Meghan Marklesays her sonArchiewas denied a royal title.
In her sit-down interview withOprah Winfreyon Sunday, Meghan addressed the issue when Oprah asked, “How did they explain to you that your son, the great-grandson of the Queen, wasn’t going to be a prince?”
For more onPrince HarryandMeghan Markle’s interview with Oprah, listen below to the episode of PEOPLE Every Day.
Meghan said the palace decreed that Archie — who turns 2 in May — would not have any title, a move she says was “different from protocol.”
“They didn’t want him to be a prince . . . which would be different from protocol, and that he wasn’t going to receive security,” she told Oprah.
What’s more, she said, “we have in tandem the conversation of, ‘He won’t be given security. He’s not going to be given a title.’ And also concerns and conversations about how dark his skin might be when he’s born.”
Meghan Markle, Prince Harry and Archie in South Africa in September 2019.Henk Kruger/AP/Shutterstock

WhenPrince Harry, 36, and Meghan, 39, were married in May 2018,Queen Elizabethgave them the titles of Duke and Duchess of Sussex. Archie, who will turn 2 in May, was entitled to the “courtesy title,” Earl of Dumbarton. However, the couple announced shortly after his birth that they had not given him a courtesy title and he would be known as Archie Mountbatten-Windsor.
Under current guidelines, great-grandchildren of the monarch are not princes or princesses, except for children of the eldest son of the Prince of Wales, which is whyPrince WilliamandKate Middleton’s children arePrince George,Princess CharlotteandPrince Louis.

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It is possible that Archie could receive a royal title later in life. When his grandfather,Prince Charlesbecomes king (in the event of Queen Elizabeth’s death), the title of “prince” will be automatically given to him as the child of a son of the king. However, Meghan and Harry can also choose not to use the title that would be conferred to Archie after Charles becomes king.
Down the line, Archie could be given the secondary Sussex title before inheriting the dukedom.
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry with son Archie in 2019.DOMINIC LIPINSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The Queen granted Prince Andrew’s request that his daughters,BeatriceandEugenie, receive the title of “princess” rather than “lady.” In 2016, Andrew refuted reports that he had demanded titles for “any future husbands” of his daughters, stating he simply wanted his children to be considered “modern, working young women who happen to be members of the royal family.”
Eugenie andJack Brooksbankdid not receive any titlesfollowing theirroyal weddingin October 2018, meaning their newborn son August and any future children will not inherit any titles.
Their father, Captain Mark Phillips, was a commoner and also turned down a title that would have been given to him as a wedding gift from the Queen when he wed Princess Anne.
“I’m very lucky that both my parents decided to not use the title and we grew up and did all the things that gave us the opportunity to do,” Anne’s daughter, Zara Tindall, said in 2015.
Lady Louise, 16, and James, Viscount Severn, 12, are grandchildren ofQueen Elizabeth, but they are unlikely to use their Her/His Royal Highness titles when they are adults, their mother Sophie, Countess of Wessex said last year.
“We try to bring them up with the understanding that they are very likely to have to work for a living,” she toldThe Sunday Times. “Hence we made the decision not to use HRH titles. They have them and can decide to use them from 18, but it’s highly unlikely.”
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source: people.com