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As Prince Harry's spotted at a tattoo parlour, all the royals who dare to bare their body art... but, can you match the royal to their inking?

C.Kim45 min ago
Prince Harry was spotted at a celebrity tattoo parlour in New York City on Wednesday - just ten days after his 40th birthday.

The Duke of Sussex pulled up to East Side Ink in a black SUV flanked by members of his security team and the NYPD, images obtained by Page Six show, and reportedly spent around an hour inside.

Harry was in the Big Apple this week to support various charities and businesses including African Parks, The HALO Trust, The Diana Award, and Travalyst.

And while it's unclear whether the father-of-two did indeed get an inking from the celeb-loved parlour in the city's Lower East Side - he wouldn't be the only royal to embrace some body art.

Princess Eugenie , King Frederik of Denmark and Lady Amelia Windsor have all proudly displayed their tattoos in the past. But, do you know what kind of inkings each royal boasts? Scroll down below to find out...

Princess Eugenie Wearing her hair down in loose curls, Prince Andrew's youngest daughter debuted a small circle tattoo behind her ear last year as she attended the Platinum Jubilee National Service of Thanksgiving to celebrate the Queen's reign.

The black circle inking was also visible when she attended a vigil at Westminster Hall to pay her respects to her late grandmother, the Queen after her death last year.

Although the princess - who is expecting her second child - has never revealed the meaning behind her tattoo, there have been some suggestion it can represent the cycle of life and death, or it can symbolise perfection, wholeness and totality

While it is rare for British royals to be seen with a tattoo, Eugenie is following on from her great-great-grandfather King George V who had a dragon and a tiger tattooed on his arms.

King George V, who reigned from 1910-1936, visited Japan in 1881 with his brother Prince Albert Victor when the pair were teenagers.

According to the official diary of the tour, compiled by their tutor, the Reverend John Dalton, the princes had their arms tattooed during their stay in Japan – Albert Victor with a pair of storks and George with a dragon and a tiger.

Serving as midshipmen aboard HMS Bacchante, Prince George's tattoos were chosen to symbolise the East and the West.

He wrote in his diary: 'We have spent a very pleasant week on shore up at Nara & Kioto (sic), we saw a great deal in the time but we were not long enough, it was too hurried.

'Nearly every body on board has been tattooed. I have got a dragon on one arm done at Tokio (sic) & a tiger on the other arm done at Kioto (sic).'

Lady Amelia Windsor Lady Amelia Windsor , a model and granddaughter of the Queen's cousin, Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, was the first member of the British royal family to show off her tattoos in public.

The stylish socialite displayed a small design on her rib, a parade of three bear cubs on her wrist and a glimpse of a tiger inked on her back while wearing a pink Chanel mini dress at the Serpentine Gallery Summer Ball in 2018.

She told Elle that the bear cubs are a sweet tribute to the bond between herself and her two siblings - Lady Marina and Edward Windsor.

'One is of three bear cubs, which represent my brother, sister and I because we saw three cubs in Canada when we were really little and thought they were us on the beach,' she said. 'It was a really magical moment.'

Grant Harrold, who is known as The Royal Butler, previously told FEMAIL : 'Lady Amelia Windsor is not a senior royal or a princess.

'As we know she is not even in the top 30 in line to the throne, so she will be aware that she can get away with personal choices such as tattoos or modelling for international fashion houses.'

Princess Sofia of Sweden Princess Sofia of Sweden showed off the sunburst tattoo at the top of her back at her wedding to Prince Carl Philip in 2015.

She has proudly displayed the inking on many formal occasions, including at the 2019 Nobel Prize Awards Ceremony.

The princess also has a butterfly on her ribcage and a discreet tattoo on her ankle, but is reported to have had a tattoo on her arm removed following her engagement to Carl Philip.

Pauline Ducruet A diver, a designer and niece of Prince Albert II of Monaco, adventurous Pauline Ducruet has shown off a number of bold tattoos in public.

Her inkings include a daisy on her lower right arm, a delicate design on her wrist and writing on the inside of her left arm as well as a small tattoo at the top of her ear.

Pauline has previously opened up about her unconventional childhood, living in a caravan with a travelling circus after her mother Princess Stéphanie eloped with an elephant trainer.

She explained to the Sunday Telegraph that while her childhood was 'random', travelling around the world also brought her 'pure freedom'.

Princess Stephanie of Monaco Pauline clearly followed the example of her mother Princess Stéphanie, the youngest daughter of actress Grace Kelly and Prince Rainier III, who often exposes her various inks.

Dubbed a 'wild child', the princess - who has spent time as a model, a swimwear designer and a singer - has a dragon tattooed on her upper back as well as a flower bracelet around her wrist and a ring tattooed on her finger.

17-year-old Stéphanie was in the car with her mother when they were in a crash after driving around a hairpin curve, leading to her mother's death in 1982.

She was later hounded with false reports suggesting that the princess had been driving the car at the time of the crash.

Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark Heir to the Danish throne, Crown Prince Frederik has not tried to hide tattoos on his arm and a depiction of a shark on his calf .

The shark is the insignia of the Danish Navy's elite frogman corps, possibly chosen as a tribute, while his arm tattoo refers to the nickname Pingu that he was given after completing his training to become a badged Frogman.

The Frogman Corps are a unit of professional divers and commandos that are tasked with assaulting enemy ships, advanced force and maritime anti-terrorism tasks among others.

The training for the Frogman Corps is notoriously difficult with participants having to complete stages including a scuba diving course, a survival course and a combat swimmer course in nine months. Only 311 soldiers have been accepted into the unit since its creation.

Prince Frederik's grandfather, King Frederik IX, also acquired tattoos during his time in the navy, having birds and dragons inked on his torso and arms.

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