Prince William has reportedly uncovered a long-forgotten decree buried in the Royal Vault beneath St. George's Chapel, Windsor, threatening to upend Queen Camilla's position just as she solidifies her reign. Unearthed during urgent estate audits amid King Charles's health struggles,
the 1953 document—allegedly authored by Queen Mary—stipulates ironclad limits on "non-blood consorts," potentially stripping Camilla of key privileges.
Deep within the vault housing centuries of royal secrets, William's legal team accessed sealed archives tied to Queen Elizabeth II's private estates.
The decree, marked "Succession Safeguard Protocol," bars non-direct-line spouses from inheriting administrative control over crown properties or influencing wills post-widowhood. Dated post-Queen Mary's death, it echoes George V-era paranoia about American divorcées destabilizing the throne, explicitly targeting Camilla's trajectory.
The parchment demands "blood primacy" for Wales-line heirs, voiding consort-led alterations—like those recently tied to Charlotte's erased inheritance. William, consolidating Green Heath and Duchy assets, views it as divine vindication, accelerating purges of Camilla's family perks. Insiders claim Charles, blindsided, faces an impossible choice: defy grandmother's edict or alienate son, with whispers of title reviews gaining traction.
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