| birth_place    = {{wp|Balmoral Castle}}, {{wp|Scotland}}
| death_date  =
| death_place  =
| burial_date  =
| burial_place =
| spouse              = {{marriage|{{wp|Christy Turlington}}|14 December 1995}}
| issue                = {{plainlist|* [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge]]
* [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]]
* [[Prince Richard, Duke of Cleveland|Richard, Duke of Cleveland]]
* [[Prince Nicholas, Duke of Edinburgh|Nicholas, Duke of Edinburgh]]
* [[Princess Mary, Duchess of Sussex|Mary, Duchess of Sussex]]
* [[Princess Elle of Hanover]]
* [[Princess Vivian of Hanover]]}}
| full name      = William Frederick Francis Albert Charles
| house          = {{wp|House of Hanover|Hanover}}
| father        = [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|Charles III]]
| mother        = {{wp|Lauren Bacall}}
| religion      = {{wp|Protestantism|Protestant}}
| module      = {{Infobox officeholder | embed=yes
  | branch        = {{plainlist|
*{{navy|United Kingdom}}}}
  | serviceyears  = 1979-1997 (active service)
  | servicenumber = <!-- Do not use data from primary sources such as service records -->
  | unit          =
  | commands      =
  | rank          = {{wp|Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom}}
  | battles_label =
  | battles      = {{wp|The Troubles}}<br/>{{wp|Falklands War}}<br/>{{wp|Multinational Force in Lebanon}}<br/>{{wp|Gulf War}}}}
}}
'''William VI''' (William Frederick Francis Albert Charles; born 17 December 1950) was {{wp|King of the United Kingdom|King of the British}} from 15 January 1997 to 13 October 2017.
Despite his constitutional status, as King, he was noticeably instrumental in promoting continued relations between the {{wp|United Kingdom}} and its former colonies in {{wp|Asia}} through his respective state visits to the continent. Meanwhile, the latter half of his reign was otherwise marked by the early years of the {{wp|War on terror|War on Terror}} and by the respective deaths of his parents, the former [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|King Charles III]] and {{wp|Lauren Bacall|Queen Lauren}} in the years 2011 and 2014, and lastly, by the {{wp|2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum|2016 Brexit referendum}}, in which the Remain vote prevailed with a 57% majority.
In his early adult years, he actively served in the {{wp|Royal Navy}}, with William notably being a part of the {{wp|British}} task force involved in the {{wp|Falklands War}}, and later as part of the coalition forces involved in the {{wp|Gulf War}}, which successfully expelled {{wp|Iraqi}} forces under {{wp|Saddam Hussein}} from neighbouring {{wp|Kuwait}}. At the same time, he was also known for his somewhat publicised lifestyle, which tied the prince to several famous actresses at the time. Eventually, on December 1995, he married the {{wp|American}} supermodel, {{wp|Christy Turlington}}, with whom he has six children, namely [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Alexandra]], [[Prince Richard, Duke of Cleveland|Richard]], [[Prince Nicholas, Duke of Edinburgh|Nicholas]], [[Princess Mary, Duchess of Sussex|Mary]], [[Princess Elle of Hanover|Elle]], and [[Princess Vivian of Hanover|Vivian]]. In addition to that, he is also the father of the acclaimed {{wp|English}} broadcaster and journalist, [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge]] (formerly known as Victoria Cattrall), an illegitimate daughter born from a relationship with the {{wp|British}}-{{wp|Canadian}} actress, {{wp|Kim Cattrall}}.
Following a health crisis in the final year of his reign, and upon the recommendation of {{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}} {{wp|David Cameron}}, an ageing William ultimately abdicated the throne in favour of his daughter, whom subsequently ascended to the throne as [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]], while otherwise styling himself as [[Duke of Hanover|''Duke of Hanover'']]. As a result, he became the third {{wp|British}} monarch to ever effectively abdicate the throne, preceded by his own father, [[Charles the Great|King Charles III]] in January 1997, and {{wp|Queen Victoria}} herself in July 1837. Following his abdication, the Duke has since devoted himself to largely philanthropic causes. In 2018, he founded the rising {{wp|English}} football club, [[Buckingham F.C.]], which competes in the {{wp|Premier League}}, the top flight of {{wp|English}} football. 
Due to his {{wp|Lauren Bacall|mother}} having been born {{wp|Jewish}} herself, William is thus recognised as being the first {{wp|Jewish}} monarch of the {{wp|United Kingdom}}, as per the {{wp|Jewish}} {{wp|Matrilineality in Judaism|matrilineal descent}} rule, followed by his eldest legitimate child and successor, the reigning [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]]. He is also notably the first {{wp|British}} monarch to be born to a father of royal ancestry and a mother of commoner descent, followed by his daughter and successor, [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]].
On October 2017, around the time of his abdication from the throne, he is said to be worth around $1.2 billion (£921 million) in total. Meanwhile, since March 2011, William has been the full owner of the {{wp|American}}-based shipping company, ''Southampton Line'', which was founded in the 1920s by [[Prince George, Duke of Southampton]], a long and distant relative of William's.
==Early Life==
William was born on December 17th 1950 to the then [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|Charles, Prince of Wales]] and {{wp|Lauren Bacall|Lauren, Princess of Wales}}, formerly known as Lauren Bacall, during the reign of his grandfather, [[Frederick of the United Kingdom|King Frederick]]. His godparents, in a manner previously unknown to that of his predecessors, consisted of both {{wp|British}} and {{wp|American}} nationals, whilst also including both members of royalty and non-royalty, such as his great-uncle and aunt, [[Prince Frederick, Duke of Clarence and Avondale]] and {{wp|Astrid of Sweden|Princess Astrid of Sweden}}, then {{wp|British}} {{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}}, {{wp|Clement Attlee}}, and {{wp|American}} {{wp|Hollywood}} figures, actor, {{wp|Frank Sinatra}}, and actress, {{wp|Katharine Hepburn}}.
Having been baptised as William Frederick Francis Albert Charles, his given name, while initially, and most popularly thought to had been a gesture by his [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|father]] in honouring his great-grandfather, the famed [[William V of the United Kingdom|King William V]], it was instead disclosed to had been a gesture by William's father in honouring his {{wp|Lauren Bacall|mother}}'s then divorced father, William Perske. Following this, he was subsequently given the names honouring his grandfather, [[Frederick of the United Kingdom|King Frederick]], and that of his parents' close friend, the {{wp|American}} actor and singer, {{wp|Frank Sinatra}}, whose given name and middle name the royal prince was given to, before concluding with William's father's own given name, ''Charles''.
==''Prince of the Welsh''==
Around the time when William was only a year old, the death of his grandfather, [[Frederick of the United Kingdom|King Frederick]] led to his [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|father]] becoming the new sovereign as ''Charles the Third''. At the same time, as the new heir apparent, William was created {{wp|Duke of Cornwall}} on July 7th by the former. Furthermore, following his father's ascension to the throne, the family of three subsequently moved from their previous residence at {{wp|Edinburgh Castle}} to the central residence of {{wp|Buckingham Palace}} in {{wp|London}}.
