The Royal Family has officially updated its website to reflect the latest dramatic change to the line of succession following the stripping of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s remaining titles.
Buckingham Palace confirmed on October 17 that Andrew would no longer be known as the Duke of York, with all honours and styles formally removed.
Until now, the site still listed him as “Duke of York” in the eighth position in the line of succession, directly after Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet.
But the update has finally been made: the entry now appears simply as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, marking the end of his public identity as a titled royal.
In a further sign of his erasure from official royal materials, Andrew’s profile page disappeared entirely earlier this month.
Attempts to visit his former page, royal.uk/the-duke-of-york, now return the message: “The requested page could not be found.”
The fresh update comes as Andrew faces yet another blow, this time from local government in Northern Ireland.
Councillors in Mid and East Antrim have reportedly voted to rename Prince Andrew Way in Carrickfergus, further distancing the community from the disgraced royal.
Andrew and his former wife Sarah Ferguson, who has also been stripped of her York title, are preparing to leave Royal Lodge, their 30-room home in Windsor.
Their eviction follows the renewed fallout over their long-criticised connections to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
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