Katharine, Duchess of Kent

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Katharine
Duchess of Kent
Spouse The Duke of Kent
Issue
George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews
Lady Helen Taylor
Lord Nicholas Windsor
Full name
Katharine Lucy Mary[1]
Titles
HRH The Duchess of Kent
Miss Katharine Worsley
Royal house House of Windsor
Father Sir William Worsley, 4th Bt.
Mother Joyce Morgan
Born February 22, 1933 (1933-02-22) (age 74)
Hovingham Hall, Yorkshire
Occupation Music Teacher

The Duchess of Kent (Katharine Lucy Mary; born Worsley, 22 February 1933) is a member of the British Royal Family, the wife of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, a grandson of King George V and cousin of Queen Elizabeth II.

The Duchess of Kent gained attention for her conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1994, the first senior royal convert publicly since the passing of the Act of Settlement 1701. The Duchess of Kent is strongly associated with the world of music, and has performed as a member of several choirs. She is also well-known as the presenter of trophies at the annual Wimbledon lawn tennis championships – a role she inherited from her mother-in-law, Princess Marina.

The Duchess's warm and informal manner has won her many admirers. She prefers to be known in her private life as Katharine Kent. She also has expressed a preference for being known as Katharine, Duchess of Kent, a style usually reserved for divorced peeresses. However, her formal title remains Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Kent.

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Katharine Lucy Mary Worsley was born at Hovingham Hall, Yorkshire, and was the only daughter of Sir William Arthrington Worsley, Bt., and his wife, Joyce Morgan, daughter of Sir John Fowler Brunner, Bt. and granddaughter of Sir John Tomlinson Brunner, Bt., the founder of Brunner Mond, which later became ICI (Imperial Chemical Industries).

She was educated at Queen Margaret's School near York and at Runton Hill School in Norfolk. At school she was introduced to music, and was taught to play the piano, organ and violin, which she still plays today. She later worked for some time in a children's home in York and worked at a nursery school in London. She failed to gain admission to the Royal Academy of Music but followed her brothers to Oxford, where they were at the University, to study at Miss Hubler's Finishing School, 22 Merton Street, devoting much of her time to music.

British Royalty
Royal Family
HM The Queen
HRH The Duke of Edinburgh

v  d  e

On 8 June 1961, she married Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, the eldest son of Prince George, Duke of Kent and Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark, at York Minster. After her marriage she was styled Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Kent.

The Duke and Duchess of Kent have three children:

The couple also had a stillborn child in 1977, a loss that caused the Duchess to fall into a state of severe depression, which she has spoken about publicly.

The Duchess of Kent was received into the Roman Catholic Church in 1994. This was a personal decision, and she received the approval of the Queen. As she explained in an interview on BBC, "I do love guidelines and the Catholic church offers you guidelines. I have always wanted that in my life. I like to know what's expected of me. I like being told: You shall go to church on Sunday and if you don't you're in for it!" Basil Cardinal Hume, then Archbishop of Westminster and thus spiritual leader of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, warned the Church against triumphalism over the Duchess' conversion.

Although the Act of Settlement 1701 means a member of the Royal Family marrying a Catholic relinquishes their right of succession to the British throne, the Act does not include marriage to an Anglican who subsequently becomes a Catholic. Therefore, the Duke of Kent did not lose his place in the line of succession to the British throne.

Since then her younger son, Lord Nicholas Windsor, and her grandson, Edward Windsor, Lord Downpatrick, have also become Catholics. Her older son, the Earl of St. Andrews, father of Lord Downpatrick, is married to a Catholic and thus has been excluded from the succession.

The Duchess of Kent decided not to personally use the style Her Royal Highness in 2002 and reduce her royal duties. Since then she has been informally known as Katharine Kent, although her formal style (e.g. in the Court Circular) remains HRH The Duchess of Kent. By way of example, when she made a formal appearance to confer awards at the BBC's Young Musician of the Year competition in 2002, she asked the organizers to introduce her as "Katharine, Duchess of Kent."

In keeping with her withdrawal from full royal duties, the Duchess took a position as a music teacher in Wansbeck Primary School in Kingston upon Hull. In 2005 the Duchess spoke in an interview on BBC Radio 3 of her liking of rap music and of the singer/songwriter, Dido, whose record, Thank You, she chose as one of her favourite pieces of music.

The Duchess has been dogged by press reports that she and her husband have lived apart for many years and that they intend to divorce; however, the divorce reports have not been substantiated. Reports by the BBC have stated that the Duchess suffers from chronic fatigue syndrome, while the Mail on Sunday reported that she suffers from depression. By 1999 she had apparently completely recovered from chronic ill-health, and when asked by the Daily Mail what had suddenly changed, she answered, without elaboration, that she had been suffering unknowingly from Coeliac Disease (a serious and potentially debilitating auto-immune disease in which a variety of diverse symptoms can be triggered by the ingestion of the protein Gluten). She stepped down from her role as head of the M.E. Society in the UK after this new diagnosis, and has since energetically worked with various charities and schools. When asked by the Daily Mail in 1999 about her long history of illness, her reply was simply that "none of us goes through life unscathed."

The effects of her undiagnosed disease gained her the reputation among Royalist circles as a "malingerer" who was routinely unwilling to perform basic public duties either owing to laziness or to benign mental illness. The eventual proof that she was in fact, suffering a legitimate physical illness and her subsequent full recovery has apparently done little to mitigate this negative perception. The Royal Family's rejection of her is thought to be a major reason she has in turn distanced herself from them (including her own husband) over the years, and is possibly why she insists on being called "Katharine Kent" or even "Katharine Worsley" in private life. It is also believed that it was her (unjustly assessed) example which especially hardened the Royals against Diana, Princess of Wales when the latter began to have emotional difficulties. The Queen Mother reportedly expressed a sentiment akin to "Not again!" (referring to Katharine Kent) when faced with Princess Diana's inability to live up to the Royal Family's expectations.

Though now fully recovered through following a Gluten-free diet, she reportedly still suffers bouts of depression. As she told the BBC in 2004, when asked to comment on rumours about her having been depressed, "Aren't we all? We all get slightly low periods in our lives, don't we?" In 1998, she told an interviewer about her lack of confidence. "I can still be very shy walking into a room full of strangers," she said. "I know how to do it, but I have never gained confidence. It is one of the reasons I am always trying to boost other people's self-esteem; because I know what it's like not to have it."

  • Informally, 1990s –: Katharine, Duchess of Kent (or privately, Katharine Kent)

  1. ^ As a titled royal, Katharine holds no surname, but, when one is used, it is Windsor or her territorial designation, Kent
Order of precedence in the United Kingdom
Preceded by
The Duchess of Gloucester
Ladies Succeeded by
Princess Michael of Kent
Academic offices
Preceded by
Mary, Princess Royal
Chancellor of the University of Leeds
19651998
Succeeded by
Melvyn Bragg
Preceded by
Birgitte, Duchess of Gloucester
Canadian order of precedence
as of 2007
Succeeded by
Princess Michael of Kent
Persondata
NAME Kent, Katharine
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Windsor, Katharine Lucy Mary; Worsley, Katharine Lucy Mary
SHORT DESCRIPTION Wife of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent
DATE OF BIRTH 22 February 1933
PLACE OF BIRTH Hovingham, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
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