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Duke of Cornwall

Duke of Cornwall is a title in the Peerage of England, traditionally held by the eldest son of the reigning British monarch, previously the English monarch. The duchy of Cornwall was the first duchy created in England and was established by a royal charter in 1337.[1] Prince William became Duke of Cornwall following the accession of his father, King Charles III, to the throne in 2022, and his wife, Catherine, became Duchess of Cornwall.

Dukedom of Cornwall
Creation date
  • 1337 (first creation)
  • 1376 (second creation)
  • 1460 (third creation)
Created by
PeeragePeerage of England
First holderEdward of Woodstock
Present holderPrince William
Extinction date
  • 1377 (second creation)
  • 1460 (third creation)
Former seat(s)Restormel Castle
MottoGerman: Houmout ("High-spirited")

Legend

Some folk histories of the British Isles, such as Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain (1136), claim that the first leader of Cornwall was Corineus, a Trojan warrior and ally of Brutus of Troy, portrayed as the original settler of the British Isles. From then through the Arthurian period, such legendary dukes of Cornwall stood apart from the high-king of Britain, while serving as his closest ally and, at times, as his protector (all per Monmouth's collected yarns). Notably in this tale, Gorlois, duke of Cornwall under King Uther Pendragon, rebelled when the king became obsessed with Gorlois' wife Igraine. Uther killed Gorlois and took Igraine: the son was King Arthur.

History

The historical record suggests that, following the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, Cornwall formed part of a separate Kingdom of Dumnonia, which included Devon, although there is evidence that it may have had its own rulers at times. The Celtic southwest of Britain was gradually conquered by the emerging Germanic Kingdom of England, and after the Norman Conquest in 1066 the new rulers of England appointed their own men as earl of Cornwall, the first of whom was in fact a Breton of Cornouaille in Brittany.

Edward of Woodstock (widely known as 'The Black Prince'), the eldest son of Edward III, was made the first duke of Cornwall in 1337, after Edward III had lost the title of duke of Normandy.[2] Cornwall was the first dukedom conferred within the Kingdom of England.[3]

Succession

The charter that established the estate on 17 March 1337 set out the rule that the duke and possessor of the estate would be the eldest son and heir apparent of the monarch.[1] There were some deviations from this rule until a legal case (the Prince's Case) in 1606, which held that the rule should be adhered to.[4]

When the estate is without a duke, the possessor is the monarch, even if the former duke left surviving descendants.[1] The monarch's grandson, even if he is the heir apparent, does not succeed to the dukedom. Similarly, no female may ever be duke of Cornwall, even if she is heir presumptive or heir apparent (this being a distinct and even likely possibility in the future after the passage of the Succession to the Crown Act 2013), although a queen regnant without a son would be the de facto duke. However, if a duke of Cornwall should die without descendants (and also no sister between the two brothers if the younger one was born after 28 October 2011),[5] his next brother obtains the duchy, this brother being both the oldest living son and heir apparent.

It is possible for an individual to be prince of Wales and heir apparent without being duke of Cornwall. The title 'prince of Wales' is the traditional title of the heir apparent to the throne, granted at the discretion of the sovereign (not automatically) and is not restricted to the eldest son.

For example, after the death of Frederick, Prince of Wales, George II's heir apparent was his grandson George (Frederick's eldest son and the future George III). The young Prince George was created prince of Wales but did not become duke of Cornwall because he was the king's grandson, rather than his son. When the sovereign has no legitimate son, or when the heir apparent is not the sovereign's son, the estates of the duchy of Cornwall revert to the Crown until a legitimate son is born or until the accession of a new monarch who has a son.

James Francis Edward Stuart, son of James II, was born duke of Cornwall in 1688. Although his father lost the throne, James Francis Edward was not deprived of his own titles and honours as a result of his father's deposition. Instead, from the (prevailing) Hanoverian perspective, it was as a result of his claiming his father's lost thrones that James was attainted for treason on 2 March 1702, and his titles were thus forfeited under English law.[3] However, from the (minority) Jacobite perspective, on his father's death in 1701 the duchy of Cornwall was merged with the Crown.