Mirroring that of his own [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|father]]'s upbringing, William's upbringing in {{wp|Buckingham Palace}} was reportedly said to had been somewhat restrictive in the early years, as a consequence of fringe rumours espousing harmful plots targeting the royal family. Nevertheless, the prince was able to benefit from both of his parents' much modern and liberal parenting style, with his [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|father]] in particular emphasising qualities of "individuality, self-dependent, and survivability" in the young prince, while his {{wp|Lauren Bacall|mother}} generally added onto the efforts of William's father in "liberalising" the young ''Prince of the Welsh''.
===The American Prince===
As his parents had previously been involved in the {{wp|Hollywood}} industry as actors and actresses themselves, William also grew up with a firm passion for {{wp|American}} movies and films, an interest helped by his parents' convenient associations with various {{wp|Hollywood}} celebrities. At the same time, he also became fond of locally-made {{wp|British}} films aswell, with the famed {{wp|English}} actress, {{wp|Audrey Hepburn}}, being a personal favourite, and later a close friend of his.
====Katharine Hepburn====
In particular, due to his parents' close association to the {{wp|American}} actress, {{wp|Katharine Hepburn}}, whom had consistently been a close friend of the royal couple, and also the prince's own godmother, William would also occasionally spend some time living under the actress's care at her family residence in {{wp|Fenwick}}, {{wp|Connecticut}}. Later on, in his memoirs, William himself described his time of living in {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|Hepburn}}'s family home as a "wholly wild, and fascinating experience". He also generally described the actress in a wholly positive light, having written in one instance, ''"While there were some minor, and understandable blunders from her, I could feel that we generally appreciated and cared for one another"''. Moreover, when living at the actress's {{wp|Connecticut}} family home, William was said to have generally fancied "dipping his toes every morning on the shores of the cold water", whilst also having much interest in sports such as golf and tennis, an interest made convenient with the presence of nearby golf courses and alike.
Interestingly, the supposed state of their "mother and son" relationship proved quick to gain a sizable degree of notoriety among the local community, so much so that William was initially mistaken to be an alleged secret lovechild between {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|Hepburn}} and her known romantic partner at the time, namely the actor, {{wp|Spencer Tracy}}, although these were quickly refuted by {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|Hepburn}}'s own family members, whom were already aware of the royal family's connections to the actress. Nevertheless, when the two were mostly apart, both William and {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|Hepburn}} maintained their lifelong friendship through the extensive use of telephones, and to a certain extent, an exchange of gifts, particularly during {{wp|Christmas}} or during their own respective birthday celebrations. In later years, William himself would often refer to {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|Hepburn}} as "my mother on the other side of the pond", and sometimes as "my great Aunt Kate".
Furthermore, during the period between 1968 to 1970, William once more lived together for a while with {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|Hepburn}}, with the latter acting as the prince's guardian, when he chose to study at the local {{wp|Central Connecticut State University}} in {{wp|New Britain, Connecticut|New Britain}}, {{wp|Connecticut}}, albeit under an assumed alias as to conceal his true identity there. Reportedly, William himself had initially considered enrolling at the more prestigious {{wp|Columbia University}} in neighbouring {{wp|New York (state)|New York}} but, out of his desire to remain close to the {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|actress}}, he chose to instead enroll in the local state university in {{wp|Connecticut}} itself, which had also been the actress's own birthplace. Thus, this arrangement allowed William a relative sense of easiness in travelling back and forth from the actress's family home in {{wp|Fenwick, Connecticut|Fenwick}} to the city of {{wp|New Britain, Connecticut|New Britain}} up north. Ultimately, after a two years long study, under the assumed alias of ''George White'', he then graduated from the university with a bachelor's degree in International Relations.
===Post-University Years===
Immediately following his graduation from university, William, as expected of an heir to the {{wp|British}} throne, began to officially undertake royal duties on his [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|father]]'s behalf. On December 1970, he privately met with the {{wp|President of Yugoslavia}}, {{wp|Josip Broz Tito}}, at his private estate at the {{wp|Brijuni}} islands. Reportedly, like his own father, William himself enjoyed a mutual friendship with the {{wp|Yugoslavs|Yugoslav}} leader, whom William was said to have wholly admired for the latter's success in stabilising the largely volatile relations between the various ethnicities situated within the federation, along with the {{wp|Yugoslavs|Yugoslav}} strongman's more flexible approach to foreign issues, in contrast to other {{wp|communist}} states in {{wp|Eastern Europe}}.
===Military Career===
In 1979, William attended the {{wp|Britannia Royal Navy College}} in {{wp|Dartmouth, Devon|Dartmouth}}, after which he was subsequently commissioned as a {{wp|midshipman}} in the {{wp|Royal Navy}}. However, with the exception of a few months or so, during which he played a largely minor role in {{wp|The Troubles}} conflict in the neighbouring {{wp|Republic of Ireland}}, the prince would largely see minimal combat throughout most of his career in the {{wp|Royal Navy}}. At the same time, in benefiting from the fact that he was less likely in general to ever see active combat, the prince, whom in his capacity as a {{wp|Royal Navy}} officer opted to otherwise embark on a long naval trip aboard, which he later did so onboard the {{wp|Royal Navy}} flagship, {{wp|HMS Lauren|''HMS Lauren''}}, thereby allowing him to personally visit a number of countries located east of the {{wp|European}} continent, namely {{wp|Saudi Arabia}}, the {{wp|United Arab Emirates}}, {{wp|Singapore}}, {{wp|Australia}}, and {{wp|Japan}}.
Eventually, in 1982, with the onset of the {{wp|Falklands War}} between the {{wp|United Kingdom}} and {{wp|Argentina}}, an opportunity for the prince to see his first active combat in the years since he was commissioned in the {{wp|Royal Navy}} finally came about. However, the controversial decision to have William on board the {{wp|British}} task force sent to the {{wp|Falkland Islands}} was initially met with considerable opposition by both the prince's father, [[Charles the Great|King Charles III]] and then-{{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}}, {{wp|Margaret Thatcher}}, both of whom were said to have opposed the prince's involvement in the conflict out of the need to protect the heir to the {{wp|British}} throne. However, after a brief, but overall contentious argument between William himself and the {{wp|Margaret Thatcher|prime minister}}, it was ultimately decided that the prince would be allowed to set sail on board the task force headed for the {{wp|Falkland Islands}}, in exchange for the prince agreeing to be under strict supervision by a fellow {{wp|Royal Navy}} officer, whom in a later interview claimed that the prime minister ordered him to "protect the prince at all costs" and "have him be the first to be evacuated in case the ship sinks by enemy fire". Regardless of this, with the conclusion of the war, William was subsequently granted his first promotion as an officer in the {{wp|Royal Navy}}, having been promoted to the rank of {{wp|Lieutenant (navy)|Lieutenant}}. Then, he subsequently joined an international peacekeeping force in {{wp|Lebanon}}, which earned him another promotion, this time to the rank of {{wp|Lieutenant commander (Royal Navy)|Lieutenant Commander}}.
From 1990 to 1991, William would see his final active combat experience as a {{wp|Royal Navy}} officer, when he was deployed to the {{wp|Middle East}} as part of an international coalition force, which in the span of a few months, managed to successfully push {{wp|Iraqi}} forces under {{wp|Saddam Hussein}} out of neighbouring {{wp|Kuwait}}. For his actions during the conflict, he was promoted to the rank of {{wp|Commodore (Royal Navy)|Commodore}}. Later on, shortly after his ascension to the throne, he promptly resigned his commission in the {{wp|Royal Navy}}, although he was nonetheless made an {{wp|Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom}} as the ceremonial head of the {{wp|Royal Navy}} itself.       
