Draft:Australian royalty

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Australian royalty may refer to Australian citizens who are members of royal families, through birth, naturalization or marriage; or Australian families that are given the epithet or moniker as Australian royalty. It has also been used to refer to the descendants of the First Fleet, or descendants of those sentenced to Transportation. Additionally, Australia is a monarchy, so members of the Australian monarchy are Australian royalty.

Former monarchies of Australia[edit]

Former colonial monarchies of territory now Australia[edit]

Indigenous Native royals[edit]

True royalty[edit]

Royal house of Australia[edit]

Members of the royal house of the monarchy of Australia are the royalty of Australia de jure

Members of the House of Windsor in residence in Australia[edit]

Australians who married into the House of Windsor[edit]

Members of the House of Windsor born in Australia[edit]

Members of the House of Windsor who married Australians[edit]

Members of the House of Windsor born to Australians[edit]

Members of the House of Windsor who became naturalized Australians[edit]

Members of the House of Windsor who are otherwise Australian[edit]

Australians romantically associated with the House of Windsor[edit]

Australians who have had very serious relationships just short of marriage, and could have entered into the House of Windsor.

Australians who married into royalty[edit]

Royalty who were born in Australia[edit]

  • Susan Cullen-Ward, who became Queen-in-exile of Albania by marriage, claimed descent from Edward Longshanks, King Edward I of England of the House of Plantagenet, and thus distant cousin to Queen Elizabeth II of Australia. [1]

Royalty who married Australians[edit]

Royalty born to Australians[edit]

Royalty who became naturalized Australians[edit]

Royalty who were otherwise Australian[edit]

Royalty in long term residence in Australia[edit]

Australians romantically associated with Royalty[edit]

Australians who have had very serious relationships just short of marriage, and could have entered into those royal houses.

Royalty by reputation[edit]

Political and criminal royalty[edit]

Monied and business royalty[edit]

  • Australia's First Families of Wine [3]
    • Hill-Smith family [3]
    • Tyrrell family [3]

Celebrity royalty[edit]

Descendants of original colonists[edit]

There are thousands of Australians who can trace their lineage back to convicts sentenced to Transportation in Great Britain, and arrived with the First Fleet or later. Some Australians consider these to be real Australian royalty.[7][8]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Stephen Gibbs (19 October 2019). "How a petite Australian sheep farmer's daughter married a giant gun-toting European king to become 'Queen of Albania' - decades before Crown Princess Mary wed her Danish prince". Microsoft News. MSN.
  2. ^ a b Lynsey Eidell (14 January 2024). "All About King Frederik and Queen Mary of Denmark's Royal Love Story". People. 8424531.
  3. ^ a b c John Wilson (22 February 2020). "World-class wines from Australian wine royalty". The Irish Times.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Callan Boys (7 March 2020). "Cooking royalty commits to preserving Australia's food history". goodfood.com.au. Good Food.
  5. ^ Fabio Magnocavallo (29 March 2020). "15 Photos Of Millie Bobby Brown With Her Surprising Hollywood Friends". thethings.com. The Things.
  6. ^ Jonathon Moran (4 April 2018). "Commonwealth Games Australian royalty Matt Shirvington discusses notorious 1998 footage". The Courier-Mail.
  7. ^ "Jack Thompson". Who Do You Think You Are ?. Season 1. Episode 1. National Film and Sound Archive. 13 January 2008. SBS. [1][2]
  8. ^ Alona Tester (19 February 2014). "Find Your Convict Ancestry With New Online Records". Gould Genealogy and History.

See also[edit]