Rights of the duke

The duchy includes over 220 square miles (570 square kilometres) of land, more than half of which lies in Devon. The duke has some rights over the territory of Cornwall, and for this and other reasons there is debate as to the constitutional status of Cornwall. The High Sheriff of Cornwall is appointed by the duke, not the monarch, in contrast to the other counties of England and Wales. The duke has the right to the estates of all those who die without named heirs (bona vacantia) in the whole of Cornwall. In 2013, the duchy had a revenue surplus of £19 million, a sum that was exempt from income tax, though Prince Charles, the duke, chose to pay the tax voluntarily.[6][7]

Until 2011, if there was no duke of Cornwall at any time, the income of the duchy went to the Crown. Under the Sovereign Grant Act 2011, revenues of the duchy of Cornwall pass to the heir to the throne, whether or not he is the duke of Cornwall. When the heir is a minor, 10% of revenues pass to him, with the balance passing to the Crown; the Sovereign Grant is reduced by the same amount.[8]

Arms

 
Coat of arms of the duchy of Cornwall, granted in 1968

The coat of arms of the duke of Cornwall is blazoned as sable, fifteen bezants, that is, a black field bearing fifteen golden discs. The arms are now used as a badge by the prince of Wales, and they appear below the shield in his coat of arms, along with his other badges.

The arms were adopted late in the 15th century, based on the arms of Richard, Earl of Cornwall. The bezants in Richard's arms were intended to represent peas, known in French as pois, as a punning reference to the French region of Poitou, of which he was count.[9]

On 21 June 1968 a royal warrant augmented the aforementioned arms with the heir apparent's coronet, which consists of four crosses patée and four fleurs-de-lises with one arch (used only by the prince of Wales). The supporters are two Cornish choughs, each supporting an ostrich feather. The motto used with the arms is Houmout, meaning "High-spirited", the personal motto of the Black Prince.[10]

Dukes of Cornwall, 1337 creation

All dukes of Cornwall who have been the eldest living son of the sovereign are generally considered to have held the same creation of the dukedom. The following is a table of these dukes of Cornwall, with the processes by which they became duke and by which they ceased to hold the title:

Duke of Cornwall Monarch From To Other title held while Duke
Edward of Woodstock
("The Black Prince")
Edward III 1337
(Parliament)
1376
(death)
Prince of Wales (1343), Prince of Aquitaine (1362–1372), Earl of Chester (1333)
Henry of Monmouth Henry IV 1399
(Parliament)
1413
(acceded as Henry V)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1399), Duke of Aquitaine (1390), Duke of Lancaster (1399)
Henry Plantagenet Henry V 1421
(birth)
1422
(acceded as Henry VI)
Duke of Aquitaine (1421)
Edward of Westminster Henry VI 1454
(charter)
1471
(death)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1454)
Edward Plantagenet Edward IV 1471
(charter)
1483
(acceded as Edward V)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1471), Earl of March (1479), Earl of Pembroke (1479)
Edward of Middleham Richard III 1483
(father's accession)
1484
(death)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1483), Earl of Salisbury (1478)
Arthur Tudor Henry VII 1486
(birth)
1502
(death)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1489)
Henry Tudor 1502
(death of older brother)
1509
(acceded as Henry VIII)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1504), Duke of York (1494)
Henry Tudor Henry VIII 1511
(birth)
1511
(death)
Edward Tudor 1537
(birth)
1547
(acceded as Edward VI)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1537)
Henry Frederick Stuart James VI and I 1603
(father's accession)
1612
(death)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1610), Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick and Baron of Renfrew (1469), Lord of the Isles (1540), Prince and Great Steward of Scotland (1469)
The italicised henceforth "Duke of Rothesay, etc (1469 & 1540)"
Charles Stuart 1612
(death of older brother)
1625
(acceded as Charles I)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1616), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540), Duke of Albany (1600), Duke of York (1605), Marquess of Ormond, Earl of Ross, Lord Ardmannoch (1600)
Charles James Stuart Charles I 1629
(birth)
1629
(death)
Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540)
Charles Stuart 1630
(birth)
1649
(acceded as Charles II)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1638), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540)
James Francis Edward Stuart
("The Older Pretender")
James II 1688
(birth)
1702
(attainted)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1688–1702), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469–1702 & 1540–1702)
George Augustus George I 1714
(father's accession)
1727
(acceded as George II)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1714), Hereditary Elector of Hanover, Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540), Duke of Cambridge, Marquess of Cambridge, Earl of Milford Haven, Viscount Northallerton, Baron Tewkesbury (1706)
Frederick Louis George II 1727
(father's accession)
1751
(death)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1729), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540), Duke of Edinburgh, Marquess of Ely, Earl of Eltham, Viscount Launceston, Baron Snowdon (1726)
George Augustus Frederick George III 1762
(birth)
1820
(acceded as George IV)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1762), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540)
Albert Edward Victoria 1841
(birth)
1901
(acceded as Edward VII)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1841), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540), Earl of Dublin (1850)
George Frederick Ernest Albert Edward VII 1901
(father's accession)
1910
(acceded as George V)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1901), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540), Duke of York, Earl of Inverness, Baron Killarney (1892)
Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David George V 1910
(father's accession)
1936
(acceded as Edward VIII)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1910), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540)
Charles Philip Arthur George Elizabeth II 1952
(mother's accession)
2022
(acceded as Charles III)
Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1958), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540), Duke of Edinburgh, Earl of Merioneth and Baron Greenwich (1947)
William Arthur Philip Louis Charles III 2022
(father's accession)
Incumbent Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (2022), Duke of Rothesay, etc. (1469 & 1540), Duke of Cambridge, Earl of Strathearn, Baron Carrickfergus (2011)

