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Prince Harry is thought to be an [[Arsenal FC]] fan along with his late great grandmother [[Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon]].
Prince Harry is thought to be an [[Arsenal FC]] fan along with his late great grandmother [[Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon]].

In May 2008 reporters and paparazzi spotted The Prince and girlfriend Chelsy, along with (close friend of Chelsy's) Heiress Margo Wilson on a yacht, while in Monaco. Both Heiresses were sunbathing and laughing while Harry was chatting with an unknown along with them.


=== Relationships ===
=== Relationships ===

Revision as of 22:16, 9 July 2008

Prince Harry
Prince Henry of Wales
Names
Henry Charles Albert David [1]
HouseHouse of Windsor
FatherCharles, Prince of Wales
MotherDiana, Princess of Wales
OccupationLieutenant, Blues and Royals
For actual Princes of Wales called Henry see Henry, Prince of Wales.

Prince Henry of Wales (Henry Charles Albert David; born 15 September 1984), commonly known as Prince Harry, is the younger son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, the late Diana, Princess of Wales. A grandson of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, he is third in the line of succession to the thrones of the United Kingdom and the other fifteen Commonwealth realms, behind his father and his older brother, Prince William.

He holds the rank of Lieutenant in the Blues and Royals regiment of the Household Cavalry of the British Army. Harry was a tank commander, trained to lead a 12-man team in four armoured reconnaissance vehicles. After the decision not to send him to Iraq, he retrained as a battlefield air controller, the job he performed in Afghanistan. He was serving on the front line in Afghanistan[2] although he was pulled out on 29 February 2008 after the world media revealed his presence there and the British authorities became concerned for his safety and the safety of those around him. He had served in Afghanistan between 14 December 2007 and 29 February 2008, for a total of 77 days.[3]

His full title is His Royal Highness Prince Henry of Wales, although he is commonly referred to as Prince Harry. As a prince, he does not need a surname (which would be Mountbatten-Windsor, if needed).[4] Like his brother William, however, Harry often uses "Wales" in place of a surname when required.

Early life

Family

Prince Harry was born on 15 September 1984 as Henry Charles Albert David at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, in central London, England, and was christened on 21 December of the same year at St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Robert Runcie. His godparents were his uncle, the Duke of York; Lady Sarah Chatto; Lady Vestey; Mrs. William Bartholomew; the portrait painter, Mr. Bryan Organ; and Mr. Gerald Ward.

There have been persistent rumours that Harry's father is Major James Hewitt, with whom Diana admitted to having an affair; even though both Diana and Hewitt have said that their affair started after the Prince was born.

Education

Harry attended Mrs. Jane Mynors's nursery school in West London, as did William. He later followed his brother to the Wetherby School, and later to Ludgrove School in Berkshire. He then attended Eton College located in Berkshire in 1998. In June 2003, he completed his education at Eton with two A-levels obtaining a B in Art and a D in Geography. At school, he developed his love of sport, particularly polo and rugby union. The Prince has shown a keen interest in abseiling. He has also participated in the Eton Wall Game.

After finishing Eton, Harry undertook a gap year, visiting Australia and Africa. In Australia, he, like his father before him, worked on a cattle station, and watched the 2003 Rugby World Cup being held in the country. In Africa, he worked in an orphanage in Lesotho. Later in the year, he travelled to Argentina on holiday.

On 8 May 2005, the Prince entered the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. There, he was known as Officer Cadet Wales instead of using his royal title, and was part of Alamein Company.[5]

Royal duties

As a serving soldier, Prince Harry currently has no official Royal Engagements. However, at the age of 23, and as third in line to the throne, he became eligible to serve as a Counsellor of State (first filling this role in 2005 when the Queen was on a state visit to Malta).

In April 2006, Prince Harry launched a charity with Prince Seeiso of Lesotho to aid children orphaned by HIV/AIDS. The charity is named Sentebale: The Princes' Fund for Lesotho; the name, Sentebale being a Sesotho word meaning forget-me-not, is meant to honour both princes' mothers: the Princess of Wales, who died in 1997; and Queen 'MaMohato of Lesotho, who died in 2003. Prince Harry was in Lesotho to launch the charity and to make a return visit to Mants'ase Children's Home near Mohale's Hoek, which he visited in 2004 during his gap year.

