Prince Andrew’s Alleged Early Sexual Awakening in Lownie Biography Exposed

Hi, I’m Maya Rivers, weaving poetic whispers around a tale that might not merit a sonnet yet demands its moment beneath the spotlight. A sorrowful refrain clings to every page of Andrew Lownie’s controversial new biography as it asserts that Prince Andrew lost his virginity at the tender age of eleven.
In “Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York,” Lownie portrays the Duke of York as a royal whose personal history is punctuated by striking assertions. According to a chapter titled “Randy Andy,” the prince experienced his first sexual encounter before he even turned nine. By eleven, the ink had barely dried on his childhood when he is alleged to have taken his virginity. One insider told The Telegraph that the duke admitted to having had his second sexual moment before his twelfth birthday and by thirteen “had already slept with more than half a dozen girls.”
The biography emerged after Lownie spent four years interviewing over one hundred individuals who crossed paths with the royal or observed his private life. One unnamed source remarked that Andrew’s early sexual explorations unfolded at an age “most of us would deem far too young.” Lownie defends the inclusion of these intimate details, arguing that they are essential for a full portrait of Andrew’s later actions. “It seemed to me it was part of building a picture of behavior, and how it shaped his life,” he wrote. The biographer even suggests that these premature experiences make the duke in some respects “much more sympathetic.”
Beyond the youthful revelations, Lownie revisits Prince Andrew’s controversial ties to Jeffrey Epstein. Contrary to Andrew’s 2019 Newsnight claim that they first met in 1999, Lownie cites former private secretary Alastair Watson, who places their introduction in the early 1990s. Epstein allegedly described Andrew as a “perverted animal in the bedroom” and confessed that the duke’s appetite for women rivaled that of the notorious financier himself. Epstein’s personal driver Ivan Novikov told Lownie about shuttle runs for “young girls who were essentially prostitutes” whenever the prince visited New York. On one such evening, Novikov recalled, Andrew, two girls around eighteen, and a stream of cocaine converged in a hotel lobby—an image that lingers in this startling narrative.
The biography also probes the duke’s unusual post-split relationship with ex-wife Sarah Ferguson and asks readers to ponder how earlier indiscretions may have shaped his public controversies. Despite the gravity of the claims, Prince Andrew has yet to offer a rebuttal. Meanwhile, “Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York” is slated to hit bookshelves on August 14.
And so, the ink settles on another chapter of royal turbulence, leaving us to wonder if the truths unveiled are the prologue to further revelations.
Sources: Celebrity Storm and New York Post, The Telegraph
Attribution: Creative Commons Licensed