==Reign==
===Early Years===
Upon his [[Charles III of the United Kingdom|father]]'s abdication on January 1997, William automatically ascended to the throne as King William VI. Despite his longstanding ceremonial status, William, in a manner similar to that of his father and predecessor, [[Charles the Great|Charles III]], also partook to some degree in the country's political affairs whilst adhering to his position as a constitutional monarch.
On January 1998, William notably became the first high-ranking {{wp|British}} official to visit the {{wp|Iran|Islamic Republic of Iran}}, where in a private meeting in the capital city of {{wp|Tehran}}, the King met with the {{wp|Iranian}} {{wp|Supreme Leader of Iran|Supreme Leader}} {{wp|Ali Khamenei}}. He also met then-{{wp|Chinese}} {{wp|President of the People's Republic of China|President}} {{wp|Jiang Zemin}} later that February, before following up on a subsequent state visit to {{wp|Taiwan}} on the same month, where he met the then-{{wp|President of Taiwan}}, {{wp|Lee Teng-hui}}. His visit to both countries, whilst receiving great attention from international commentators, was also seen as a symbolic diplomatic gesture since the year before, the {{wp|United Kingdom}} had ceded the territory of {{wp|Hong Kong}} to {{wp|China}} itself after decades of colonial administration over the territory.
===9/11 & Iraq War===
In the immediate aftermath of the {{wp|September 11 attacks}}, he publicly expressed his "greatest sympathies with the {{wp|American}} people", stating that "innocent citizens should never be the target of such a heinous act of terror intended to promote a malicious goal". That same year, as head of state, he oversaw the {{wp|Tony Blair|Blair}} administration's participation in the {{wp|US}}-led {{wp|United States invasion of Afghanistan|invasion of Afghanistan}}, which effectively toppled the predominant {{wp|Taliban}} regime in the {{wp|Afghanistan|country}}. Just a couple of years later, the {{wp|United Kingdom}} would also participate in the controversial {{wp|2003 invasion of Iraq}}, which in addition to sparking nationwide protests over the perceived justification for the invasion, also proved to be a source of controversy for the royal family themselves, when the King's sister, [[Catherine, Princess Royal]] infamously posed nude on the cover of a {{wp|British Vogue|''British Vogue''}} magazine, in an act of personal protest against the {{wp|2003 invasion of Iraq|invasion}} itself. The princess's manner of protest, which included draping herself with a {{wp|Union Jack}} flag, aswell as having herself leaning against a {{wp|British}} {{wp|Challenger 2}} battle tank promptly became the source of condemnation and rebuke by a number of military officials, whom dubbed her manner to be "treasonous", while some sectors of the public dubbed the princess's manner of protest to be "shameful" and "unpatriotic". In response, the King himself was said to have afterwards reluctantly rebuked his [[Catherine, Princess Royal|sister]] himself in order to preserve the royal family's prestige and standing among the {{wp|British}} public, while rumours allege that he had otherwise been privately supportive and approving of his sister's protest. Meanwhile, a statement which officially condemned the {{wp|2003 invasion of Iraq|invasion}} on the grounds of its dubious justification published by his other sister, the [[Princess Alexandra, Duchess of Albany|Duchess of Albany]], whom was then serving as the {{wp|Commonwealth Secretary-General}} once more brought the royal family into the center of the controversy surrounding this action, although the duchess herself, whom in contrast to the [[Catherine, Princess Royal|''Princess Royal'']], received a generally far less amount of rebuke or criticism for her own action regarding the invasion since she was then serving as the executive head of a global political association.
===Final Years===
With the onset of the {{wp|financial crisis of 2007-2008}}, a global recession that was considered to be the most serious recession since the {{wp|Great Depression}} William personally had the tax rate for himself as the {{wp|British}} monarch raised to a slightly higher amount, so as to contribute more financially to efforts in mending the recession's immediate effects. Evidently, in an interview with the {{wp|BBC}} around that same time, he remarked, ''"When the {{wp|Second World War}} happened, my father broke royal convention and decided to go to war against {{wp|Imperial Japan|Japan}} in the Pacific while my grandparents chose to bravely face the {{wp|German}} bombings head-on, thus putting them both in grave danger just as the average soldier and citizen"''. He promptly declared that "while I would not be the King of England to face an armed invasion of our country, I would also not be the one to sit back and watch my own people face the hardships alone, for that is what {{wp|Louis XVI|Louis XVI}} of {{wp|Kingdom of France|France}} did, and in the end, as we all know it, he ultimately lost his head". At the same time, in a manner deemed unconventional by many as the country's head of state, William also openly encouraged the government under then-{{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}} {{wp|Gordon Brown}} to pursue aggressive economic policies meant to combat the recession's immediate effects, declaring that "if {{wp|God}} wills it, the {{wp|United Kingdom}} would be the first country in the world to escape this burgeoning recession". Nonetheless, {{wp|Gordon Brown|Brown}} himself was subsequently voted out of office in the {{wp|2010 United Kingdom general election|2010 general election}}, which saw him being replaced with the current {{wp|Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative}} prime minister, {{wp|David Cameron}}, with whom he was said to have later developed a close working relationship, one that continued well under his successor, the reigning [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]].
He later openly praised the historic legalisation of same-sex marriage in {{wp|England}} and {{wp|Wales}}, aswell as the {{wp|Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative}} government's healthcare and welfare reforms. In the last few years of his reign, it was marked by three separate and notable referendums, with the first being a referendum on the method of electing Members of Parliaments at future general elections, the second concerning potential {{wp|Scottish}} independence, while the third one otherwise revolved around the status of the {{wp|United Kingdom}}'s continued membership of the {{wp|European Union}}. All three referendums went in the government's favour each time, while William himself, whom in contrast to the demeanor shown during his previous years, largely kept silent on the respective outcomes of each of the three separate referendums. At around the same time, both his [[Charles the Great|father]] and his {{wp|Lauren Bacall|mother}} would each respectively pass away on March 2011 and August 2014. In one interview conducted some time after his abdication, he went on to describe the last few years of his reign as "both eventful and also emotional in nature".   
==Abdication==
In the final year of his reign, despite already being sixty seven years of age, William was consistently described as being a "generally healthy, and well-conditioned man", as he was notably credited for almost regularly playing a game of polo with the palace staff and his close associates during his free time, leading him to be known as the ''Polo King'' among his close circles. However, on October 6th, having just gone back to his chambers alongside his {{wp|Christy Turlington|wife}}, the King unexpectedly collapsed onto his bed while the latter had gone inside the chambers' bathroom. Around a minute later, royal doctors were immediately summoned following signs of a weakened pulse, leading him to be transferred instead to a special room for an operation. At the same time, by his own {{wp|Christy Turlingtony|wife}}'s insistence, any knowledge of the incident was kept secret from spreading outside of the palace itself, as to not force an immediate return for their daughter, [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Alexandra]] from her university. Following an initially successful operation, he was declared to be in a "mildly stable" condition but soon afterwards, subsequent operations were also conducted which lasted until just hours before his daughter [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Alexandra]]'s return from her university, during which he was declared to had fully recovered from his illness, which was subsequently noted to have been a stroke but was otherwise kept secret from public knowledge. 
