Congratulatory messages
are flooding in from around the world to mark the birth of the Duke and
Duchess of Cambridge's son, the third in line to the throne. Prince William said the couple "could not be happier"
following the birth of the boy, who weighed 8lb 6oz and is yet to be
named, at 16:24 BST on Monday.
BBC royal correspondent Nicholas Witchell said the expectation is that they will leave hospital on Tuesday.The birth will also be marked later with a series of gun salutes.
The duke was at the private Lindo Wing of St Mary's Hospital,
west London, for the birth - and stayed with Catherine and the baby
overnight.
Leaving hospital
The couple are expected to talk to their medical team before they make any decision to go home.
BBC royal correspondent Peter Hunt said that in the meantime
it was unlikely the Queen would visit her great-grandchild in hospital,
adding "she can of course see him privately once he leaves".
The public - along with members of the global press - are waiting for a first glimpse of the royal baby outside the hospital
After the new arrival was announced in a
statement issued by Kensington Palace, a large cheer went up from
well-wishers and journalists outside the hospital.
A written bulletin was then displayed on an easel at
Buckingham Palace where royal watchers and tourists are queuing in the
rain to catch a glimpse.
The palace has said the historic notice will only be on show
for 24 hours, indicating it is likely to be removed just after 20:00.
Name announcement
The world now awaits the couple's choice of names for their
son, with George the bookmakers' favourite, followed by James and
Alexander.
Nicholas Witchell said the scale of the international
interest was "pretty awesome", and "quite threatening in a sense". He
said the couple would be "knocked back" when they step out of the
hospital.
The arrival generated headlines and celebrations around the world, and prompted messages of goodwill to flood in:
- New Yorkers were informed of the news when it was tickered in lights at Times Square
- In London, Trafalgar Square was lit blue for a boy, while the BT Tower delivered the message: "It's a boy!"
- At its peak, there were more than 25,000 tweets per minute about the royal baby's birth
- US president Barack Obama said: "We wish them all the happiness and blessings parenthood brings" while Australian PM Kevin Rudd said Australians wished "the royal bub all the best"
- The Archbishop of Canterbury, Most Reverend Justin Welby, greeted the news by saying: "Along with millions here and around the world, I share in their joy at this special time"
- The village of Bucklebury in Berkshire - Catherine's childhood home - was "intensely delighted at the birth", said the BBC's Ben Moore
- A specially-filmed scene will be inserted into Tuesday's edition of EastEnders to mark the birth
At 14:00 BST, the King's Troop Royal Horse Artillery
will stage a 41-gun salute in Green Park, after riding past Buckingham
Palace.
At the same time, the Honourable Artillery Company - the City
of London's army reserve regiment - will fire a 62-gun salute from Gun
Wharf at the Tower of London.
And the church bells of Westminster Abbey, where William and
Catherine were married in April 2011, are expected to ring out for three
hours from 14:00.
'Doing well'
Following the birth announcement, a statement from Kensington Palace said the Royal Family were "delighted".
William and Catherine - said by officials to be "so, so happy"
- spent the night, a thundery and wet one, with their newborn son in
their private maternity suite.
After a labour which had lasted at least 10 hours - and despite the clamour for information from an expectant world - the couple did what most new parents do. They spent time alone bonding with their son.
Soon, they will have to leave their cocoon and present their prince to those eager for a glimpse of the baby.
When they leave, they will be photographed on the steps of the Lindo Wing, just as baby William was back in 1982.
His son's birth will be marked with gun salutes and the pealing of church bells.
It is a celebratory reception the one-day-old royal will have to get used to.
He is a prince who one day, as things stand, will be a king.
After a labour which had lasted at least 10 hours - and despite the clamour for information from an expectant world - the couple did what most new parents do. They spent time alone bonding with their son.
Soon, they will have to leave their cocoon and present their prince to those eager for a glimpse of the baby.
When they leave, they will be photographed on the steps of the Lindo Wing, just as baby William was back in 1982.
His son's birth will be marked with gun salutes and the pealing of church bells.
It is a celebratory reception the one-day-old royal will have to get used to.
He is a prince who one day, as things stand, will be a king.
The Duchess of Cornwall, on a
two-day visit to Yorkshire with the Prince of Wales, said it was a
"wonderfully uplifting moment for the country" and that mother and baby
were "doing well".
The prince said he was "thrilled and very excited", as the couple were congratulated by well-wishers during a walkabout.
"Grandparenthood is a unique moment in anyone's life, as
countless kind people have told me in recent months, so I am enormously
proud and happy to be a grandfather for the first time and we are
eagerly looking forward to seeing the baby in the near future," said the
prince in a statement on Monday night.
Royal doctor Mr Setchell described the new arrival as a "wonderful baby, beautiful baby".
Prime Minister David Cameron, speaking outside Downing Street, hailed the "wonderful news".
The birth of the prince means the monarchy has three generations of heirs to the throne for the first time since 1894.
Nicholas Witchell said the third in line to the throne could
expect to be brought up in a "secure and loving environment", shielded
from many of the pressures of ordinary life but facing the specific
challenges his position will bring.
The baby's future, he said, will be "a lifetime of public
curiosity and, in due course, the responsibility of refreshing and
taking forward the ancient institution that is the world's best-known
hereditary monarchy".
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