Along with his elder brother, Harry spearheaded the Concert for Diana at Wembley Stadium, on 1 July 2007. Attended by 63,000 people, and broadcast in 140 countries, the concert raised funds for charities such as the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund, Centrepoint and Harry's own Sentebale.

Patronages, presidencies and chancellorships

As with any member of the Royal Family, Prince Harry is expected to take up honorary positions as patron, president or chancellor of charitable or academic institutions throughout the Commonwealth Realms. Prince Harry is currently patron of:

Army

Officer Cadet Wales (standing to attention next to the horse) on parade at Sandhurst, 21 June 2005.

Upon leaving the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in April 2006, Prince Harry was commissioned into the The Blues and Royals (Royal Horse Guards and 1st Dragoons), a regiment of the Household Cavalry in the British Army, as a Second Lieutenant (known in the regiment as "Cornet")[1]. Upon reaching two years' seniority in April 2008, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant.

In 2006, Prince Harry was also appointed as one of nine new Commodores-in-Chief of the Royal Navy, alongside other members of his family, being appointed as Commodore-in-Chief, Small Ships and Diving.

On 22 February 2007, the Ministry of Defence and Clarence House made a joint statement that Prince Harry would be deployed with his regiment in Iraq,[7] to serve as part of the 1st Mechanised Brigade of the 3rd (UK) Mechanised Division, although this decision was later rescinded. Prior to this, the last member of the Royal Family to have served in a war zone was Prince Harry's uncle, Prince Andrew, Duke of York, who flew helicopters during the Falklands War in 1982. At the time, Prince Andrew was second in line to the thrones of the Commonwealth Realms, although this changed to third on the 21 June, 1982, the birthday of Prince William and the day after the British Government declared hostilities to be over. According to a BBC news article, Prince Harry had made it clear that he would leave the army if he was left in safety while his regiment was sent to a war zone.[8]

The head of the British army, General Sir Richard Dannatt, first said on 30 April 2007 that he had personally decided that the Prince will serve with his unit in Iraq.[7] The Ministry of Defence had been considering whether the Prince should be exposed to a combat situation; concerns included the Prince being a high-value target, as several threats by various groups have already been made against him, and the dangers the soldiers around him would face should any attempt be made on his life or capture. However, families of serving soldiers have expressed concern over any decision which would exempt Prince Harry from active service in Iraq. The Prince has been quoted as saying "There's no way I'm going to put myself through Sandhurst and then sit on my arse back home while my boys are out fighting for their country." Although friends of the Prince have indicated that he would be "disappointed" if he were not allowed to go, they are also quoted as saying he would not resign from the army in protest.[9]

Prince Harry was scheduled to leave for Iraq in May or June 2007, with the regiment becoming responsible for patrolling the Maysan province, trying to stop Iranian smugglers bringing hi-tech weapons across the border of desert and marshes. The province, known to Coalition forces as Iraq’s "Wild West", has been described as "a dangerous wilderness that is being used by Iraq's Shia extremist groups as a testing ground for their latest explosive devices."[10] On 16 May, 2007, Dannatt, contrary to his previous remarks, announced "I have decided today that Prince Harry will not be deployed to Iraq."[11] Clarence House subsequently issued a statement that "Prince Harry is very disappointed that he will not be able to go to Iraq with his troop on this deployment, as he had hoped. He fully understands and accepts General Dannatt’s difficult decision, and remains committed to his Army career. Prince Harry’s thoughts are with his troop and the rest of the Battle Group in Iraq."[12]

In May 2007 British soldiers in Iraq were reported to be wearing t-shirts bearing the statement "I'm Harry!": a reference to the scene in the movie Spartacus in which the survivors of Spartacus's army, defeated by Roman legions, are offered leniency by Crassus if they will identify their leader. Every survivor declares: "I'm Spartacus!"[13]

By early June, it was being reported that Prince Harry, third in line to the Canadian Throne, had arrived in Canada to train, along with other soldiers of the Canadian and British Armies, at CFB Suffield, near Medicine Hat, for a tour of duty in Afghanistan.[14][15]

On February 28, 2008, the Ministry of Defence stated that Prince Harry had secretly been deployed to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan, in Helmand Province as a Forward Air Controller.[16] The Ministry of Defence had a deal with the media of the United Kingdom running to keep his whereabouts secret. The German newspaper Bild[17] and the Australian magazine New Idea[18][19] were the first to report rumours on January 7 2008, followed by a story on the American website the Drudge Report on February 28, leading to the confirmation by the British Ministry of Defence.[20]

