Talk:List of current heirs apparent

Latest comment: 5 months ago by 2601:249:9301:D570:2869:4862:2318:6CB0 in topic Spain

Caroline, Hereditary Princess of Monaco edit

The article for Caroline, Hereditary Princess of Monaco, Princess of Hanover specifies that the title "Hereditary Prince(ss)" is given, in the absense of any heir apparent, to the heir presumptive, which is the case with Princess Caroline. Although he has stated that he will not, her brother Prince Albert could hypothetically marry the mother of one of his illegitimate children or, more likely, marry and produce a child—either of these cases would cause Caroline to be displaced as first in line to the throne, which by definition makes her heiress presumptive. The article on heirs apparent even specifies that Victoria, Crown Princess of Sweden is the only current heiress apparent to a throne, meaningfully failing to mention Princess Caroline. In accordance with all this irrefutable evidence, I will remove Caroline from this list and from the corresponding category, and if I can find similar pages on heirs presumptive I will add her there. Unless this is proven to be wrong, please do not re-add Princess Caroline to this list. Andrei Iosifovich (talk) 23:36, 14 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

Date edit

Maybe we could add a column for the date that the person became heir apparent. Tad Lincoln (talk) 22:51, 26 February 2014 (UTC)Reply

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Spain edit

I'm afraid Spain is in the wrong list. Though Spain favours male over female heirs, women can, and in fact have, become queens of Spain. There is no Salic law and princess Leonor is Princess of Asturias, the title held by the heir to the throne. So, yes, she is the heiress apparent and has acted and been recognized as such since her father became king. 90.69.201.36 (talk) 09:42, 23 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

Spain has male preference primogeniture, so she could theoretically be displaced if her father had a legitimate son. 2601:249:9301:D570:2869:4862:2318:6CB0 (talk) 20:08, 16 December 2023 (UTC)Reply