A royal author has claimed Catherine, the Princess of Wales considered "refusing" the title she inherited from her late mother in law, Princess Diana, when it was bestowed upon her in 2022. According to Robert Jobson, the royal was concerned about comparisons being drawn between her and Diana, who was killed in a tragic car crash in 1997. READ MORE: Meghan opens up about past 'trauma', mental health struggles "She knew she'd inevitably be compared with Diana, whose untimely death had provoked such a tsunami of anger and grief.

And she was right," Jobson wrote in an excerpt from his new book Catherine, The Princess of Wales: A Biography of the Future Queen, published in the Daily Mail. He claimed that Catherine used to find talk of one day taking the title of Princess of Wales "stressful" and initially shied away from it. "Indeed, it got to the point where she felt she might follow Camilla (who opted to become Duchess of Cornwall) in refusing — when the time came — to be known as HRH Princess of Wales," Jobson wrote.

READ MORE: Kate's summer plans confirmed as cancer treatment continues Camilla was also technically entitled to the title, as she was married to Charles when he was the Prince of Wales, however she never used it. But when Queen Elizabeth II died in late 2022 and her son Charles became King of England, Catherine and her husband Prince William were made Prince and Princess of Wales. Unlike Camilla, Catherine seemingly decided to embrace the title that h.