Prince George

Prince George, the late Queen Elizabeth II’s great-grandson, bragged about his father Prince William one day being king.
Image via Facebook
The Royal Family

‘Better watch out!’: Cheeky Prince George tells pals after squabble

Prince George cheekily once reminded his school classmates that his dad; Prince William, would one day be king.

Prince George

Prince George, the late Queen Elizabeth II’s great-grandson, bragged about his father Prince William one day being king.
Image via Facebook
The Royal Family

Prince George may be following in his father Prince William’s steps as heir to the throne, but it’s clear he has inherited some cheeky traits from his uncle Prince Harry.

This, after a new royal book claimed that the second-in-line once “told off” his classmates about his and his father’s future as kings.

PRINCE GEORGE TELLS HIS CLASSMATE OFF

In her book titled The New Royals, biographer Katie Nicholl focuses on the new generation of royals, particularly Willam and his wife Kate’s three children Prince George (9), Princess Charlotte (7), and Prince Louis (4).

According to the author, William and Kate are raising their children – particularly Prince George – with a “sense of duty”.

But whilst he has been raised with a relatively “normal family upbringing”, the boisterous blonde is acutely aware of his standing in society.

The author wrote: “’They are raising their children, particularly Prince George, with an awareness of who he is and the role he will inherit. But they are keen not to weigh them down with a sense of duty.

“George understands he will one day be king and as a little boy sparred with friends at school, outdoing his peers with the killer line: ‘My dad will be king so you better watch out’.

NORMAL CHILDHOOD FOR FUTURE KING

But whilst being England’s next king is the furthest thing from a normal childhood, the  book – released this month – claimed that the royals are trying not to “weigh Prince George down with too much responsibilities too soon”

In another royal book – Battle of Brothers by Robert Lacey, released in 2020 – it was revealed that Prince William and Princess Kate reportedly sat down their firstborn around his seventh birthday to explain his role in the monarchy.

It read: “Maybe one day George will tell us the story himself. But sometime around the boy’s seventh birthday in the summer of 2020, it is thought that his parents went into more detail about what the little prince’s life of future royal ‘service and duty’ would particularly involve.

‘William’s aim as a father, the prince stressed, was to give his son ‘a normal family upbringing’, enabling the monarchy ‘to stay relevant and keep up with modern times’.”