Dukes of Cornwall, 1376 creation

When his heir apparent, Edward of Woodstock, Prince of Wales and Duke of Cornwall, predeceased him, Edward III granted a new creation of the title 'duke of Cornwall' to his grandson, Richard of Bordeaux. When he acceded the throne as Richard II in 1377, this creation merged with the Crown.

also Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1376)

Dukes of Cornwall, 1460 creation

When Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York pressed his claim to the throne, he was made heir apparent to Henry VI by the Act of Accord. On 31 October 1460, he was made prince of Wales and earl of Chester, duke of Cornwall and Lord Protector of England. Since he was not the eldest living son of the monarch, this creation was outside the terms of the 1337 warrant; York died in battle two months later, on 30 December 1460.

also Lord Protector of England, Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester (1460, see Act of Accord); Duke of York (1385), Earl of Ulster (1264), Earl of March (1328), Earl of Cambridge (1414, restored 1426), feudal Lord of Clare (bt. 1066–1075), Baron Mortimer of Wigmore (1331)

Jacobite duke

Charles Edward Stuart ('The Young Pretender'), eldest son and heir apparent of James Francis Edward Stuart ('The Old Pretender'), was born in Rome on 31 December 1720, and shortly after his birth, he was declared prince of Wales, duke of Cornwall and earl of Chester in the Jacobite succession. With the death of the Old Pretender on 1 January 1766, he acceded to his father's claim to be King of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland. He died on 31 January 1788.[11]

Family tree

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c A Charter of 1337
  2. ^ Blackstone, William (1765-1769) Commentaries on the Laws of England, book 1 chapter 12
  3. ^ a b Complete Peerage: 'Duke of Cornwall'
  4. ^ 77 ER 481, 8 Coke Report 1a, [1606] EWHC Ch J6
  5. ^ Succession to the Crown Act 2013, section 1
  6. ^ Booth, Robert (15 July 2013). "Prince Charles accused of 'dodging around for tax purposes'". The Guardian.
  7. ^ Thomson, Ainsley (15 July 2013). "U.K. Lawmakers Go After Tax Affairs of the Royal Family". The Wall Street Journal.
  8. ^ "Sovereign Grant Act 2011: guidance". GOV.UK. 5 November 2019.
  9. ^ Planché, James (1859). The Pursuivant of Arms; or, Heraldry Founded on Facts. R. Hardwick. p. 136.
  10. ^ Briggs, Geoffrey, Civic and Corporate Heraldry (1971), p. 122.
  11. ^ Melville Amadeus Henry Douglas Heddle de La Caillemotte de Massue de Ruvigny, Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval (1904). The Jacobite peerage, baronetage, knightage and grants of honour. Edinburgh: T.C. and E.C. Jack. p. 31.

