It’s a girl! British royal succession rules to change

PERTH, Australia, (Reuters) – Centuries of British  royal discrimination came to an end yesterday after Commonwealth  leaders agreed to drop rules that give sons precedence as heir  to the throne and bar anyone in line for the crown from marrying  a Roman Catholic.

The 16 countries that have Queen Elizabeth as their monarch  agreed to the changes put forward by British Prime Minister  David Cameron, who had called the rules of succession outdated.

“The idea that a younger son should become monarch instead  of an elder daughter simply because he is a man, or that a  future monarch can marry someone of any faith except a Catholic,  this way of thinking is at odds with the modern countries that  we’ve all become,” Cameron told reporters.

The agreement came on the sidelines of a Commonwealth summit  presided over by the Queen in the remote west Australian city of  Perth.

Current succession rules dating back to 1688 and 1700 were  designed to ensure a Protestant monarchy, and bar anyone in line  to the throne from marrying a Catholic.

Only a Catholic link is barred. There are no restrictions on  marrying members of other religions or atheists.

The rules have their roots in a turbulent period of English  history dating back to Henry VIII’s break with Rome in the mid-  16th century. The laws were imposed at a time when Catholics  were seen as a threat to the state.