In light of the incident, William began seriously contemplating in an abdication, during which he made it known to the then {{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}} {{wp|David Cameron}}, whom he had specifically invited to {{wp|Buckingham Palace}} for the matter. Discussions between the two would continue until December 10th when in a coordinated manner, William first declared his abdication at 10:30 AM in a {{wp|BBC}} broadcast from {{wp|Buckingham Palace}} before an {{wp|Act of Parliament}} was granted {{wp|royal assent}} by the King himself, thereby effectively formalising his abdication. In his abdication speech, William chose not to publicly disclose the details of his illness leading to his abdication, having instead chosen to cite ''"ill-health and inability to sustain the continuation of royal duties"'' as his primary reasons for abdicating. He subsequently attended the coronation of his daughter and successor, [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]] whom soon afterwards made her father [[Duke of Hanover|''Duke of Hanover'']] as his post-abdication title.
==Post-Abdication==
Ever since his abdication took effect in October 2017, William has largely devoted his interests ever since towards philanthropy, having established the '''Charles & Lauren Peace Foundation''' himself in December 2017, aswell as towards the field of international relations. On February 2018, he held his second overall state visit (his first as the [[Duke of Hanover|''Duke of Hanover'']]) to the {{wp|China|People's Republic of China}}, meeting the country's incumbent {{wp|President of the People's Republic of China|President}}, {{wp|Xi Jinping}}, with whom he subsequently toured a particular university in the capital city of {{wp|Beijing}}, which was built in 1991 following the former's initial state visit to the country two decades prior. Nevertheless, amidst allegations and rumours accusing him of having "pro-{{wp|Chinese}} sentiments", William himself has largely been personally active in calling for an end to the ongoing {{wp|China–United States trade war|trade war}} involving the two countries. In a March 2018 op-ed for {{wp|The New York Times|''The New York Times''}}, he wrote that "the ongoing trade war going on at this very moment is nothing different than the {{wp|Cold War}} conflict that terrorised the world throughout much of the previous 20th century". Afterwards, on May 9th 2018, in response to the {{wp|American}} government's withdrawal from the {{wp|Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action}} agreement, William himself took to personally criticising the decision, while also echoing his [[Charles the Great|late father]]'s proposed vision of the {{wp|United Kingdom}}'s overall foreign policy theme, as he subsequently referred to the decision as "a clear wake-up call for {{wp|Britain}}'s people and administrators to once more seek to chart their own path forward towards making the world a better place for all, with or without the help of the {{wp|United States of America}}". Soon afterwards, although he was criticised by some for inserting himself into politics, a move which was largely disallowed among members of {{wp|British}} royalty, his words were otherwise positively received by some groups aswell, with Amelie Chambers of {{wp|The Independent|''The Independent''}} writing that "the Duke's words could never be truer for every living {{wp|Brits}} waking up to the reality of an uncharacteristically brash and a rogue ally in the form of the {{wp|United States of America}}".
Moreover, since his abdication, William has been personally active in calling for "substantial reforms" regarding the shipping industry, particularly with regards to the type of oil used by shipping vessels around the world, having at times called for various shipping companies, including that of his own, ''Southampton Line'' to "effectively transition to the more ocean-friendly green hydrogen for a better future for us all". For instance, while addressing the {{wp|United Nations General Assembly}} in 2018, the {{wp|British}} royal notably declared that "shipping industries around the world have just as much of an obligation to protect and conserve the world's oceans for the foreseeable future just as much as they do in getting valuable goods to the billions of people spread out across the world".
Following the onset of the {{wp|COVID-19 pandemic}}, William, whom along with other members of the {{wp|British}} royal family, has since taken to largely restricting their usual activities indoors, although, much like his fellow family members themselves, the Duke has also personally paid a number of visits to various healthcare facilities across the {{wp|United Kingdom}}, while also emphasising the importance of {{wp|COVID-19}} safety protocols, aswell as vaccinations.
==Sports==
In 2018, after a reportedly failed bid to secure the ownership of the popular {{wp|English}} football club, {{wp|Manchester United}} from its owners, namely members of the {{wp|American}} Glazer family, William subsequently announced that he would be founding a new professional football club that would "vigorously and persistently compete" in the {{wp|Premier League}}, the top flight of {{wp|English}} football. At the same time, in an interview on {{wp|Sky News}}, he persistently denied rumours that the sole motivation behind his decision to do so was to supposedly "take revenge" against {{wp|Manchester United}}, stating that he "cherish and loves the club just as much as my [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|daughter]] who actually played for it in the youth division". Irrespective of this, the club was officially founded and established on June 5th 2018.
That same year, in its {{wp|Premier League}} debut, the club was initially met with some criticism by commentators and observers, some of whom referred to it as "the Duke's failed experiment", in reference to the [[Buckingham F.C.|club]] having finished at 8th place behind {{wp|Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool}}. However, the following year, the club went on to reach new heights in the {{wp|Premier League}} arena, as [[Buckingham F.C.|Buckingham]] finished at 2nd place in the {{wp|2019–20 Premier League|2019-20 season}}, thereby besting the likes of the more established football clubs, {{wp|Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United}}, {{wp|Chelsea F.C.|Chelsea}}, and in particular, {{wp|Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City}}, which finished the season at third place, albeit with a significant gap between itself and rival, {{wp|Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United}}, which finished at 4th place. Then, despite some reversals of its fortunes, with the club finishing at 4th place in the {{wp|2020-21 Premier League|2020-21 season}}, it has nonetheless amassed and maintained a considerable amount of support from football fans within the {{wp|United Kingdom}}, aswell as those from foreign countries abroad. In covering the club's performance in the {{wp|Premier League}}, the {{wp|BBC}} described it as "a living tale of David and Goliath", in alluding to the club's competition with its more established opponents. On August 2021, the {{wp|Crown Arena}} stadium was officially opened, and has currently served as the club's stadium and training ground. The following year, the club achieved its first major success in an international competition after defeating fellow {{wp|Premier League}} competitor, {{wp|Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool}} at the {{wp|2022 UEFA Champions League Final}}, thereby winning its first international competition since the club's establishment in 2018.
Following the {{wp|2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine}}, which, among others, led to the imposition of sanctions on {{wp|Russian}} oligarch, {{wp|Roman Abramovich}}, the owner of {{wp|Chelsea F.C.}} by the {{wp|British}} government, it was then rumoured that the Duke supposedly harboured some interest in securing the ownership of the {{wp|English}} football club, in response to a decision by {{wp|Roman Abramovich|Abramovich}} himself to transfer the club's ownership amidst the prevailing controversy surrounding the club. However, William himself subsequently denied the rumours, claiming that "all things considered, my heart and interests will forever remain with [[Buckingham F.C.|Buckingham]] until the very end".
