4 published verifications about British Royal Family British Royal Family ×
“Queen Camilla is a member of the British royal family.”
Authoritative and independent sources consistently identify Camilla as Queen and as part of the British royal family. The claim matches common, institutional, and reference-source usage, including membership by marriage as the King’s consort. Terminology changes such as “Queen Consort” versus “Queen Camilla” do not alter that status.
“William, Prince of Wales, is a member of the British Royal Family.”
Authoritative official and independent sources consistently identify William, Prince of Wales, as a member of the British Royal Family. The claim is straightforward, uses standard public terminology, and is directly confirmed rather than inferred. Minor errors in weaker sources do not change the conclusion.
“Catherine, Princess of Wales, is a member of the British royal family.”
Authoritative official and independent sources consistently identify Catherine, Princess of Wales, as part of the British royal family. The claim matches both official royal communications and standard usage in major news and reference works. Any debate over a formal legal definition of “membership” does not change the practical and publicly recognized reality.
“The British royal family owns one-third of all countries in the world.”
The claim is not supported by the evidence. The British royal family does not own countries; in Commonwealth realms, the monarch serves as a constitutional head of state in independent sovereign nations. The number is also wildly wrong: even the broadest relevant count is about 15 countries, not one-third of the world.