External links

  • Duchy of Cornwall website – Duke of Cornwall
  • The Prince of Wales's website – Duchy of Cornwall
  • Guardian Unlimited article
  • link dead
  • The charter of 1337

duke, cornwall, steamship, other, uses, cornwall, disambiguation, title, peerage, england, traditionally, held, eldest, reigning, british, monarch, previously, english, monarch, duchy, cornwall, first, duchy, created, england, established, royal, charter, 1337. For the steamship see SS Duke of Cornwall For other uses see Cornwall disambiguation Duke of Cornwall is a title in the Peerage of England traditionally held by the eldest son of the reigning British monarch previously the English monarch The duchy of Cornwall was the first duchy created in England and was established by a royal charter in 1337 1 Prince William became Duke of Cornwall following the accession of his father King Charles III to the throne in 2022 and his wife Catherine became Duchess of Cornwall Dukedom of CornwallArms of the Duke of CornwallCreation date1337 first creation 1376 second creation 1460 third creation Created byEdward III first creation Edward III second creation Henry VI third creation PeeragePeerage of EnglandFirst holderEdward of WoodstockPresent holderPrince WilliamExtinction date1377 second creation 1460 third creation Former seat s Restormel CastleMottoGerman Houmout High spirited Contents 1 Legend 2 History 3 Succession 4 Rights of the duke 5 Arms 6 Dukes of Cornwall 1337 creation 7 Dukes of Cornwall 1376 creation 8 Dukes of Cornwall 1460 creation 9 Jacobite duke 10 Family tree 11 See also 12 Notes 13 External linksLegend EditSome folk histories of the British Isles such as Geoffrey of Monmouth s History of the Kings of Britain 1136 claim that the first leader of Cornwall was Corineus a Trojan warrior and ally of Brutus of Troy portrayed as the original settler of the British Isles From then through the Arthurian period such legendary dukes of Cornwall stood apart from the high king of Britain while serving as his closest ally and at times as his protector all per Monmouth s collected yarns Notably in this tale Gorlois duke of Cornwall under King Uther Pendragon rebelled when the king became obsessed with Gorlois wife Igraine Uther killed Gorlois and took Igraine the son was King Arthur History EditThe historical record suggests that following the Anglo Saxon settlement of Britain Cornwall formed part of a separate Kingdom of Dumnonia which included Devon although there is evidence that it may have had its own rulers at times The Celtic southwest of Britain was gradually conquered by the emerging Germanic Kingdom of England and after the Norman Conquest in 1066 the new rulers of England appointed their own men as earl of Cornwall the first of whom was in fact a Breton of Cornouaille in Brittany Edward of Woodstock widely known as The Black Prince the eldest son of Edward III was made the first duke of Cornwall in 1337 after Edward III had lost the title of duke of Normandy 2 Cornwall was the first dukedom conferred within the Kingdom of England 3 Succession EditThe charter that established the estate on 17 March 1337 set out the rule that the duke and possessor of the estate would be the eldest son and heir apparent of the monarch 1 There were some deviations from this rule until a legal case the Prince s Case in 1606 which held that the rule should be adhered to 4 When the estate is without a duke the possessor is the monarch even if the former duke left surviving descendants 1 The monarch s grandson even if he is the heir apparent does not succeed to the dukedom Similarly no female may ever be duke of Cornwall even if she is heir presumptive or heir apparent this being a distinct and even likely possibility in the future after the passage of the Succession to the Crown Act 2013 although a queen regnant without a son would be the de facto duke However if a duke of Cornwall should die without descendants and also no sister between the two brothers if the younger one was born after 28 October 2011 5 his next brother obtains the duchy this brother being both the oldest living son and heir apparent It is possible for an individual to be prince of Wales and heir apparent without being duke of Cornwall The title prince of Wales is the traditional title of the heir apparent to the throne granted at the discretion of the sovereign not automatically and is not restricted