Queen dowager
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Queen dowager
A Queen Dowager or Dowager Queen (compare: Princess Dowager, Dowager Princess, or Princess Mother) is a title or status generally held by the widow of a deceased king. Its full meaning is clear from the two words from which it is composed: queen indicates someone who served as queen consort (i.e. wife of a king), while dowager indicates a widow who holds the title from her deceased husband. (A queen who rules in her own right and not due to marriage to a king is a queen regnant.)
Distinction from Queen MotherA Queen Mother is a particular type of queen dowager who is simultaneously a former queen consort and the mother of the current monarch. Therefore, every queen mother is by definition also a queen dowager. However, not all queen dowagers are queen mothers; they may have a relation other than mother to the reigning monarch, such as aunt or grandmother. For example, Queen Adelaide was queen dowager after her husband William IV was succeeded by his niece Victoria. Not every mother of a reigning monarch is a queen mother or a queen dowager. For example, the mother of Queen Victoria of Great Britain, the Duchess of Kent, was never a queen dowager because her late husband, the Duke of Kent, had never been king. Similarly, the mother of King George III of the United Kingdom, the former Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha, was not a queen dowager because her husband, Frederick, Prince of Wales, was never king. Instead, she held the title of Dowager Princess of Wales. Finally, it is possible for there to be a queen mother and one or more queen dowagers alive at any one time. This situation occurred in the sixteen realms of the Commonwealth in the period between the accession of Queen Elizabeth II on 6 February 1952 and the death of her paternal grandmother on 24 March 1953. For slightly over a year, there were three queens in the Commonwealth realms:
A queen dowager continues to enjoy the title, style, and precedence of a queen consort. However, many former queens consort do not formally use the word "dowager" as part of their titles. The Garter King of Arms' proclamation in the United Kingdom of the styles and titles of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother at her funeral on 9 April 2002 illustrates her dual status as a queen dowager and a queen mother: British Queens dowagerThere were several former queen consorts of England, Scotland, and later the United Kingdom, who were never queen mothers. The following queens were dowagers between the given dates, whether Queen mothers or not: Of England:
Of the United Kingdom:
Of the Commonwealth realms:
OtherNote that in some of the countries mentioned below it is unusual to indicate a former queen-consort as a dowager.
BelgiumIn Belgium Dowager (or in French "Douairière") is not a usual term to indicate a queen-consort that survived her husband. Elizabeth of Belgium was not referred to as "Dowager Queen", although she survived her husband for many years. Neither is the term usual for Fabiola of Belgium after the death of her husband Baudouin. TriviaIn the fictional book series The Princess Diaries, the character Princess Clarisse Marie Grimaldi Renaldo is the dowager princess of the principality of Genovia. In the film versions, where Genovia is portrayed as a kingdom, Clarisse is portrayed as Queen, or Dowager Queen. Notes
lt:Karalien? na?l? sh:Kraljica udovica zh:?? Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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