Showing posts with label Catherine Elizabeth Kate Middleton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catherine Elizabeth Kate Middleton. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
It's a baby boy for Prince William and wife Kate
LONDON - Prince William's wife Kate gave birth to a baby boy on Monday, providing Britain's royal family with a future king in an event that had been anticipated around the world, Kensington palace said.
Crowds cheered and rushed towards the gates of Buckingham Palace as it was announced that the Duchess of Cambridge had produced a male heir weighing 8 lbs 6 oz (3.8 kilos).
The baby will be third in line to the throne and in the direct line of succession after head of state Queen Elizabeth II's eldest son and heir Prince Charles, and then his eldest son William.
"Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge was safely delivered of a son at 4:24 p.m. (1524 GMT)," Kensington Palace said in a statement just over four hours afterwards.
"The baby weighs 8lbs 6oz. The Duke of Cambridge was present for the birth."
"Her Royal Highness and her child are both doing well and will remain in hospital overnight," said the statement from the Royal Household, which sidestepped tradition to announce the birth with a press release.
"The Queen, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Prince of Wales, The Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Harry and members of both families have been informed and are delighted with the news," it read.
The boy's name was not revealed, but he will be known as Prince of Cambridge.
The former Kate Middleton was admitted to the private Lindo Wing of St. Mary's Hospital, Paddington, central London, at around 6:00 a.m. in the midst of a summer thunderstorm.
The birth was later officially announced to great cheers on a golden easel placed in the forecourt of Buckingham Palace.
US President Barack Obama's spokesman had earlier said that he and the first family were "waiting with anticipation" for the birth and "wish the family and all of Great Britain well on this pending momentous occasion."
William, at his wife's bedside, has been on annual leave and will take two weeks' paternity leave from his military job as a Royal Air Force search and rescue pilot.
Both mother and son were "doing well" and will remain in hospital overnight while the queen was "delighted with the news", according to the palace.
The birth came later than widely expected, adding to the sense of anticipation that has built up ever since William, whose mother Diana died in a Paris car crash in 1997, and the former Kate Middleton married with huge fanfare in April 2011.
Bookmakers had largely backed a girl baby, after Kate had said they did not know its sex.
The fact that it is a boy relieves the need to rush through new succession laws across the 16 Commonwealth realms, which would mean that a girl could no longer be overtaken by any future younger brothers.
The royal couple used a back entrance to the hospital when they arrived at 6:00 a.m. (0500 GMT), missing the ranks of international media who have camped outside the hospital for three weeks.
The prince was born in the same hospital wing and media from across the globe are hoping for a repeat of the scene in 1982 when Charles and his first wife Diana brought out the baby to show him off to the world.
Royal fanatics gathering outside the hospital also took their excitement to a new level.
"I'm so excited. Like in a washing machine. Never been so high!" said John Loughrey, who has slept outside the hospital for seven nights, wrapped in a British flag.
The new arrival is Queen Elizabeth's third great-grandchild, and a first grandchild for Charles.
It ensures that there are three generations of heirs to the crown of the United Kingdom of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland -- a nuclear-armed UN Security Council permanent member and the world's sixth biggest economy.
The queen was seen arriving back at Buckingham Palace from Windsor Castle, just outside the capital, in mid-afternoon but other royals went about their usual business.
Charles, the current heir, was visiting York in northern England, where members of the public shouted "Congratulations!".
Smiling, he replied: "Do you know something I don't?"
Charles, who turns 65 in November, joked: "I'm very grateful indeed for the kind wishes for my rather slowly-approaching grandfatherhood."
Prime Minister David Cameron sent his best wishes to the couple and the "whole country is excited."
The pregnancy was announced in December when Kate was admitted to hospital with severe morning sickness.
At the Lindo Wing, a standard room and normal delivery -- which Kate is hoping for -- costs £4,965 ($7,600, 5,800 euros) for the first 24 hours, plus consultants' fees which can reach around £6,000.
The duchess is being tended by a top medical team led by the queen's gynecologist Alan Farthing and his predecessor Marcus Setchell, obstetrician Guy Thorpe-Beeston, and consultant neonatologist Sunit Godambe
On the pavement opposite the hospital entrance, around 30 presenters lined up in a row delivering live broadcasts and clips, with photographers and journalists filling out the scene.
There has been a betting frenzy on the name of the royal newborn with bookmakers favouring a George and James for the top boys' names. With a report from Belinda Goldsmith, Reuters
source: interaksyon.com
Monday, July 22, 2013
Last-minute bets pour in for British royal baby
LONDON - A flood of last-minute bets on Britain's royal baby poured in on Monday even as Prince William's wife Catherine was in hospital in labor.
Most of the money was going on the name of the third-in-line to the throne, with one bookie suspending betting on the subject.
"The money really is pouring in. We have taken about £30,000 ($45,000, 35,000 euros) in the last three hours. It's unbelievable," Rory Scott, a spokesman for Irish bookmakers Paddy Power, told AFP.
"The majority of that is on the name. We have suspended betting on the date."
Speculation that the baby is a girl, based on a misheard comment by Kate in March, means girls' names are most popular with the punters.
"There is a clear view that the baby will be a girl so there is lots of activity around girls' names," a spokeswoman for British betting firm William Hill told AFP.
"Alexandra and Charlotte are the most popular."
Other favored names are Diana, William's mother's name; Elizabeth, after the current queen; and Victoria, after Britain's longest reigning monarch.
Those who think the baby will be a boy have plumped for George and James.
James is the name of Kate's brother but George has been the favorite "from day one", say the bookies.
Bookies say they have taken more than £1 million in total on what they have called the biggest novelty (non-sporting) market of all time.
Bets have come in from around the world with one Austrian man placing £1,000 on a male baby.
Scott said the amount of money is "quite staggering" and compared to what would be placed on English football's FA Cup final.
"We have taken about £10,000 a day over the weekend," he said.
The most bets by volume have been on the name Diana but they have been smaller amounts of money and it has drifted out of the odds, he said.
The date itself seems nearly certain with firms suspending the betting on Monday now that the Duchess of Cambridge is in labor.
In the run-up it was an unpopular choice of day, though.
"The 17th was the most popular. Only five percent of the bets were placed on today -- today was an outsider," said the William Hill spokeswoman.
"Everyone seemed to think that the baby would come last week."
Even after the birth there will be no rest for the betting firms, with people now betting on Kate's sister putting in an appearance.
"We are running bets now on the colour of the dress Pippa will be wearing on her first visit to the hospital and how many times Pippa will run the media gauntlet, how many times she will enter in the hospital and who will be holding the baby on the steps. The current favourite is William," Scott said.
There are also bets on the godparents with "the usual suspects -- David Beckham, Prince Harry, and Pippa" among the favorites, said the William Hill spokeswoman.
And the betting bonanza could go on for years -- firms are already taking wagers on baby number two.
source: interaksyon.com
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