to the eldest son For example after the death of Frederick Prince of Wales George II s heir apparent was his grandson George Frederick s eldest son and the future George III The young Prince George was created prince of Wales but did not become duke of Cornwall because he was the king s grandson rather than his son When the sovereign has no legitimate son or when the heir apparent is not the sovereign s son the estates of the duchy of Cornwall revert to the Crown until a legitimate son is born or until the accession of a new monarch who has a son James Francis Edward Stuart son of James II was born duke of Cornwall in 1688 Although his father lost the throne James Francis Edward was not deprived of his own titles and honours as a result of his father s deposition Instead from the prevailing Hanoverian perspective it was as a result of his claiming his father s lost thrones that James was attainted for treason on 2 March 1702 and his titles were thus forfeited under English law 3 However from the minority Jacobite perspective on his father s death in 1701 the duchy of Cornwall was merged with the Crown Rights of the duke EditMain article Duchy of Cornwall The duchy includes over 220 square miles 570 square kilometres of land more than half of which lies in Devon The duke has some rights over the territory of Cornwall and for this and other reasons there is debate as to the constitutional status of Cornwall The High Sheriff of Cornwall is appointed by the duke not the monarch in contrast to the other counties of England and Wales The duke has the right to the estates of all those who die without named heirs bona vacantia in the whole of Cornwall In 2013 the duchy had a revenue surplus of 19 million a sum that was exempt from income tax though Prince Charles the duke chose to pay the tax voluntarily 6 7 Until 2011 if there was no duke of Cornwall at any time the income of the duchy went to the Crown Under the Sovereign Grant Act 2011 revenues of the duchy of Cornwall pass to the heir to the throne whether or not he is the duke of Cornwall When the heir is a minor 10 of revenues pass to him with the balance passing to the Crown the Sovereign Grant is reduced by the same amount 8 Arms Edit Coat of arms of the duchy of Cornwall granted in 1968 Main article Coat of arms of the Prince of Wales The coat of arms of the duke of Cornwall is blazoned as sable fifteen bezants that is a black field bearing fifteen golden discs The arms are now used as a badge by the prince of Wales and they appear below the shield in his coat of arms along with his other badges The arms were adopted late in the 15th century based on the arms of Richard Earl of Cornwall The bezants in Richard s arms were intended to represent peas known in French as pois as a punning reference to the French region of Poitou of which he was count 9 On 21 June 1968 a royal warrant augmented the aforementioned arms with the heir apparent s coronet which consists of four crosses patee and four fleurs de lises with one arch used only by the prince of Wales The supporters are two Cornish choughs each supporting an ostrich feather The motto used with the arms is Houmout meaning High spirited the personal motto of the Black Prince 10 Dukes of Cornwall 1337 creation EditAll dukes of Cornwall who have been the eldest living son of the sovereign are generally considered to have held the same creation of the dukedom The following is a table of these dukes of Cornwall with the processes by which they became duke and by which they ceased to hold the title Duke of Cornwall Monarch From To Other title held while DukeEdward of Woodstock The Black Prince Edward III 1337 Parliament 1376 death Prince of Wales 1343 Prince of Aquitaine 1362 1372 Earl of Chester 1333 Henry of Monmouth Henry IV 1399 Parliament 1413 acceded as Henry V Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1399 Duke of Aquitaine 1390 Duke of Lancaster 1399 Henry Plantagenet Henry V 1421 birth 1422 acceded as Henry VI Duke of Aquitaine 1421 Edward of Westminster Henry VI 1454 charter 1471 death Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1454 Edward Plantagenet Edward IV 1471 charter 1483 acceded as Edward V Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1471 Earl of March 1479 Earl of Pembroke 1479 Edward of Middleham Richard III 1483 father s accession 1484 death Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1483 