Duke of Hanover

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Dukedom of Hanover
Coat of Arms of Edward, Duke of Windsor.svg
Creation date14 October 2017
CreationFirst
MonarchAlexandra
PeeragePeerage of the United Kingdom
First holderPrince Thomas
Present holderPrince Thomas
StatusExtant

Duke of Hanover is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 14 October 2017 for the former King Thomas following his abdication on 13 October 2017. The dukedom bears its name from the royal family's name and its ancestral seat, the Kingdom of Hanover.

History

On October 13th 2017, following a prior health complication several days earlier, King Thomas formally abdicated from the throne, with the abdication immediately followed by an Act of Parliament, which confirmed the king's abdication. Soon afterwards, speculations immediately arose as to what the former king would be referred to as since his abdication, as there has traditionally been no set of rules regulating a monarch's abdication. Unlike his father Charles III, whom was allowed to retain his kingship title following his own abdication almost two decades earlier, Thomas opted instead to be styled as a Duke of Hanover, a decision that was later announced at the subsequent Accession Council of the Privy Council.

Thomas's dukedom was formally conferred on to him by his successor Queen Alexandra on December 22nd of the same year. While the dukedom itself, by Thomas's own behest, was deemed ineligible to be passed onto his own natural successor, he nevertheless retained the restrictions as a royal duke, in which he is barred from standing for election in the British House of Commons, and that he is disallowed from speaking on political subjects in the upper legislative chamber, namely the House of Lords.

Duke Portrait Birth Marriages Death
Prince Thomas
House of Hanover
2017-Present
Prince Thomas 17 December 1950
Balmoral Castle, Scotland
son of King Charles III and Queen Lauren
Christy Turlington
14 June 1995