Childhood changes for Spain's eight-year-old queen-to-be

MADRID (AFP) - Like many eight-year-old girls, she eats in the school canteen and goes to ballet class. Her friends know her as Leonor - but now they will have to call her "Highness".

Her childhood will not be the same now that her father Felipe has been crowned king of Spain.

She is no longer "Infanta", like her younger sister Sofia, but Princess of Asturias - and is due one day to be Queen. She is the youngest direct royal heir in Europe.

The cameras are drawn to her blue eyes, blonde hair and toothy smile. Royal-watchers say those may be just the charms the Spanish royal family needs to save its image.

"Until now, her parents have deliberately protected her so that she is not in the papers all the time. Those days are over," said the prince's biographer, Mr Jose Apezarena.

"They will still try to minimise the impact on her personal life, but soon she is going to be the heir to the throne. It will change her life," he added.

"I feel a bit sorry for her because the change is going to take away some of her freedom."

King Felipe and his ex-newsreader wife, the new Queen Letizia, were already darlings of the celebrity press when Leonor was born on October 31, 2005.

The births of Leonor and Sofia, who is now seven, turned them into possibly the cutest royal family in the world: a tall prince, glamorous mother and two little girls with long blonde hair.

The couple have kept their daughters largely out of view so their childhoods can be as normal as possible.

The few glimpses of the girls allowed by the palace have shown them smiling as they hold hands with their mother and father or their grandmother, Queen Sofia.

"Leonor is a very intelligent child, very active but calm. She faces the cameras with great serenity," said Mr Apezarena.

"She is very caring towards her sister. She makes sure to give her advice and help," he said.

"She does the same things as her classmates, eats in school, goes to ballet class, and studies English."

She is said to speak good English, learned from her grandmother and a British nanny as well as at Holy Mary of the Rose Bushes, her expensive private school in western Madrid.

History is changing the childhood routines of Leonor de Borbon y Ortiz, however.

Just weeks before Felipe's father, King Juan Carlos, announced his abdication on June 2, Leonor made her first official royal outing.

In a white cardigan and green shorts, she stood beside her father in his blue air force uniform to watch a ceremonial fly-past on May 2.

Royal-watchers say Juan Carlos, 76, had already decided to step aside and the outing was the start of Leonor's new higher-profile role as future heir to the throne.

She is expected to follow the same preparation for the crown as her father did, with military training when she is older. At 18, she must swear loyalty to the king and the constitution.

"They have been explaining to her for some time who she is, who her parents and grandparents are, and what their role is in the country," said Mr Apezarena, author of a recent book about Felipe and Letizia.

"She has been listening to that, but she is still very young."

Behind the walls of the royal Zarzuela Palace and Holy Mary of the Rose Bushes, Leonor may hear little of the noisy street protests by those who want Spain to be a republic.

Felipe is tasked with trying to win over Spaniards fed up at corruption scandals and two recessions.

For that, the new heiress could be one of his biggest assets.

"Whenever the infantas Leonor and Sofia appear in public, they win the affection of the people. They are very pretty girls and seem very well brought up," Apezarena said.

"We are going to be seeing a lot more of those images from now on, and they are going to help the new king to win over the people."

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