The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Document gives the Queen’s consent

- Tony jones

A picture has been released of the document signed by the Queen giving her consent for Prince Harry to marry Meghan Markle.

The Queen signed the Instrument of Consent in March – an elaborate notice of approval, transcribe­d in calligraph­y, and issued under the Great Seal of the Realm.

The document states: “Now know ye that we have consented and do by these presents signify our consent to the contractin­g of matrimony between our most dearly beloved grandson Prince Henry Charles Albert David of Wales KCVO and Rachel Meghan Markle.”

The wording differs from the instrument signed to give consent to the marriage of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in 2011 when Kate was described as “our trusty and wellbelove­d” Catherine.

Harry took Meghan to meet the Queen for afternoon tea at Buckingham Palace in October last year to introduce her to the woman he wanted to wed.

Although the monarch was unlikely to have withheld her blessing, she would only have said “no” on the advice of the prime minister, whom she will have informed.

For hundreds of years, the Royal Marriages Act 1772 required descendant­s of George II to seek the sovereign’s consent before they wed, otherwise their marriages were deemed invalid.

But this law was repealed through the Succession to the Crown Act 2013, which came into effect in 2015 when all the Commonweal­th countries, where the Queen is head of state, passed any necessary legislatio­n.

The new Act still requires the first six people in the line of succession to obtain the Queen’s permission.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? The Instrument of Consent, signed in March.
Picture: PA. The Instrument of Consent, signed in March.

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