==Shipping==
Since his [[Charles the Great|father]]'s passing on March 2011, William has since been the sole owner of the royal family's hugely profitable shipping company, ''Southampton Line'', which was first founded in the 1920s by [[Prince George, Duke of Southampton]], the younger brother of William's great great grandfather, [[William V of the United Kingdom|King William V]]. From that point on, the company largely remained under the ownership of the [[Prince George, Duke of Southampton|Duke of Southampton]], before being passed on to William's father, [[Charles the Great|King Charles III]], following the former's death on December 1962, before later being passed on to William himself as a result of the [[Charles the Great|King]]'s death on March 2011. By this time, the company, according to an estimate by {{wp|CNN}}, is already said to be worth at around $1.5 billion (£1.1 billion), thereby giving him an estimated net worth of around $1.2 billion (£921 million), minus the total value of the various properties administered by the {{wp|Crown Estate}}, a corporation sole that is believed to be worth around $19.5 billion (£14.9 billion).
Following the {{wp|2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine}}, it was announced that the company would "indefinitely suspend operations in the {{wp|Russia|Russian Federation}} for the time being", stating that "recent events have complicated the company's operations in the country".         
==Marriage==
===Katharine Houghton===
[[File:GWC.jpg|thumb|Actress, {{wp|Katharine Houghton}} alongside co-star, the late actor, {{wp|Sidney Poitier}} in the 1967 film, {{wp|Guess Who's Coming to Dinner|''Guess Who's Coming to Dinner''}}]]
Due to his parents' rather hands-off approach in regards to his potential choice of marriage, William himself thus became consequently linked to a number of important women of the time, all of which were mostly either of {{wp|American}} or {{wp|British}} nationalities. During the early 1970s, William was at first popularly associated with that of the young and rising actress, {{wp|Katharine Houghton}}, whom he had personally known through his [[Charles the Great|father]]'s close friend, namely the actress, {{wp|Katharine Hepburn}}, {{wp|Katharine Houghton|Houghton}}'s own aunt, with whom Charles was also closely familiar. Even so, in a manner apparently mimicking that of William's father's previous romantic relationship with {{wp|Katharine Hepburn|Hepburn}} decades prior, the two generally dated in secrecy, with William himself being the one mostly travelling in private to {{wp|Katharine Houghton|Houghton}}'s {{wp|Connecticut}} residence, as the risks of the latter being spotted in public instead with the {{wp|British}} royal back in his native home country were deemed to be great of a concern for either side. However, amidst the overwhelmingly positive encouragement in favour of a marriage between the two, neither William nor {{wp|Katharine Houghton|Houghton}} ultimately agreed to ever seek such an option, with {{wp|Katharine Houghton|Houghton}} herself later marrying William's similarly named [[Prince William of the United Kingdom|younger brother]] instead, thereby effectively making the actress William's own sister-in-law.
Irrespective of this, both William and {{wp|Katharine Houghton|Houghton}} would both go on to remain close friends with one another, so much so that {{wp|Katharine Houghton|Houghton}} would later be referred to by several media outlets as "the third princess", in alluding to the general state of closeness between the actress and her two respective sister-in-laws, namely [[Catherine, Princess Royal]] and the [[Princess Alexandra, Duchess of Albany|Duchess of Albany]].
Throughout the following years, William was subsequently associated with a number of other notable figures of the time, including the actresses, {{wp|Raquel Welch}}, {{wp|Jaclyn Smith}}, and {{wp|Jane Seymour (actress)|Jane Seymour}}, aswell as several royal princesses, with the most notable being {{wp|Caroline, Princess of Hanover|Princess Caroline of Monaco}}, whom he briefly dated for a few years in the early 1980s.
Due to his [[Charles the Great|father]]'s strong and close ties to the prominent {{wp|Kennedy family}}, it was even rumoured at some point by some media outlets that William was supposedly planning on marrying the daughter of the late {{wp|President of the United States|President}} {{wp|John F. Kennedy}}, {{wp|Caroline Kennedy}}, whom William had first met while accompanying his [[Charles the Great|father]] to the state funeral of {{wp|Caroline Kennedy|Kennedy}}'s father, whom on November 1963, was mortally wounded from an assassination while visiting the city of {{wp|Dallas}}, {{wp|Texas}}. Ultimately, perhaps due to {{wp|Caroline Kennedy|Kennedy}}'s deeply entrenched and longstanding {{wp|Catholic}} faith, coupled with the overwhelming publicity and media coverage that would be expected from a hypothetical marriage involving an heir to the {{wp|British}} throne and a member of the prominent {{wp|Kennedy family}}, no marriage proposals were ever brought forward by either side. 
===Kim Cattrall===
[[File:KCSJ.jpg|thumb|{{wp|Kim Cattrall}} as her iconic role of {{wp|Samantha Jones (Sex and the City)|Samantha Jones}} in the popular drama series, {{wp|Sex and the City}}]]
From the early to mid-1990s, William was engaged in another romantic relationship, namely with the actress, {{wp|Kim Cattrall}}. Reportedly, around late 1991, while the prince was then on a personal vacation in {{wp|California}}, he would first meet {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} while the actress was in the midst of shooting for the sixth {{wp|Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country|Star Trek}} film. However, prior to the meeting itself, William was at first said to be mostly unaware of the film's existence, though this soon changed when under the guise of generating more publicity for the film by hoping to attract some form of endorsement from a notable member of the royal family, the film's director, {{wp|Nicholas Meyer}}, whom upon personally meeting with the prince himself, was able to subsequently convince the latter to pay a personal visit to the movie's own film set, thus leading to a subsequent meeting on the set with {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}}, during which the two were said to have been almost immediately romantically invested in one another, which in turn led to the prince reportedly asking the actress out for a dinner later that night. Later on, the late actor, {{wp|Christopher Plummer}}, whom had starred alongside {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} in the movie itself, went on to describe the couple as "a pair of sick lovebirds", while also claiming that whenever {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} herself was not involved in a particular scene, she would always be seen only talking to the {{wp|British}} royal himself, so much so that William was then supposedly nicknamed by the crew as "the posh {{wp|John Lennon}}", in a reference to the somewhat similar degree of fascination held by the {{wp|American}} public towards the late {{wp|English}} {{wp|John Lennon|singer}} present in the actress's own immediate infatuation with the {{wp|British}} royal.
Soon afterwards, the two proceeded to continue their romantic relationship further, although, by William's own behest, their relationship initially proceeded in a state of relative secrecy, as to not bring too much attention to {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}}, then a rising actress herself. Nevertheless, in the following year, the two would formally appear together in the public eye for the first time ever when {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} was sighted being alongside the prince for his tour to the then recently established {{wp|Russian Federation}}, where the two publicly met and toured the country alongside then {{wp|Russian}} {{wp|President of Russia|President}}, {{wp|Boris Yeltsin}}. Soon enough, the couple was quickly received with much scrutiny by various media outlets around the world, with some of them already beginning to speculate on a possible marriage involving the two, whilst emphasising their apparent closeness with one another. However, in response to these rumours, {{wp|George Carey}}, the then {{wp|Archbishop of Canterbury}} proceeded to openly assert that the actress is "in no way or form" eligible to marry the prince herself, due to the fact that {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}}'s own ex-husband, namely Andre J. Lyson being currently alive at the time cited by the archbishop as being against the teachings of the {{wp|Church of England}}, an institution of which William is expected to become its supreme governor upon ascending to the {{wp|British}} throne himself, hence his expected obedience and general faithfulness to the {{wp|Church of England|Church}}'s teachings. Nevertheless, around December 1992, {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} herself eventually gave birth to a daughter, [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria Cattrall]] at the prince's family home in {{wp|Albany}}, {{wp|New York (state)|New York}}, during which she was solely accompanied by William himself along with the doctors tasked by the prince to ensure a safe birthing process for both the actress and the newborn child. Then, when news of the child's birth was subsequently relayed back in general secrecy to William's family in {{wp|London}}, it was said to have been received rather poorly by the prince's parents, the [[Charles the Great|King]] and {{wp|Lauren Bacall|Queen}}, with the [[Charles the Great|King]] himself being quick to reportedly chastise the prince in an allegedly heated phone call between the two men, while then-{{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}}, {{wp|John Major}} reportedly demanded the prince to immediately return back to the {{wp|United Kingdom}}, while both {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} herself and the couple's illegitimate newborn [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|daughter]] were otherwise forbidden to do so themselves under the guise of "national security".
