The Duke of York, Prince Andrew, has been subjected to financial boycott by his brother, King Charles, of Britain, according to an updated royal biography, according to the BBC website.
Prince Andrew was under financial pressure due to the cost of running his 30-room home at the Royal Lodge in Windsor.
But royal writer Robert Hardman now claims the monarch has decided to stop paying for security at Prince Andrew’s home or provide a personal allowance.
These combined costs are thought to amount to several million pounds sterling annually.
Buckingham Palace refused to comment on the book’s allegations, which were serialized by the Daily Mail.
The demand to stop Prince Andrew’s income comes from an updated version of King Charles’ biography, written by royal author Robert Hardman.
It says the private conservator, who looks after royal finances, has been instructed to end Prince Andrew’s personal allowances and security payments.
The King of Britain was not prepared to support Prince Andrew indefinitely, but this suggests that a final decision has now been made to cut off his services.
The Prince of York, who no longer has an official spokesman, has not yet responded to allegations regarding the loss of this funding.
But that means he will have to find his own way to pay for the upkeep and security of the Royal Lodge Hotel, a historic 19th-century building in Windsor.
It is believed there will be a high cost of maintaining the large property leased from the Crown Estate.