Prince Edward will attend new Pope Leo XIV’s inauguration on behalf of King Charles next week

PRINCE Edward will represent King Charles at the inauguration of Pope Leo XIV next week.

Robert Prevost, 69, is the first ever American to helm the Catholic Church after being voted in earlier this week.

Cardinal waving to the crowd.
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Robert Prevost will be Pope Leo XIVCredit: Reuters
The Duke of Edinburgh speaking at a gold award ceremony.
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Prince Edward speaking during the gold award celebrations for the Duke of Edinburgh’s award yesterdayCredit: PA

And the Duke of Edinburgh will be the royal representation at the new Pope's inauguration next Sunday, Buckingham Palace have said.

The inauguration will take place May 18, at around 10am local time at St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City.

Ahead of the inauguration, Leo has a busy schedule as he familiarises himself with the papal responsibilities.

He's due to have meetings with cardinals and hold prayer sessions before he is officially named pontiff.

On Thursday evening, Leo XIV stepped out onto the red draped balcony in the Vatican in front of 15,000 Catholic faithful and spoke in Italian and Spanish, addressing the world.

Crowds in St Peter's Square erupted into chants of "Viva il Papa" and screams of happiness as the sacred Conclave ritual came to an end.

The Vatican's enormous bells rang to mark the end of the search for the successor to St Peter - and the beloved Pope Francis.

He is seen as more traditional than Francis - but not the conservative hardliner some in the church were hoping for after his predecessor's efforts to make the faith more progressive.

Crowds in the Vatican waved flags and danced as the historic moment was broadcast around the world and marked from Spain to Tonga.

The new pontiff urged people to "build bridges through dialogue, through encounter, to come together as one people, always in peace", before paying homage to Pope Francis.

Leo secured at least 89 votes of the 133 cardinals participating in the secretive lock-in Conclave in order to be picked.

The successful vote for the new leader of the world's 1.4billion Catholics came after three rounds of voting which could not produce a result.