Cannons blaze as Monaco welcomes royal twins, Gabriella and Jacques
Prince Albert II of Monaco and his wife Charlene have welcomed twin babies Gabriella and Jacques to the world, as cannons roared and church bells tolled in the tiny Mediterranean principality.
Despite being born two minutes after his sister on Wednesday, Monaco’s succession laws mean Jacques is next in line to head the 700-year-old House of Grimaldi.
Gabriella Therese Marie was born at 5.04 pm followed by Jacques Honore Rainier at 5.06 pm, the palace said in a statement, adding that the newborns and their glamorous South African mother were “doing well”.
The babies replace Albert’s sister Caroline as next in line to the throne, and will likely draw a line on rumours of the royal couple’s supposedly rocky relationship.
The prince’s late father, Rainier III, had rewritten the constitution as he became ill in 2002 so one of his daughters could inherit if his son - who had fathered two children out of wedlock - failed to produce a legitimate heir.
But Albert, 56, finally married former Olympic swimmer Charlene, 36, in 2011 -- 11 years after the pair first met.