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Archie

Prince Archie of Sussex (Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor; born 6 May 2019) is a member of the British royal family, the elder child and only son of Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex. He is seventh in the line of succession to the British throne. Born in London at 05:26 BST, Archie's arrival represented a shift from longstanding royal protocols, as his parents withheld details such as the precise location and his birth weight from public announcement, opting instead for selective private sharing with select media. Initially styled without a princely title or HRH designation—consistent with Queen Elizabeth II's 1917 Letters Patent limiting such styles to the sovereign's children and grandchildren through the male line—Archie became entitled to the title Prince Archie of Sussex following his grandfather King Charles III's accession in 2022. The family's relocation to in , after stepping back from senior royal duties, has seen Archie raised primarily in the with an emphasis on shielding him from media scrutiny, including private ceremonies excluding press access and undisclosed identities. This approach has sparked notable legal confrontations, such as lawsuits filed on Archie's behalf against agencies for allegedly intrusive photography in and the , with settlements reached in some cases asserting privacy breaches.

Personal name

Origin and meaning

Archie is primarily a masculine and of , which originated from the compound Ercanbald. The elements ercan, meaning "genuine" or "precious," and bald, meaning "bold" or "brave," combine to convey "truly brave" or "genuinely bold." This Germanic entered English usage via , where became established as a hereditary and forename among clans, though isolated claims linking Archie directly to an "archer" occupation lack substantiation in primary linguistic sources and appear to conflate it with unrelated names like Archer.

Notable real people

Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt (1894–1979), known as Archie, was the fifth child of U.S. President and served as a U.S. Army officer in both and , earning two Silver Stars for gallantry. He was wounded multiple times, including severe knee injuries in combat, and later worked in business after retiring from military service. Archibald Alphonso Alexander (1888–1958), an African-American civil engineer and architect, was the first Black graduate of the University of Iowa's College of Engineering in 1912 and founded his own firm, designing bridges and highways across the U.S., including the Whitehurst Freeway in He also served as of the U.S. Virgin Islands from 1954 to 1956. Archie Moore (1916–1983), born Archibald Lee Wright, was an American professional boxer who held the world championship for nearly a decade from 1952 to 1962, the longest reign in that division's history, and compiled a record of 186 wins, including 132 knockouts, before retiring in 1963. Known as the "Old Mongoose," he fought until age 46 and challenged for the title against in 1955. Archie Griffin (born August 21, 1954) is a former who won the in both 1974 and 1975, making him the only player in NCAA history to achieve this feat while playing for , where he rushed for over 5,000 yards. He was drafted by the in 1976 and later inducted into the . Archie Manning (born May 19, 1949), full name Elisha Archibald Manning III, was an quarterback who played 13 seasons primarily with the from 1971 to 1982, passing for 21,734 yards and 115 touchdowns despite the team's struggles. He earned Player of the Year honors in 1978 after leading the Saints to their first winning season and is the father of Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks Peyton and . Archie Harrison (born May 6, 2019) is the eldest child of , and , and holds the title as the sixth in line to the British throne. His birth at in marked the first mixed-race child in the line of succession in modern royal history.

Fictional characters

In comics and animation

Archibald "Archie" Andrews is the protagonist of the long-running series, debuting in #22 with a cover date of December 1941, published by MLJ Magazines (later renamed ). The character, a red-haired teenager residing in the fictional town of , was illustrated by Bob Montana, with story contributions from Vic Bloom and oversight from publisher . Archie's narratives typically revolve around his high school life, friendships with characters like and , and a romantic rivalry between and , emphasizing lighthearted humor and teen dilemmas without aging the cast despite spanning over eight decades. The series shifted to its own title, , in 1946, becoming one of the best-selling comic lines with millions of issues sold annually by the under artist Dan DeCarlo's influential visual style. Archie has been adapted into multiple animated series, starting with The Archie Show, which premiered on CBS on September 14, 1968, and ran through 1969, featuring 17 half-hour episodes that included musical segments by the fictional band The Archies. This program achieved record viewership, capturing a 75 share among Saturday morning audiences, and spawned spin-offs like The U.S. of Archie (1974–1976), which incorporated educational historical content. Later adaptations include Archie's Weird Mysteries (1999–2000), a 40-episode DIC Entertainment production airing on PAX TV, where Archie and friends solved supernatural mysteries in Riverdale. These animations retained the comics' core ensemble and humor while adding voice acting by talents such as Chris Lundquist as Archie in the 1968 series and Andrew Rannells in Weird Mysteries.