[[File:VickyGold.jpg|thumb|left|[[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge]], William's illegitimate daughter with actress, {{wp|Kim Cattrall}}]]
However, when the prince promptly refused to comply with the {{wp|John Major|Prime Minister}}'s aforementioned demand to immediately return to the {{wp|United Kingdom}} without the two Cattralls, and even subsequently threatened to leak the issue to both the {{wp|American}} and {{wp|British}} media, both William and {{wp|John Major|Major}} opted to subsequently enter into a series of secret negotiations, which eventually established that both {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} and their shared daughter, [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria]] would each be granted the title of ''Lady'' for themselves as opposed to an actual royal title due to the child having been born out of wedlock, along with being provided with a considerable amount of financial aid by the {{wp|British}} royal family meant to better alleviate the family of two's financial situation. Nevertheless, despite an agreement being conclusively reached between the two sides, William himself opted to mostly remain in the {{wp|United States}} for roughly the next two years or so, before eventually going on to marry his current wife, the {{wp|American}} supermodel, {{wp|Christy Turlington}}, with whom William would later have four children, including the current [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]].
Later on, according to {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} herself, William continued to remain actively involved to some degree in his illegitimate daughter's upbringing, as he was often said to have both visited and spent a considerable amount of personal time with a young [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria]], whom William would also occasionally bring along with him back to the {{wp|United Kingdom}}, as to allow the young child to better bond with her {{wp|British}} royal relatives living on the other side of the {{wp|Atlantic Ocean}}. Eventually, beginning from the year 2003, both the younger and older Cattrall began to appear more publicly and frequently alongside William and the {{wp|British}} royal family, with the earliest instance being on that year's {{wp|Christmas Day}}, which was briefly marked by controversy when the {{wp|British}} tabloid newspaper, {{wp|The Sun (United Kingdom)|''The Sun''}} first published a sighting of the {{wp|Kim Cattrall|actress}} and a ten year old [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria]] joining the members of the royal family in celebrating {{wp|Christmas Day}} that year. Then, in also marking his illegitimate daughter's 10th birthday celebrations that year, an event which took place just five days after the {{wp|Christmas}} celebrations, William promptly issued a decree whereby the ten year old [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|Victoria]] would finally be recognised as a {{wp|Princess of the United Kingdom}}, along with the accompanying title of "{{wp|Royal Highness|Her Royal Highness}}".
Despite having never formally recognised {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} as a wife of his own, William is nevertheless known for his otherwise passionate defence of the former in the face of media speculation and occasional criticism, with one infamous instance being some time in March 1999, when the prince then famously sued the {{wp|British}} newspaper, the {{wp|Daily Mail|''Daily Mail''}} for having published an article referring to {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}}, whom had then been gaining much fame herself through her role of {{wp|Samantha Jones (Sex and the City)|Samantha Jones}} in the popular drama series, {{wp|Sex and the City}}, as "an unapologetic and unabashed mistress", a description that was subsequently criticised by the {{wp|British}} royal, whom called the term "largely derogatory, aswell as a great insult to the mother of my beloved [[Princess Victoria, Duchess of Cambridge|daughter]]". On the other hand, while {{wp|Kim Cattrall|Cattrall}} herself has so far only been given a ducal title of her own, the actress has nevertheless been reportedly referred to by William himself on several occasions as ''Queen Victoria'' instead, in a manner supposedly meant to give the actress an equal title-based standing alongside William's own lawfully wedded wife, {{wp|Christy Turlington}}, whom is otherwise formally referred to as ''Queen Christy'' herself.
===Christy Turlington===
[[File:PradaBlack.jpg|thumb|right|{{wp|Christy Turlington}} at the Christian Lacroix Spring Summer 1994]]
Around March 1994, while accompanying his sister, the [[Catherine, Princess Royal|''Princess Royal'']] to an exclusive gala in {{wp|Paris}}, {{wp|France}}, he was first introduced to the {{wp|American}} supermodel, {{wp|Christy Turlington}} by the [[Catherine, Princess Royal|''Princess Royal'']] herself, whom prior to that event, had been a close friend of the famed {{wp|American}} {{wp|Christy Turlington|supermodel}}, due to the two women sharing a common profession in modelling. Irrespective of this, according to the couple's close circles, the two, upon being introduced to one another, were able to immediately "hit it off", so much so that according to one version in particular, {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}} herself soon afterwards "tightly hugged" and "incessantly thanked" the [[Catherine, Princess Royal|''Princess Royal'']] for having paired the two together at the start. However, despite a largely positive start for their relationship, the two did not immediately follow up on their initial successes the following day, although the subsequent "courting" process nonetheless took place in the days that followed, during which period the couple largely avoided media attention that could result from their equally high-profile statuses, which meant that the couple themselves would often took to reportedly wearing mostly inconspicuous outfits whenever the two would be with one another in public. It was also revealed later on by William himself in an interview, that as an additional safety precaution, the couple would largely frequent the {{wp|Caribbean}} islands for their many dates together, with the major reason being the supposed privacy and seclusion offered by the region's many island countries, in comparison to the {{wp|United States}}, or any major {{wp|European}} country where they were perceived to be more likely to be spotted together by paparazzi, thereby risking a premature media exposure of their relationship.
Eventually, around December of that same year, the couple's relationship would finally become public knowledge when in a speech marking his 44th birthday that month, William personally acknowledged that a relationship between himself and the {{wp|American}} {{wp|Christy Turlington|supermodel}} had in fact taken place in the months prior, much to the surprise of both the {{wp|British}} government and public, while both the [[Charles the Great|King]] and {{wp|Lauren Bacall|Queen}} themselves were otherwise said to have been already made aware of it beforehand, so as to already secure the necessary permission from William's own [[Charles the Great|father]], as per the {{wp|Royal Marriages Act 1772}}, with the necessary condition being that {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}} herself would be willing to convert to {{wp|Anglicanism}} in order to circumvent the longstanding ruling on marriages between a traditionally {{wp|Anglican}} member of the royal family and a spouse of the {{wp|Catholic}} faith, whereby the said member of the royal family would lose his or her position in the line of succession. Ultimately, such a decision proved unnecessary when in the months leading up to the couple's eventual marriage on December 1995, the {{wp|Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative}} government under then-{{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}} {{wp|John Major}} successfully proposed a bill that later became known as the [[Succession to the Crown Act 1995]], which officially removed the longstanding practice of disqualifying those who married a {{wp|Roman Catholic}} from the line of succession, thereby making {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}} the only {{wp|Catholic}} {{wp|British}} royal consort to date, while also notably replacing the male preference primogeniture system in favour of an absolute primogeniture system, thereby ensuring that the couple's firstborn child, the later [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]] would naturally succeed to the throne in the case of her father's death or abdication from the throne, which William himself later did so on October 13th 2017. 
