The Palace has spoken: Baby Sussex is now Archie Harrison Montbatten-Windsor. But Americans may have been surprised to see that he was not Prince Archie. In fact, Harry and Meghan don’t plan for little Archie to use any sort of title. Technically, he could be “styled” Archie, Earl of Dumbarton, which sounds like someone who would absolutely crush on the squash courts. But he won’t even go by Lord Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, according to the Times, the garden-variety title that children of big-ticket aristocrats get. His parents have declined any sort of title; “They have chosen not to use a courtesy title,” a source told the Telegraph. Advertisement It’s just the latest confusing twist in the maze that is the British royal family and their bewildering assortment titles, which operate according to their own internal logic, but also are much, much more malleable than Americans might expect. How any given royal is “styled” says a lot about their position in the pecking order—and how their parents want them to fit into it, as well. Thanks to decisions made a century ago, titles aren’t a locked descriptor, like an FDA label. They shift depending on the times and the circumstances, and…