Beatrice and Eugenie may be princesses by birth but theyâre âraising their children their wayâ and âgiving them freedom,â according to a royal author. Princess Beatrice, 37, shares daughters, Sienna, four, and Athena, one, with her property developer husband, Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, while Princess Eugenie, 35, has two sons, August, four, and Ernest, two, with Jack Brooksbank.
Beatrice is also stepmother to Edoardoâs nine-year-old son, Christopher Woolf, known as Wolfie, from his previous relationship with American architect Dara Huang.
âThe Princess has shown how a so-called blended family works,â royal author Robert Jobson tells us at HELLO!. âShe wed Edoardo in July 2020, when his son Wolfie was around four, and she was genuine too when she described being his stepmum as âa great honourâ.â
Wolfie splits his time between his time between his parentsâ homes in London, and has joined Beatrice and Edoardo at royal engagements, including Christmas at Sandringham and the Princess of Walesâs Christmas carol service.
âHis mother, Dara, has confirmed the arrangement worked, saying the two sets of parents were both helping to raise him with no drama. Just good parenting,â Robert comments.
In an interview with Harperâs Bazaar in 2024, Dara opened up about co-parenting, saying: âWolfie has had two sets of parents trying to help him on both sides, and I just think, âThe more, the merrier.â
âI feel lucky to have such positive people around him, who really embrace him â because it didnât have to be so easy.â
Keeping their children off social media
Like many modern parents in the digital age, Beatrice and Edoardo are protective of their childrenâs privacy. Siennaâs birth in September 2021 was announced with just a picture of her footprints, and the couple have not shared images of their daughtersâ faces publicly in a move to maintain their privacy as they grow up.
Eugenie has a public profile and while she has posted images of her sons August and Ernest in the past, she has noticeably opted to only share photographs of her children from behind in recent months.
And while Beatrice and Eugenie have both shared some anecdotes about motherhood, the Princesses have consciously not involved their children in their public life.
One subject that Beatrice has opened up about is her daughter Athenaâs premature birth. Thursday marked a particularly emotional day for the royal as Athena celebrated her first birthday.
The tot was born several weeks prematurely on 22 January 2025 with the Princess bravely opening up about her daughterâs birth in an essay for British Vogue saying her baby was âso tiny it took more than a few weeks for the tears of relief to dryâ.
Since then, Beatrice has become patron of prematurity research charity Borne and has called for increased research and support into prematurity, as she admitted that the experience can be âincredibly lonelyâ.
No royal titles
Neither Edoardo nor Jack were given titles by the late Queen Elizabeth II upon their respective marriages, meaning that their children go by âMasterâ or âMissâ.
âThe royal sisters have both avoided complications for their children by avoiding royal and aristocratic titles,â Robert tells us. âTheir children are simply August and Ernest Brooksbank and Sienna and Athena Mapelli Mozzi. It means less scrutiny and means they can avoid the burden of being truly public figures.â
The Princesses each have their charitable endeavours, but they do not carry out royal duties. Eugenie works as a director at art gallery Hauser & Wirth while Beatrice works for tech company Afiniti.
Robert describes the sisters as âworking mums with proper jobsâ and âhands-onâ.
âThe York princesses grew up close enough to see how the royal system works, very close to the late Queen and Prince Philip,â he says. âBut they were distant enough to see the difficulty it brings. They are raising their children their way â and in doing so giving them freedom.â
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