Prince Andrew ‘Bedde at least a dozen women during the marriage’

Prince Andrew once confessed to his wife Sarah Ferguson: “I am a prince than a naval officer than a husband.”
But Radaronline.com Can reveal according to explosive claims in a new book, he was also a productive Womanizer in the early months of their marriage – and reportedly slept with more than a dozen women in their first year as a man and woman.
The revelations come from Titled: The real story of the Duke of YorkBy royal biographer Andrew Lownie, who paints a picture of a man who is derived from Royal duty and marriage by a series of things, even if his wife, the Duchess of York, was pregnant with their first child.
A source told us that the new claims Andrew earned the nickname “Dirty Duke” behind closed doors in July 1986, when he married 26-year-old Sarah Ferguson in a lush ceremony in Westminster Abbey.
Within a few months after their marriage, marriage was crumbling, plagued by physical absence, emotional neglect – and, according to those close to the couple, serial unfaithfulness.
A former Royal Insider, quoted by Lownie, said: “Sarah discovered that Andrew did not come home with part of his leave. He went somewhere else – and this just drove her crazy.”
The source added: “She did not like the fact that she was a coastal widow and to discover that she had deliberately hurt really hurt.”
The breakdown of their relationship was not only due to the collision of personalities or royal pressure, the book argues – but against Andrew’s things, which apparently started almost immediately after the honeymoon.
According to Lownie’s book, the Duke of York “with more than a dozen women for their first birthday.”
According to Lownie, the ruthless rotation of women in his life was an open secret among courtiers and friends.
Another source added: “The arguments he and Sarah were bordered on domestic violence.” You have to understand what I have to do with this, “Sarah once told a confidant.” I am married to a man who has never been in a supermarket. “”
The insider said that it emphasized how she considered Andrew as ultra-for-right and not male enough to satisfy her needs or from the bedroom.
Andrew and Sarah, who were introduced by Princess Diana in 1985, would have fallen quickly, both recovering from earlier heartache.
But cracks appeared early. Andrew, still a naval officer, was often gone – and for a year he was only at home for 42 days. Sarah was left to navigate the press, the palace and motherhood largely alone.
Lownie writes that Sarah struggled emotionally, Andrew seemed unmoved and not available.
“I would write him almost every day and eagerly wait for the post,” Sarah told a friend. “But they never came. I missed him incredibly.”
When Sarah eventually brought forward their problems with the queen, the prince quickly changed the subject in dogs and horses.
A source told Lownie: “Andrew’s idea of a good time on a beautiful sunny day was to sit in the house and watch golf on television.
“His dinner would be placed for him so that he could keep watching TV, and then he would go to bed.”
It came at the stage where Sarah would make an excuse not to be with her husband, where the source added: “She would ask if the Duke went to eat and, if he was, she would make sure she was gone.”
It was just a matter of time before the Duchess found the excitement and affection she wanted with other men – with another insider said: “Sarah is a sensual woman who needs to be loved and likes to show affection.”
While the Philandering of Andrew continued, “Sensual” Sarah turned to others for affection – started an affair with the American Playboy Steve Wyatt in 1989. But even after their divorce in 1992 and divorce in 1996, the couple maintained a strange lasting band, who continued to live together and vacation with their daughters.
Lownie’s report of their relationship suggests that guilt can play a role in Andrew’s lasting loyalty to Sarah.
“She says it is his fault that she wandered when they were married – that it was because he neglected her,” a good friend told the author.
“And he feels terribly guilty because there is a little truth in it.”