[[File:B55.jpg|thumb|left|The "big five" supermodels: {{wp|Cindy Crawford}}, {{wp|Linda Evangelista}}, {{wp|Naomi Campbell}}, {{wp|Christy Turlington}}, and {{wp|Tatjana Patitz}}]]
Soon enough, when the announcement was broadcasted live to the public, it immediately sparked considerable controversy among {{wp|British}} society, not least in part due to {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}} herself belonging to the {{wp|Catholic}} denomination, but otherwise due to her current profession at the time, which was deemed by some to be inappropriate for a future queen consort, with even one {{wp|Conservative Party (United Kingdom|Conservative}} {{wp|Member of Parliament|MP}} at the time even claiming that "the marriage would be the end of the centuries-old monarchy". Nonetheless, some time afterwards, both then-{{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister}} {{wp|John Major}} and the then-{{wp|Archbishop of Canterbury}}, {{wp|George Carey}} jointly agreed to approve such a union, under the strict condition that {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}} herself would ultimately convert to {{wp|Anglicanism}}, in order to avoid any further complications. Meanwhile, William's own father, [[Charles the Great|King Charles III]] himself also came out in support of the union himself as the reigning {{wp|British}} monarch, claiming that "it is wrong for me to say that having a {{wp|Catholic}}-turned-{{wp|Anglican}} convert as my very own daughter-in-law would be something entirely strange or a new concept for myself, for my own great-grandmother ({{wp|Carlota of Mexico|Queen Charlotte}}) was also a {{wp|Catholic}}-turned-{{wp|Anglican}}, and for that, she deserves absolutely no hate or condemnation at all for whom she was before as an individual". Meanwhile, rumours of the couple's incompatibility also began to surface, with some media outlets likening the couple to actor, {{wp|Richard Gere}} and fellow supermodel, {{wp|Cindy Crawford}}, both of whom were married to one another for approximately four years from 1991 to 1995, before eventually divorcing just a few months prior to William and {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}}'s own marriage that same year. Moreover, much like {{wp|Richard Gere|Gere}} and {{wp|Cindy Crawford|Crawford}}, both William and {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}} possessed a significant age difference between themselves aswell, with {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}} being nineteen years younger than her husband, despite marrying at a slightly later age compared to {{wp|Cindy Crawford|Crawford}}. 
Eventually, on June 14th 1995, the couple were married in a similar fashion to that of William's parents, specifically at {{wp|Oheka Castle}}, a hotel in {{wp|New York (state)|New York}} which notably served as the wedding venue for the prince's own parents back in 1946. On William's side, his groomsmen included his own brother, [[Prince William of the United Kingdom|Prince William]], along with {{wp|Frank Sinatra Jr.}}, son of the famed singer and actor, {{wp|Frank Sinatra}}, actor, {{wp|Hugh Grant}}, {{wp|United States Senate|U.S Senator}}, {{wp|Ted Kennedy}}, and then-vice president, {{wp|Al Gore}}, whom was reportedly chosen as a result of then-{{wp|President of the United States|President}} {{wp|Bill Clinton}}'s inability to participate in the wedding himself, while on {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}}'s side, her list of bridesmaids largely included the likes of her fellow supermodel friends, namely the [[Catherine, Princess Royal|''Princess Royal'']] herself, along with {{wp|Cindy Crawford}}, {{wp|Linda Evangelista}}, {{wp|Naomi Campbell}}, {{wp|Tatjana Patitz}}, and {{wp|Kate Moss}}. William's other sister, the [[Princess Alexandra, Duchess of Albany|Duchess of Albany]] was also subsequently included as part of the bride's many bridesmaids. Then, for the first couple of weeks, the couple largely resided at the family home of actress, {{wp|Katharine Hepburn}}, herself being a close friend and "aunt" of William's, at {{wp|Fenwick}}, {{wp|Connecticut}}, before proceeding to spend the rest of their approximately month long vacation period in {{wp|Jamaica}}, during which the couple briefly met with then-{{wp|Prime Minister of Jamaica}}, {{wp|P. J. Patterson}}. It was later believed that the {{wp|American}} island state of {{wp|Hawaii}} had initially been the couple's choice of destination for spending the vast majority of their honeymoon period, although this was otherwise abandoned, supposedly due to William himself having opted for a more "{{wp|Caribbean}}-style honeymoon". 
In the following days, a rumour briefly circulated which claimed that then-{{wp|President of the United States|President}} {{wp|Bill Clinton}}, whom with the supposed intention of honouring the ''Prince of the Welsh'' on the latter's wedding day, had reportedly intended to award the prince an honorary {{wp|Fleet admiral (United States)|fleet admiral}} of the {{wp|United States Navy}}, in line with the prince's rank of {{wp|Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet}} of the {{wp|Royal Navy}}. However, then-{{wp|President of the United States|President}} {{wp|Bill Clinton|Clinton}} himself later denied the rumour, claiming that "no such idea has ever been proposed at any given moment". Nonetheless, had the decision actually come into effect, William would have consequently become the first {{wp|British}} royal to have ever held such a prestigious rank in any service branches of the {{wp|United States Armed Forces}}, for his father, [[Charles the Great|King Charles III]] had otherwise only acquired the rank of {{wp|Brigadier general (United States)|brigadier general}} as part of his service in the {{wp|United States Air Force}} during the {{wp|Second World War}}. Moreover, he would have also been the first non-serving member of the {{wp|United States Navy}} in {{wp|American}} history to have ever achieved such a rank, be it in an official or honorary manner since the rank's creation during the {{wp|Second World War}}, during which period the rank was bestowed upon four high-ranking officers of the {{wp|United States Navy}}, namely {{wp|William D. Leahy}}, {{wp|Ernest King}}, {{wp|Chester W. Nimitz}}, and {{wp|William Halsey Jr.}}. 
Soon enough, just a year into their marriage, the couple would welcome the birth of their first child together, the reigning [[Alexandra I of the United Kingdom|Queen Alexandra]], although this was in turn followed by a roughly three year long period during which the couple chose to live separately from one another, so as to accommodate for {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}}'s decision to focus on her university studies back in the {{wp|United States}}, which in turn led to rumours falsely claiming that the couple's marriage was in a terrible state as anticipated, while the reality proved to be the exact opposite. Later on, following {{wp|Christy Turlington|Turlington}}'s graduation in 1999, the two would finally begin to live together as a family of three at the royal residence of {{wp|Buckingham Palace}}. Soon enough, in the following year, William's wife gave birth to twins,  [[Prince Richard, Duke of Cleveland|Richard]] and [[Prince Nicholas, Duke of Edinburgh|Nicholas]], followed by another daughter, [[Princess Mary, Duchess of Sussex|Mary]] in 2003. The year afterwards, the couple welcomed another pair of twins, [[Princess Elle of Hanover|Elle]] and [[Princess Vivian of Hanover|Vivian]], both of whom were respectively named after the two female characters from the 2001 film, {{wp|Legally Blonde|''Legally Blonde''}}, namely {{wp|Elle Woods}} and [https://legallyblonde.fandom.com/wiki/Vivian_Kensington Vivian Kensington], played by actresses, {{wp|Reese Witherspoon}} and {{wp|Selma Blair}} respectively.
