Kate Middleton with her son Prince George at the Defence Establishment Fairbairn in Canberra on April 25, 2014.

Princess Kate’s cute pregnancy nickname for Prince George revealed

The Princess of Wales suffered from severe sickness, hyperemesis gravidarum, in each of her three pregnancies

Parenting Editor
Updated: October 6, 2023

The Prince and Princess of Wales’ eldest child, Prince George, was born on 22 July 2013, named after his great-great-grandfather, King George VI, the father of the late Queen Elizabeth II.

Many mothers give their babies sweet nicknames during their pregnancies, and it’s thought that Princess Kate did this exact thing with her firstborn.

WATCH: British royal babies make their debuts

Royal correspondent Katie Nicholl wrote in Vanity Fair back in 2013: “Although Kate apparently suspected it was a boy and had set her heart on the name Alexander, they had not yet decided what to call their firstborn. 

"Kate was reported to have affectionately referred to her bump as “our little grape” while she was pregnant, and there was a flurry of betting on possible names.”

How adorable, their little grape!

Different fruits are often used to illustrate the size of a baby in the womb at varying stages of pregnancy, and a grape represents his or her size at week nine. We wonder if the grape nickname originated at that stage?

baby prince george© Photo: Getty Images
Prince George as a baby

William and Kate announced they were expecting their first child on 3 December 2012 and Prince George was born in the Lindo Wing of St Mary's Hospital in London, weighing 8lb 6oz at 4.24pm on 22 July 2013. Kate is said to have delivered him naturally.

The Princess has previously opened up about the moment George was born, telling Giovanna Fletcher: "Amazing, amazing. It is extraordinary as I've said. How can the human body do that? It is utterly extraordinary, actually. And he was very sweet. And also sort of relieved that he was a happy, healthy boy."

© Chris Jackson
Kate Middleton the Princess of Wales

In 2017, doctors from Kate's healthcare team shared details of the pregnancy and birth.

Professor Tiong Ghee Teoh, a consultant obstetrician, and gynaecologist, and anaesthesiologist Dr Johanna Bray were a part of the royal's 23-member medical team on call three months prior to the birth in case extra assistance was required.

© Getty
Prince George's christening in 2013

"We had a huge team,” Professor Teoh revealed. "Anything that could possibly go wrong, we had a team of people behind each speciality." He added, "Everyone was sworn to secrecy."

The Princess of Wales’s Imperial College Healthcare team included two obstetricians, three midwives, three anaesthetists, four surgical staff members, two special care baby-unit staff, four paediatricians, one lab technician and three to four managers.

More Parenting

See more