Queen Camilla objected to Prince William marrying ‘common’ Kate Middleton.mc

Queen Camilla used to be one of Kate Middleton’s “fiercest critics” — and “did object” to her marrying Prince William.

King Charles’ wife believed the now-Princess of Wales, 44, was “too common” to wed William in 2011, according to Christopher Andersen’s “Kate!” biography, out last week.

“She did not think she was up to snuff, as it were,” the new book reads. “She was below the salt. She had no aristocratic blood.”

Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall smile during a Remembrance Day Ceremony.
Queen Camilla allegedly “did object” to Kate Middleton (pictured above in November 2011) becoming Prince William’s wife.Getty Images

He claimed Camilla “always saw herself as the mistress of a king, not a queen” and “picked [Princess] Diana to be Charles’ bride” in 1981.

Anderson noted that “the palace didn’t really want” Middleton, whom William met attending the University of St Andrews in Scotland.

“People like Camilla didn’t want her because they felt that she was too common to be the wife of a future king,” the biographer wrote, alleging the 78-year-old “did object” to her daughter-in-law’s “working-class roots.”

Kate Middleton in a black suit and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall in a white outfit, both wearing hats, attending the Order of the Garter service.
Camilla reportedly believed Middleton (pictured above in June 2008) was “too common” and “not up to snuff.”Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images
Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, riding in a horse-drawn carriage.
Camilla (pictured above in June 2011) reportedly wanted her stepson to wed someone with “aristocratic blood.”Getty Images

Kate’s parents, Carole Middleton and Michael Middleton, are former British Airways employees who founded a successful party supply business.

“[Camilla] was very cognizant of the fact that a future king of England should have, she believed, a marriage to a royal personage, or at least a British aristocrat,” Anderson wrote — not “a descendant of coal miners whose mother had grown up in public housing and once worked as a flight attendant.”

Camilla allegedly believed Carole to be a “gauche opportunist” and “knew a schemer when she saw one.”

Prince William wearing a cap and Kate Middleton watching a rugby match.
William and Kate (pictured above in February 2007) met in college and got engaged in 2010.Getty Images
Prince William and Kate Middleton holding hands after their wedding ceremony at Westminster Abbey.
The couple tied the knot in April 2011.Getty Images

Reps for Camilla and Kate did not immediately respond to Page Six’s request for comment.

Kate and William, 43, got engaged in October 2010 and tied the knot in April of the following year.

Ahead of the 2011 nuptials, Camilla and Charles, 77, reportedly “offended” the bride by requesting she change the letter of her first name, Catherine, from a C to a K.

They believed another C royal cypher — a personalized monogram or emblem representing a royal family member — would be “overkill,” Anderson wrote.

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Prince William, Catherine Princess of Wales, and their three children attend a Christmas morning service.
They have since welcomed three children (pictured above in December 2024).Samir Hussein/WireImage
(L-R) Queen Camilla, King Charles III, Prince William, and Catherine, Princess of Wales pose for a photograph ahead of The Diplomatic Reception at Buckingham Palace.
While Camilla (pictured above in December 2023) was allegedly often “sniping” at Middleton during the couple’s early days, the princess “never put a foot wrong.”Getty Images

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When William was left allegedly “fuming” over the “insult,” the subject was dropped.

The author claimed Kate and William’s early days included “a lot of sniping from the sidelines, much of it coming from Camilla’s camp” — but the princess “never put a foot wrong.”

Kate and the Prince of Wales have since welcomed three children — Prince George, 12, Princess Charlotte, 11, and Prince Louis, 8.