Prince Charles, Camilla Parker Bowles
Camilla Parker Bowles wore a tiara at the state banquet that she and Prince Charles attended on Tuesday. Pictured: Prince Charles, Bowles view Dutch items from the Royal Collection at Buckingham Palace on October 23, 2018 in London, United Kingdom. Getty Images/Chris J Ratcliffe-WPA Pool

Camilla Parker Bowles recently sparked rumors that she will soon become Queen after she was photographed in a tiara at a state banquet on Tuesday.

The Duchess of York stunned in the massive honeycomb headpiece that she wore when she met the King and Queen of the Netherlands. Bowles was also joined by Prince Charles and Queen Elizabeth II at the gathering. Her Majesty also wore a beautiful tiara to the official engagement.

Bowles’ tiara has been worn by the mom of two multiple times since it was given to her by the Queen years after her wedding to Prince Charles. The tiara previously belonged to Queen Mother but was passed on to her daughter, the current monarch.

Earlier this year, Professor Pavlos Eleftheriadis told Daily Star that Bowles will become Queen when Prince Charles becomes King and after Her Majesty dies.

Camilla will be a Queen in the limited legal sense of being the wife of the sovereign, or ‘Queen Consort,’” he said.

It is up to Bowles if she wants to be called the Queen, Queen Consort, or Princess Consort in public. But in official documents, she will be listed either as the Queen or the Queen Consort.

“She cannot be forced to be called ‘Queen Consort,’ but her role as the wife of the King is, by definition, that of Queen. That is, however, a very limited role, which need not involve the use of the title ‘Queen.’ It is clear that Camilla is the wife of Prince Charles, the future sovereign. The civil ceremony was valid. Permission for the marriage was given by the Privy Council in March 2005 under the Royal Marriages Act of 1772. This cannot be any longer in dispute. So when he accedes to the throne, she will be the wife of the king. The wife of the head of state is not a joint head of state, however. The sovereign reigns on his or her own,” he explained.