In television and film

Archibald "Archie" Bunker, portrayed by , serves as the protagonist of the sitcom , which aired from January 12, 1971, to April 8, 1979, spanning 205 episodes across nine seasons. Bunker is depicted as a blue-collar loading dock foreman in , , embodying a stereotypical conservative with prejudiced views on , gender, and , often clashing with his progressive son-in-law . The character's blunt dialogue and malapropisms, such as referring to "dead-alley" for "dead end," underscored the series' exploration of American cultural tensions through . Bunker returned in the spin-off , airing from September 23, 1979, to April 4, 1983, for 97 episodes over four seasons, where he owned and operated a neighborhood bar following the death of his wife Edith. This continuation shifted focus to Bunker's evolving relationships and business challenges, retaining his core traits while softening some edges amid changing network standards. , adapted from the comic series, appears in live-action television as a central figure in , a CW drama series that premiered on January 26, 2017, and concluded after seven seasons in 2023, with portraying the red-haired teenager navigating mysteries, romance, and music in a dark reimagining of the source material. Apa, born in 1997, depicted Andrews as an aspiring musician and athlete entangled in small-town intrigue involving friends and . Earlier live-action portrayals include the 1990 NBC TV movie Archie: To Riverdale and Back, aired May 6, 1990, featuring Christopher Rich as a 30-something Andrews reuniting with high school friends amid threats to Pop's Chock'lit Shoppe, blending nostalgia with adult dilemmas. In film, Agastya Nanda plays Andrews in The Archies, a Netflix musical released December 8, 2023, set in 1960s Anglo-Indian Riverdale, where the character leads a band confronting development threats to a local park alongside romantic entanglements.

In literature and other media

Archie Goodwin serves as the primary narrator and operational assistant to the reclusive detective in a series of novels and novellas authored by . Introduced in the debut novel (1934), Goodwin handles fieldwork, client interviews, and confrontations with law enforcement, contrasting Wolfe's sedentary, intellectual approach confined to his . produced 33 novels and 39 novellas featuring the duo, spanning from 1934's to 1975's A Family Affair, with Goodwin's first-person perspective providing wry commentary on events and characters. Goodwin is depicted as a native of rural , orphaned young and self-reliant, with skills in , stenography, firearms, and honed during informal bouts. His narrative voice emphasizes efficiency, skepticism toward authority, and a code of loyalty to Wolfe, whom he joined in 1930 after a chance encounter. The character's timeline remains ambiguous, aging minimally across decades to maintain narrative consistency amid evolving historical backdrops like . In literary adaptations, Goodwin appears in authorized prequels by Robert Goldsborough, such as Meets Nero Wolfe (2012), which explores their early partnership, and Goes Home (2019), shifting action to his Midwest roots for a investigation involving a local banker. These extensions preserve Stout's style, with Goodwin's narration underscoring his independence and disdain for bureaucratic interference. Archibald "Archy" McNally, protagonist of 13 mystery novels initiated by in McNally's Caper (1994), operates as a discreet for Palm Beach's , blending satire with crime-solving. Though primarily addressed as Archy, the character's full name aligns with Archie variants, featuring in posthumous continuations by Vincent Lardo until McNally's Gamble (2008). McNally's cases involve art thefts, , and family intrigues among Florida's wealthy, narrated in a light, insider tone reflective of Sanders' focus on upscale vice.

