Princess Eugenie and her new fiance are actually related - here's how
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- Princess Eugenie and Jack Brooksbank announced their engagement on Monday.
- The pair, who have dated since 2010, have a common ancestor in 19th-century earl Thomas William Coke.
- See exactly how the two are related in the chart below.
Princess Eugenie and London socialite Jack Brooksbank announced their engagement on Monday, heralding a second royal wedding in the space of a few months.
The announcement also prompts an observation almost as old as the British royal family itself: that the newly-betrothed couple are blood relatives.
Eugenie and Brooksbank are distant cousins - third cousins once removed, to be precise. This chart explains what's going on:
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They couple share a common ancestor in the 19th-century aristocrat Thomas William Coke, the 2nd Earl of Leicester.
We found the connection via thepeerage.com, an online database of European aristocracy sourced from a variety of historical texts. Coke's entry is here, and you can click through each descendant to Brooksbank and Eugenie.
Coke is Eugenie's great-great-great-great grandfather, on the side of her mother Sarah, Duchess of York (widely known as "Fergie").
Coke is also Brooksbank's great-great grandfather, via his second marriage.
Since this marriage came when Coke was older, and also because of later marriages further down the line, there are fewer generations on the Brooksbank side of the family.
Eugenie's royal lineage comes from another section of her family tree, via her father Prince Andrew, who is the second son of Queen Elizabeth II.
The heritage gives her a claim to the British throne, though as eighth in the line of succession her chance of ever being queen is virtually non-existent.
The phenomenon is not uncommon, especially given the relatively contained social circles in which the British aristocracy has traditionally moved. Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, by comparison, are related even more closely, and have a common ancestor in Queen Victoria.
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Historically, royal families were very closely linked because it was strongly discouraged to marry outside of the aristocracy. Until relatively recently, all descendants of the British monarch were legally obliged to ask his or her permission before marrying.
In 2015, the British Parliament replaced that rule with a more limited one which only requires consent from the first six in the line of succession.
However, in practice Eugenie still ended up with someone very closely linked to aristocratic circles when she and Brooksbank started dating in 2010.
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