According to strange royal traditions

Prince Louis will change his family name when he grows up

Prince Louis with his mother during the last party.

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Prince William's four-year-old son, Prince Louis, is among a group of people whose family names will include changes when they grow up.

But it is uncommon for a man in Britain and the West that his last name, too, is set to change at some point in the future.

And the troubled prince, who entertained the audience with his rare moves, at the last jubilee celebrations, will follow in his father's footsteps with an unusual change of his name later.

His current and official title is "His Royal Highness Prince Louis Arthur Charles".

He is ranked fifth in the series to take the throne.

But when his father Prince William's official title changes to "Prince of Wales", when his grandfather, Prince Charles, becomes king, Prince Louis's title will change immediately.

The young prince will follow in the footsteps of his father, who used "Wales" as his family name at school and while serving in the Royal Navy.

The same will happen to my brother Prince Louis, George and Charlotte.

Like Prince Harry, Prince Louis and Princess Charlotte will likely return to using the surname Mountbatten-Windsor when their brother becomes the Prince of Wales.

Prince Harry uses the nickname "Mountbatten-Windsor" and has passed it on to his two children, Lilipet and Archie.

Sons of princes usually use duchies, as their family names;

For example, Cambridge or Sussex.

In the past, the Queen chose to bestow the title "Duke of York" on Prince Andrew, when he married in 1986, and he is often referred to as the Queen's favorite child.

Even with the recent scandal surrounding the Duke of York, the Queen made no decision to strip her son of his title.

Any attempt to remove the title would have to be voted on in Parliament, with a law passed by both the Houses of Commons and the Lords.

The young prince will follow in the footsteps of his father, who used "Wales" as his family name at school and while serving in the Royal Navy.

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