Earl of Salisbury 1478 Arthur Tudor Henry VII 1486 birth 1502 death Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1489 Henry Tudor 1502 death of older brother 1509 acceded as Henry VIII Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1504 Duke of York 1494 Henry Tudor Henry VIII 1511 birth 1511 death Edward Tudor 1537 birth 1547 acceded as Edward VI Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1537 Henry Frederick Stuart James VI and I 1603 father s accession 1612 death Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1610 Duke of Rothesay Earl of Carrick and Baron of Renfrew 1469 Lord of the Isles 1540 Prince and Great Steward of Scotland 1469 The italicised henceforth Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Charles Stuart 1612 death of older brother 1625 acceded as Charles I Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1616 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Duke of Albany 1600 Duke of York 1605 Marquess of Ormond Earl of Ross Lord Ardmannoch 1600 Charles James Stuart Charles I 1629 birth 1629 death Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Charles Stuart 1630 birth 1649 acceded as Charles II Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1638 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 James Francis Edward Stuart The Older Pretender James II 1688 birth 1702 attainted Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1688 1702 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 1702 amp 1540 1702 George Augustus George I 1714 father s accession 1727 acceded as George II Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1714 Hereditary Elector of Hanover Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Duke of Cambridge Marquess of Cambridge Earl of Milford Haven Viscount Northallerton Baron Tewkesbury 1706 Frederick Louis George II 1727 father s accession 1751 death Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1729 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Duke of Edinburgh Marquess of Ely Earl of Eltham Viscount Launceston Baron Snowdon 1726 George Augustus Frederick George III 1762 birth 1820 acceded as George IV Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1762 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Albert Edward Victoria 1841 birth 1901 acceded as Edward VII Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1841 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Earl of Dublin 1850 George Frederick Ernest Albert Edward VII 1901 father s accession 1910 acceded as George V Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1901 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Duke of York Earl of Inverness Baron Killarney 1892 Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David George V 1910 father s accession 1936 acceded as Edward VIII Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1910 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Charles Philip Arthur George Elizabeth II 1952 mother s accession 2022 acceded as Charles III Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1958 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Duke of Edinburgh Earl of Merioneth and Baron Greenwich 1947 William Arthur Philip Louis Charles III 2022 father s accession Incumbent Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 2022 Duke of Rothesay etc 1469 amp 1540 Duke of Cambridge Earl of Strathearn Baron Carrickfergus 2011 Dukes of Cornwall 1376 creation EditWhen his heir apparent Edward of Woodstock Prince of Wales and Duke of Cornwall predeceased him Edward III granted a new creation of the title duke of Cornwall to his grandson Richard of Bordeaux When he acceded the throne as Richard II in 1377 this creation merged with the Crown Richard of Bordeaux 1367 1400 also Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1376 Dukes of Cornwall 1460 creation EditWhen Richard Plantagenet Duke of York pressed his claim to the throne he was made heir apparent to Henry VI by the Act of Accord On 31 October 1460 he was made prince of Wales and earl of Chester duke of Cornwall and Lord Protector of England Since he was not the eldest living son of the monarch this creation was outside the terms of the 1337 warrant York died in battle two months later on 30 December 1460 Richard Plantagenet 1411 1460 also Lord Protector of England Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1460 