Animals

Notable real animals

Archie, a ( simum simum), resided at the in , where he became recognized as the oldest male of his subspecies in human care, reaching 55 years of age. Born on December 19, 1969, Archie arrived at the zoo in 1997 and contributed to efforts by siring offspring, including calves in 2001 and 2005. He succumbed to cancer on March 10, 2025, after exhibiting symptoms including weight loss and lethargy despite veterinary interventions. Another notable Archie was a short-haired owned jointly by pop artist and interior designer Jed Johnson, adopted as a in late 1972. The dog, sometimes called Archie Bunker after the character, accompanied Warhol to his studio, art openings, and social events, appearing in numerous photographs and Polaroids that Warhol produced during the . A companion named Amos joined the household a few years later, but Archie remained a fixture in Warhol's documented daily life until the dog's death in the late . Archie, a black Labrador retriever residing at the Silo Hotel in Launceston, Tasmania, gained local celebrity status for greeting guests and participating in hotel activities since his adoption around 2018. In 2025, he featured in the short film Top Dog as part of the Global Canine Film Festival, highlighting the role of hotel dogs in hospitality.

Fictional animals

In Domenica More Gordon's 2012 children's picture book Archie, the titular character is a stylish dog who discovers a passion for fashion after acquiring a sewing machine, leading him to create custom outfits for neighborhood pets and sparking a local trend. The story emphasizes themes of creativity and entrepreneurship through Archie's pet pooch companion and interactions with other animals seeking attire. Archie the Scare Pig serves as the mascot for Fear Tech, the rival institution to in Pixar's 2013 animated film . Designed as a , six-legged with asymmetrical horns and eyes, Archie is deployed during sporting events to demoralize opponents through his frightening appearance and aggressive behavior, such as charging at scare team members. His role underscores the competitive rivalry between the schools in the film's narrative to (2001). In the The Penguins of Madagascar (2008–2015), Archie is a cunning antagonist featured in the episode "Mask of the Raccoon" (season 1, episode 41, aired November 28, 2008). Voiced by , he masquerades as a while pilfering supplies from animals and other wildlife, employing disguises and traps until thwarted by . Archie appears as a recurring spider character in the British Horrid Henry (2006–2019), based on Francesca Simon's books. This large, black-and-gray aids the protagonist in pranks and schemes, such as scaring classmates, highlighting his role as a mischievous ally in the show's chaotic child-centric episodes.

Technology and computing

Software and systems

was an early developed to index and search filenames across anonymous (FTP) archives on the . Created in 1990 by graduate students Alan Emtage, Bill Heelan, and Peter J. Deutsch at in , , it functioned by periodically querying public FTP servers to retrieve directory listings, which were then compiled into a centralized database for user queries. The name "" derived from "archive" without the "ve," reflecting its focus on archival file locations rather than web content, as the had not yet emerged. The system operated through a client-server model, where users connected via to Archie servers to perform keyword searches on the indexed filenames and paths, retrieving lists of matching files and their host locations for manual FTP downloads. Initially hosted on McGill's infrastructure, it gained widespread use among early users, handling significant traffic—up to half of Canada's flow at peak—without commercialization or patenting by its creators. Public release occurred on September 10, 1990, marking it as one of the first tools enabling systematic file discovery on the pre-web . Archie's architecture emphasized efficiency in a decentralized FTP ecosystem, using prospero protocol precursors for querying and updating its database nightly to accommodate growing archives. However, it did not index file contents or support full-text search, limiting it to exact filename matches and proving inadequate as the web proliferated in the mid-1990s, leading to its gradual obsolescence. Servers operated until around 1999, after which the original McGill service ceased, though mirrors persisted briefly. In May 2024, enthusiasts revived using archived tapes and vintage hardware, restoring a functional instance accessible via for historical demonstration, underscoring its role as a foundational precursor to modern search technologies despite its narrow scope. This resurrection highlights 's pioneering causal contribution to systems, predating web crawlers like those in (1993) or JumpStation (1993), though it targeted FTP rather than HTTP resources.

