Prince Harry and his wife Meghan have been asked to vacate Frogmore Cottage, the house within the grounds of King Charles of England's estate at Windsor Castle that they use when they are in Britain, a spokesman for Britain said. the couple. Earlier, The Sun newspaper had reported that the monarch had offered the house to his brother, Prince Andrew.
Carlos' decision comes in the wake of the couple's damning revelations about Harry's father, older brother Prince William, and other royals in their recent memoir, a Netflix documentary, and a series of television interviews, the media reported.
"We can confirm that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have been asked to vacate their residence at Frogmore Cottage," a spokesperson for Harry and Meghan said.
Prince Andrew, the King's younger brother, was forced from his royal post because of his relationship with convicted American Jeffrey Epstein.
The newspaper has reported that Andres wants to stay in his current house instead of moving to Frogmore Cottage. Buckingham Palace declined to comment on the matter. A royal source has communicated that any such discussion would be a private family matter.
Frogmore Cottage remained his British residence
Harry and Meghan moved into Frogmore Cottage within the grounds of the Windsor Castle estate, west London, after their marriage in 2018. After stepping down from royal duties in 2020, they moved to California to forge new lives. and racing, but Frogmore Cottage remained his British residence.
They also agreed to return the 2.4 million pounds ($2.9 million) of taxpayers' money spent on renovating the house. Harry's cousin Eugenie, Andrew's youngest daughter, and her husband were allowed the use of the property after the couple left, but the Sun said they had since moved on.
Harry and Meghan have rarely returned to Britain since they departed for the United States, but have used Frogmore on the few occasions they have returned, such as for the late Queen Elizabeth's Platinum Jubilee celebrations last year.
Relations between the couple and the rest of the family have been further strained since then, following scathing criticisms leveled at the royals and their aides in their record-breaking book "Spare." The disagreements have cast doubt on whether Harry will attend his father's coronation in May.