see Act of Accord Duke of York 1385 Earl of Ulster 1264 Earl of March 1328 Earl of Cambridge 1414 restored 1426 feudal Lord of Clare bt 1066 1075 Baron Mortimer of Wigmore 1331 Jacobite duke EditCharles Edward Stuart The Young Pretender eldest son and heir apparent of James Francis Edward Stuart The Old Pretender was born in Rome on 31 December 1720 and shortly after his birth he was declared prince of Wales duke of Cornwall and earl of Chester in the Jacobite succession With the death of the Old Pretender on 1 January 1766 he acceded to his father s claim to be King of England Scotland France and Ireland He died on 31 January 1788 11 Family tree EditvtePrinces of Wales Dukes of Cornwall Dukes of Rothesay Earls of Carrick and Earls of Chester family treeEarl of Chester first creation 1067 1070Gerbod the Fleming Earl of ChesterKing William I c 1028 1087 Earldom of Chester first creation forfeit 1071Earl of Chester second creation 1071Maud Margaret Hugh d Avranches c 1047 1101 1st Earl of ChesterAdela of Normandy c 1067 1137 Stephen Count of Blois c 1045 1102 King Henry I c 1068 1135 Ranulf le Meschin 1070 1129 3rd Earl of ChesterRichard d Avranches 1094 1120 2nd Earl of ChesterLucia Mahaut d 1120 Robert Rufus1st Earl of Gloucester c 1090 1147 Ranulf de Gernon 1099 1153 4th Earl of ChesterMaud Matilda of Gloucester d 1189 Hugh of Cyfeiliog 1147 1181 5th Earl of ChesterRanulf de Blondeville 1170 1232 6th Earl of ChesterEarl of LincolnMatilda Maud 1171 1233 Countess of Chester suo jureEARL OF CHESTER fourth creation 1264John of Scotland c 1207 1237 7th Earl of ChesterEarl of HuntingdonSimon de Montfort 1208 1265 Earl of ChesterEarl of LeicesterEarldom of Chester second creation reverted to the crown 1237EARL OF CHESTER third creation 1254Earldom of Chester fourth creation forfeit 1265Edward Lord of Chester 1239 1307 Earl of Chester without the title of Earl later King Edward IEarldom of Chester third creation reverted to the crown 1272EARL OF CHESTER fifth creation 1301Edward of Caernarfon 1284 1327 Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester 1301 1307 later King Edward IIEarldom of Chester fifth creation reverted to the crown 1307EARL OF CHESTER sixth creation 1312Robert Stewart 1316 1390 Earl of Carrick 1316 1368 later King Robert II of ScotsEdward Plantagenet 1312 1377 Earl of Chester 1312 1327 later King Edward IIIHereafter the Earldom of Chester was created in conjunction with the Principality of Wales DUKE OF CORNWALL 1337John Stewart 1337 1406 Earl of Carrick 1368 1390 later King Robert III of ScotsEdward the Black Prince 1330 1376 Duke of Cornwall 1337 1376 Prince of Wales 1343 1376 John of Gaunt 1340 1399 Duke of LancasterLionel of Antwerp 1338 1368 Duke of ClarenceEdmund of Langley 1341 1402 Duke of YorkDukedom of Cornwall extinct 1376DUKE OF CORNWALL 1376Richard of Bordeaux 1367 1400 Prince of Wales 1376 1377 Duke of Cornwall 1376 1377 later King Richard IIJohn Beaufort c 1371 1410 King Henry IV 1366 1413 Philippa of Clarence 1355 1382 Dukedom of Cornwall merged in the Crown 1377Roger Mortimer 1374 1398 DUKE OF ROTHESAY created 1398DUKE OF CORNWALL restored 1399David Stewart 1378 1402 Earl of Carrick 1390 1402 Duke of Rothesay 1398 1402 Henry of Monmouth 1386 1422 Prince of Wales 1399 1413 Duke of Cornwall 1399 1413 later King Henry VAnne de Mortimer 1390 1411 Richard of Conisburgh c 1375 1415 Earl of CambridgeDUKE OF CORNWALL 1460James 1394 1437 Earl of Carrick 1402 1406 Duke of Rothesay 1404 1406 later King James I of ScotsJoan Beaufort c 1404 1445 John Beaufort 1404 1444 Duke of SomersetHenry 1421 1471 Duke of Cornwall 1421 1422 later King Henry VIRichard Plantagenet 1411 1460 Duke of YorkPrince of Wales 1460 Duke of Cornwall 1460 Alexander Stewart 1430 Duke of Rothesay 1430 James 1430 1460 Duke of Rothesay 1431 1437 later King James II of ScotsLady Margaret Beaufort 1441 1443 1509 Edward of Westminster 1453 1471 Prince of Wales 1454 1471 Duke of Cornwall 1454 1471 King Edward IV 1442 1483 King Richard III 1452 1485 James 1451 1488 Duke of Rothesay 1452 1460 later King James III of ScotsKing Henry VII 1457 1509 Edward 1470 Prince of Wales 1471 1483 Duke of Cornwall 1471 1483 later King Edward VEdward of Middleham c 1473 1484 Prince of Wales 1483 1484 Duke of Cornwall 1483 1484 From the 1469 Act of Scottish Parliament the Earldom of Carrick and the Dukedom of Rothesay was to be automatically held by the