==Personal Information==
==Titles & Honours==
*'''17 December 1950 - 7 July 1951''' ''His Royal Highness'' Prince William of Cambridge
*'''7 July 1951 - 22 July 1951''' ''His Royal Highness'' The Duke of Cornwall
*'''22 July 1951 - 15 January 1997''' ''His Royal Highness'' The Prince of the Welsh
*'''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''' ''His Majesty'' The King of the British
*'''14 October 2017 - Present''' ''His Royal Highness'' The Duke of Hanover
==Honours==
====National & Commonwealth====
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Most Noble Order of the Garter
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Royal Family Order of King William VI
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Recipient of the Royal Family Order of King Charles III
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Medal of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of King Charles III
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Royal Guelphic Order
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Order of St. George
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle​
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Most Illustrious Order of Saint Patrick
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath​
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Order of the British Empire
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Distinguished Service Order
*{{flag|United Kingdom}} - Sovereign of the Williamite Cross
*{{flag|Canada}} - Sovereign of the Order of Canada
*{{flag|Australia}} - Sovereign of the Order of Australia
*{{flag|New Zealand}} - Sovereign of the Order of New Zealand
*{{flag|Barbados}} - Sovereign of the Order of Barbados
*{{flag|Saint Lucia}} - Sovereign of the Order of St Lucia
*{{flag|Solomon Islands}} - Sovereign of the Order of Solomon Islands
*{{flag|Belize}} - Sovereign of the Order of Belize
*{{flag|Antigua and Barbuda}} - Sovereign of the Order of Antigua and Barbuda
*{{flag|St Christopher and Nevis|Saint Kitts and Nevis}} - Sovereign of the Order of St Christopher and Nevis
*{{flag|Grenada}} - Sovereign of the Order of Grenada​
*{{flag|Tuvalu}} - Sovereign of the Order of Tuvalu
*{{flag|Puerto Rico}} - Sovereign of the Order of Puerto Rico
====Foreign====
*{{flag|Spain}} - Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece
*{{flag|Norway}} - Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of St Olav
*{{flag|Norway}} - ​Recipient of the Medal of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of King Olav V
*{{flag|Norway}} - Recipient of the Royal House Centenary Medal
*{{flag|Norway}} - ​Recipient of the King Harald V Silver Jubilee Medal
*{{flag|Sweden}} - Member of the Royal Order of the Seraphim
*{{flag|Sweden}} - Commander Grand Cross of the Royal Order of the Sword
*{{flag|Denmark}} - Knight of the Order of the Elephant
*{{flag|Denmark}} - Grand Commander of the Order of the Dannebrog
*{{flag|Germany}} - Grand Cross Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
*{{flag|Japan}} - Collar and Grand Order of the Order of the Chrysanthemum
*{{flag|Japan}} - Golden Medal of Merit Japanese Red Cross
*{{flag|Japan}} - Golden Medal of Honorary Member of Japanese Red Cross
*{{flag|France}} - Grand Cross of the National Order of the Legion of Honour
*{{flag|Malaysia}} - Honorary Recipient of the Order of the Crown of the Realm
*{{flag|China}} - Recipient of the Order of Friendship
*{{flag|Republic of China}} - Recipient of the Order of Brilliant Jade
====Military Appointments====
{{flag|United Kingdom}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''3 June 1979 - 28 May 1980''': {{wp|Officer Cadet}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''28 May 1980 -  25 June 1982''': {{wp|Midshipman}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}}  '''25 June 1982 - 11 January 1984''': {{wp|Lieutenant (navy)|Lieutenant}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''11 January 1984 - 5 May 1985''': {{wp|Lieutenant commander (Royal Navy)|Lieutenant Commander}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''5 May 1985 - 15 June 1991''': {{wp|Captain (Royal Navy)|Captain}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''15 June 1991 - 14 December 1995''': {{wp|Commodore (Royal Navy)|Commodore}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''14 December 1995 - 15 January 1997''': {{wp|Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': {{wp|Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom|Lord High Admiral}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|naval}} '''13 October 2017 - Present''': {{wp|Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet}}, {{wp|Royal Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|army}} '''25 June 1982 - 3 June 1986''': {{wp|Colonel (United Kingdom)|Colonel}}, {{wp|British Army}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|army}} '''3 June 1986 -  12 November 1990''': {{wp|Brigadier (United Kingdom)|Brigadier}}, {{wp|British Army}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|army}} '''3 June 1986 -  15 January 1997''': {{wp|Major General (United Kingdom)|Major General}}, {{wp|British Army}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|army}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': {{wp|Head of the British Armed Forces|Commander-in-Chief of the British Armed Forces}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|army}} '''13 October 2017 - Present''': {{wp|Field Marshal (United Kingdom)|Field Marshal}}, {{wp|British Army}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|air force}} '''5 June 1986 -  15 January 1997''': {{wp|Air Marshal}}, {{wp|Royal Air Force}}<br/>
{{flagicon|UK|air force}} '''15 January 1997 - Present''': {{wp|Marshal of the Royal Air Force}}<br/>
{{flag|Canada}}<br/>
{{flagicon|Canada|army}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Canadian Army}}<br/>
{{flagicon|Canada|naval}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Royal Canadian Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|Canada|air force}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Royal Canadian Air Force}}<br/>
{{flag|Australia}}<br/>
{{flagicon|Australia|army}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Australian Army}}<br/>
{{flagicon|Australia|naval}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Royal Australian Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|Australia|air force}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Royal Australian Air Force}}<br/>
{{flag|New Zealand}}<br/>
{{flagicon|New Zealand|army}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|New Zealand Army}}<br/>
{{flagicon|New Zealand|naval}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Royal New Zealand Navy}}<br/>
{{flagicon|New Zealand|air force}} '''15 January 1997 - 13 October 2017''': Commander-in-Chief of the {{wp|Royal New Zealand Air Force}}<br/>
== Ancestry ==
{{ahnentafel
|width=100%|align=center|collapsed=yes
| boxstyle_1 = background-color: #fcc;
| boxstyle_2 = background-color: #fb9;
| boxstyle_3 = background-color: #ffc;
| boxstyle_4 = background-color: #bfc;
| 1 = 1. '''William VI of the United Kingdom'''
| 2 = 2. [[Charles III of the United Kingdom]]
| 3 = 3. {{wp|Lauren Bacall}}
| 4 = 4. [[Frederick of the United Kingdom]]
| 5 = 5. {{wp|Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia}}
| 6 = 6. {{wp|William Perske}}
| 7 = 7. {{wp|Natalie Bacall}}
| 8 = 8. [[George V of the United Kingdom]]
| 9 = 9. {{wp|Princess Sophia of Prussia}}
| 10 = 10. {{wp|Wilhelm II, German Emperor}}
| 11 = 11. {{wp|Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein|Princess Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg}}
| 12 = 12. {{wp|Zalman Perski}}
| 13 = 13. {{wp|Sheyna Yofa}}
| 14 = 14. {{wp|Max Weinstein}}
| 15 = 15. {{wp|Sophia Bacall}}
}}

Latest revision as of 09:57, 3 May 2024