I hate to dash any other peoples answers, but his actual name, while it SHOULD be Windsor is actually
Charles Philip Arthur George Mountbatten-Windsor.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles,_Prince_of_Wales
2007-01-06 10:18:08
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answer #1
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answered by AdamKadmon 7
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The Prince Charles, Prince of Wales (Charles Philip Arthur George Mountbatten-Windsor; born Windsor, 14 November 1948), is the eldest son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
2007-01-06 10:33:42
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answer #2
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answered by Martha P 7
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What Is Prince Charles Last Name Answers
2016-10-19 10:31:45
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answer #3
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answered by yuste 4
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Windsor
2007-01-08 07:27:49
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answer #4
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answered by Sarah* 7
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Windsor
2007-01-06 18:23:32
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Windsor
2007-01-06 12:37:26
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answer #6
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answered by maimunitza 1
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Camadida is right, it was Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, a very German name which was changed to Windsor, where the Royals happened to have a castle, around the time of WW1. We couldn't be fighting the Germans with a German royal family! So they were named after the town and not the other way round, (as I once heard an American tourist say!)
...after all, the Queen is just 'a German tourist with a Greek boyfriend'!!!...the REAL Britons are the Welsh and Cornish!!!
2007-01-06 10:16:32
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answer #7
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answered by throatgoat 1
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Mountbatten - Windsor.
All direct descendants of Prince Philip bear the name Mountbatten - Windsor.
2007-01-08 07:58:50
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answer #8
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answered by rachiedodie 2
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The British royal family is known as the House of Windsor.
royal family does have a last name, and they do use it from time to time. This wasn't always the case. Queen Victoria's husband, Prince Albert, was a member of the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, so her descendants were part of that dynasty. This, however, was not the family's last name. They didn't have one, because they didn't need one, so they didn't worry about it. Experts later worried about it for them and decided their name was probably "Witten" (or maybe even Wipper).
The royal family's official name, or lack thereof, became a problem during World War I, when people began to mutter that Saxe-Coburg-Gotha sounded far too German. King George V and his family needed a new, English-sounding name. After considering every possible name, from Plantagenet to Tudor-Stuart to simply England, the king and his advisors chose the name Windsor.
2007-01-06 14:05:16
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answer #9
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answered by hitan_2005 3
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Mountbatten-Windsor
2007-01-06 10:29:59
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answer #10
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answered by Sandy Lou 4
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