first born Prince of the King of Scots James 1473 1513 Duke of Rothesay 1473 1488 later King James IV of ScotsMargaret Tudor 1489 1541 Arthur Tudor 1486 1502 Prince of Wales 1489 1502 Duke of Cornwall 1486 1502 Henry Tudor 1491 1547 Prince of Wales 1504 1509 Duke of Cornwall 1502 1509 later King Henry VIIIJames Stewart 1507 1508 Duke of Rothesay 1507 1508 Arthur Stewart 1509 1510 Duke of Rothesay 1509 1510 James 1512 1542 Duke of Rothesay 1512 1513 later King James V of ScotsHenry 1511 Duke of YorkDuke of Cornwall 1511 Edward Tudor 1537 1553 Prince of Wales 1537 1547 Duke of Cornwall 1537 1547 later King Edward VIJames Stewart 1540 1541 Duke of Rothesay 1540 1541 Mary Queen of Scots 1542 1587 James Charles Stuart 1566 1625 Duke of Rothesay 1566 1567 later King James VI IHenry Frederick Stuart 1594 1612 Prince of Wales 1610 1612 Duke of Cornwall 1603 1612 Duke of Rothesay 1594 1612 Elizabeth Stuart 1596 1662 Charles Stuart 1600 1649 Prince of Wales 1616 1625 Duke of Cornwall 1612 1625 Duke of Rothesay 1612 1625 later King Charles ISophia of Hanover 1630 1714 Charles James 1629 Duke of Cornwall 1629 Duke of Rothesay 1629 styled Prince of WalesCharles Stuart 1630 1685 Prince of Wales c 1638 1641 1649 Duke of Cornwall 1630 1649 Duke of Rothesay 1630 1649 later King Charles IIKing James II VII 1633 1701 King George I 1660 1727 George Augustus 1683 1760 Prince of Wales 1714 1727 Duke of Cornwall 1714 1727 Duke of Rothesay 1714 1727 later King George IIJames Francis Edward Stuart 1688 1766 Prince of Wales c 1688 1688 Duke of Cornwall 1688 1702 Duke of Rothesay 1688 1702 Frederick Louis 1707 1751 Prince of Wales 1728 1751 Duke of Cornwall 1727 1751 Duke of Rothesay 1727 1751 George William Frederick 1738 1820 Prince of Wales 1751 1760 later King George IIIGeorge Augustus Frederick 1762 1830 Prince of Wales 1762 1820 Duke of Cornwall 1762 1820 Duke of Rothesay 1762 1820 later King George IVEdward Augustus 1767 1820 Duke of Kent and StrathearnQueen Victoria 1819 1901 Albert Edward 1841 1910 Prince of Wales 1841 1901 Duke of Cornwall 1841 1901 Duke of Rothesay 1841 1901 later King Edward VIIGeorge Frederick Ernest Albert 1865 1936 Prince of Wales 1901 1910 Duke of Cornwall 1901 1910 Duke of Rothesay 1901 1910 later King George VEdward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David 1894 1972 Prince of Wales 1910 1936 Duke of Cornwall 1910 1936 Duke of Rothesay 1910 1936 later King Edward VIIIlater Duke of WindsorKing George VI 1895 1952 Queen Elizabeth II 1926 2022 Charles Philip Arthur George b 1948 Prince of Wales 1958 2022 Duke of Cornwall 1952 2022 Duke of Rothesay 1952 2022 later King Charles IIIWilliam Arthur Philip Louis b 1982 Prince of Wales since 2022 Duke of Cornwall since 2022 Duke of Rothesay since 2022 Duke of CambridgePrince George of Wales b 2013 See also Edit Cornwall portalCornish Foreshore Case 19th century arbitration about the ownership of minerals and mines under the foreshore of Cornwall Duchy Originals the duchy s organic produce brand Duke of Rothesay Duchess of Cornwall Outline of CornwallNotes Edit a b c A Charter of 1337 Blackstone William 1765 1769 Commentaries on the Laws of England book 1 chapter 12 a b Complete Peerage Duke of Cornwall 77 ER 481 8 Coke Report 1a 1606 EWHC Ch J6 Succession to the Crown Act 2013 section 1 Booth Robert 15 July 2013 Prince Charles accused of dodging around for tax purposes The Guardian Thomson Ainsley 15 July 2013 U K Lawmakers Go After Tax Affairs of the Royal Family The Wall Street Journal Sovereign Grant Act 2011 guidance GOV UK 5 November 2019 Planche James 1859 The Pursuivant of Arms or Heraldry Founded on Facts R Hardwick p 136 Briggs Geoffrey Civic and Corporate Heraldry 1971 p 122 Melville Amadeus Henry Douglas Heddle de La Caillemotte de Massue de Ruvigny Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval 1904 The Jacobite peerage baronetage knightage and grants of honour Edinburgh T C and E C Jack p 31 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dukes of Cornwall Duchy of Cornwall website Duke of Cornwall The Prince of Wales s website Duchy of Cornwall Guardian Unlimited article Celtic Frontier or County Boundary Competing discourses of a late nineteenth century British border link dead The charter of 1337 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duke of Cornwall amp oldid 1140547735, 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