1 Why This Affects Just Royal Women
The Telegraph explains that “royal women are expected to bow and curtsy to one another, popping up and down like whack-a-moles,” because of a 2005 document written by the late queen’s private secretary. It’s called “Precedence of the Royal Family to be Observed at Court,” and it delineates precisely where female royals sit, seniority-wise, in relation to each other. Royal men have no such complicated prescription: They just bow to each other everywhere. 2 The Original Camilla Question
ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb Of course, everyone is expected to bow or curtsy to the monarch. It was so under Queen Elizabeth and will continue with King Charles. But Charles’s mate caused a bit of a to-do. When Charles married Camilla in 2005, the previous protocol was that everyone would bow or curtsy to her as the wife of the heir to the throne, the Telegraph explains. But Queen Elizabeth mixed things up so that “blood princesses”—those born royal, such as Anne, Alexandra, Beatrice, and Eugenie—were moved ahead of Camilla in the pecking order. 3 Where Kate Fits In
Prince William married Kate Middleton in 2012, and she joined the curtsying continuum. Kate was expected to curtsy to blood princesses, such as Anne and Beatrice and Eugenie—but not if she was with her husband. 4 But What About Camilla Now?
Although Camilla is rock-solidly married to the British monarch, her ascension makes protocol somewhat fuzzy in a number of ways. First, although her official title is Queen Consort, there are rumors that she will be referred to only as Queen Camilla. She has now vaulted ahead of the blood princesses in curtsying order, she no longer has to curtsy to other Royal Family members, and the others must curtsy to her. But Hello! magazine reported that she will continue to do so when meeting other monarchs as a sign of respect.  5 Sons, Wives Must Bow/Curtsy to King

There’s a new protocol for King Charles’s sons and daughters-in-law, Hello! explains. Whenever they first acknowledge the king, Prince William and Prince Harry will be bow, while Kate Middleton and Meghan Markle will be required to curtsy. But will the entire order be rewritten by Charles, as his mother did? “It would be mistaken to think there has been any edict,” a royal source told the Telegraph. “There’s a massive in-tray of stuff, and all sorts of titles and patronages to deal with. Plus, the small matter of a coronation to plan.”