Hardware and robotics

Archie designates a series of robots engineered for in bipedal , , and assistive tasks, with centered at the and involving brushless DC motors paired with harmonic drive gears for actuation. The teen-sized variant measures 1.2 meters in height and incorporates 22 (DOF), distributed as follows: seven DOF per leg (three at the , one at the , three at the ankle), five DOF per arm (three at the shoulder, one at the , one at the ), and one DOF at the neck. This configuration enables dynamic walking gaits and manipulation capabilities, with actuators featuring integrated absolute position encoders derived from harmonic gear backlash measurements to eliminate separate sensors. Power is supplied via lithium-polymer batteries, supporting onboard computation through a distributed network of microcontrollers for joint-level and higher-level processing on a PC-104 stack running . An adult-sized iteration extends to 1.4 meters in height while retaining 22 DOF with analogous joint distributions, emphasizing scalability for human-like proportions and enhanced torque requirements in the lower body for stability during locomotion. These robots prioritize cost efficiency through off-the-shelf components and simplified mechanical designs, such as custom gear adaptations, to facilitate replication in academic settings over proprietary high-end systems. Early prototypes focused on upper-body development, including a neck-head assembly and dual-arm setup with five DOF per arm, integrating force-torque sensing at the wrists and stereo vision via head-mounted cameras for environmental interaction. The overall architecture supports applications in household assistance, such as and , though primary emphasis in documented hardware iterations remains on robust bipedal rather than advanced sensory .

Other uses

Military and slang terms

In British military slang during World War I, "Archie" referred to anti-aircraft fire or the guns producing it, particularly German anti-aircraft artillery targeted at Allied aircraft. The term emerged in 1914 among pilots, who personified the fire as an adversary, often exclaiming phrases like "Archie is after us" while evading shells. Its first documented use appears in a September 30, 1914, diary entry by pilot L.A. Strange, noting low clouds exposing aircraft to "Archie" at 4,000 feet. The traces to the 1911 music hall song "Archibald, Certainly Not!", popularized by comedian , with pilots adapting the refrain humorously when dodging bursts, as in shouting "Archibald, certainly not!" to mock incoming fire. This black humor origin is corroborated in contemporary accounts, distinguishing it from later terms like "ack-ack" in . Vice-Marshal Amyas Borton, an early commander, is sometimes credited with coining or popularizing the term during patrols over . Usage extended to denote individual shells or guns, as in "an Archie" for a single anti-aircraft round, reflecting the era's rudimentary air defenses that burst into shrapnel clouds visible from cockpits. By 1915, it permeated Allied jargon, appearing in pilot memoirs and official reports, though its application waned as aviation technology advanced. No significant non-military usages for "Archie" in this context have been recorded, confining it to historical WWI lexicon.

Media titles and brands

Archie Comics is an publishing brand established in 1939, renowned for its long-running series centered on the teenage character and his companions , , , and in the fictional town of . The brand has sold over 2 billion comics worldwide, translated into dozens of languages and distributed globally. Core titles under the Archie Comics brand include the flagship Archie series, which debuted in 1942 and continues with periodic new issues, alongside spin-offs such as Little Archie, , , , and musical group franchise. These publications emphasize lighthearted teen adventures, romance, and humor, with monthly releases encompassing more than a dozen ongoing or periodic titles as of 2025. In 2015, the brand launched the Archie Horror imprint, which reimagines its characters in and narratives, attracting collaborations with prominent writers and artists. This expansion maintains the publisher's output of fresh content, including Halloween-themed issues released on October 1, 2025, featuring stories like Dilton's mishaps during the holiday. Archie Comics remains one of the few independent, family-controlled entities in the industry, sustaining print media dominance without reliance on mainstream superhero genres.

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