According to reports, the Prince's combat tour in Afghanistan began on December 14, 2007. Reports have also revealed that by February 29, 2008, the prince had called in at least three U.S Air Force F-15E air strikes.[21] Other details of Prince Harry's combat experience have revealed that he had fired a machine gun at insurgent positions during a battle. In that battle, he helped Gurkha troops repel an attack of sixteen to twenty Taliban insurgents.[22] He has also performed patrol duty in hostile areas.[23] On February 29, 2008, Prince Harry was withdrawn from Afghanistan, following the outbreak of news that could potentially jeopardise his safety and the safety of his fellow sub-ordinates, he returned to RAF Brize Norton with 169 other soldiers also returning. His tour came 735 years after his ancestor, Edward Prince of Wales, had also been on military duty in the middle East during the Ninth crusade.[24] He was welcomed back to Britain by his brother and his father, who said he was "incredibly proud" of his son. The Queen's senior courtiers also exclaimed that she viewed that "[Harry] had performed a good job in a very difficult climate."[25]

Personal life

Prince Harry is thought to be an Arsenal FC fan along with his late great grandmother Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon.

In May 2008 reporters and paparazzi spotted The Prince and girlfriend Chelsy, along with (close friend of Chelsy's) Heiress Margo Wilson on a yacht, while in Monaco. Both Heiresses were sunbathing and laughing while Harry was chatting with an unknown along with them.

Relationships

File:Sun front.jpg
The Front Cover of tabloid The Sun featuring a picture of the costume.

The media continue to speculate about any and all of Prince Harry's possible girlfriends. The Prince's best known romance has been with Chelsy Davy, a Zimbabwe-born white African heiress to an African ranching and real estate fortune. In an interview conducted for his 21st birthday in September 2005, Prince Harry referred to Davy as his girlfriend and the press reported that their relationship was at that time 18 months old, strongly contradicting reports they were no longer a couple.[26] In July 2006, photos were published of the two kissing at the Cartier Polo International Tournament, and by October that year it was reported that Davy had accepted an offer from the University of Bristol, which is 27 miles (43 km) from Highgrove, to study for a postgraduate degree in politics. Harry and Chelsy Davy were both seen together publicly at the Concert for Diana. Chelsy is currently attending the University of Leeds and living in the U.K.

Costume controversy

At a party with the fancy dress theme "Colonial and Native", Prince Harry wore a Nazi Party swastika armband, causing controversy[27] and considerable embarrassment to his family. He later issued a public statement apologising for his actions.[28]

Titles, styles, honours and arms

Styles of
HRH Prince Henry of Wales
File:Monarch's Grandchildren Coronet.svg
Reference styleHis Royal Highness
Spoken styleYour Royal Highness
Alternative styleSir

Titles and styles

Prince Harry is currently third-in-line for succession to the Throne (behind his father and elder brother). Should his father succeed to the throne he will be known simply as His Royal Highness The Prince Henry.

Surname usage

Under an Order-in-Council in 1960, the non-titled descendants of Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh were given the surname Mountbatten-Windsor, combining the dynasty name of Elizabeth and the assumed surname of Philip. However, although titled, the Queen's children have all decided to use the surname also in honour of their father. For their banns for their first marriages, both Harry's aunt, Anne, Princess Royal and his own father, Charles, Prince of Wales, used Mountbatten-Windsor rather than Windsor. Mountbatten-Windsor is now treated as being the surname of all descendants of the Queen and the Duke except those, like the children of the Princess Royal, who have a new paternal surname (in that case, "Phillips").

In the British Monarchy's website, it is stated that "members of the Royal Family who are entitled to the style and dignity of HRH Prince or Princess do not need a surname, but if at any time any of them do need a surname, that surname is Mountbatten-Windsor."[29]

As with Royal Family tradition, both Prince William and Prince Harry used "Wales" as a last name during his years of education. Harry's York cousins in turn use "York" (other Royal Families also use their parents' title as their own working surname). Past precedent, however, is that such title-surnames are dropped from usage in adulthood, with either title alone or name and Mountbatten-Windsor being used on legal documents and banns of marriage.

Military rank

  • Second Lieutenant (Cornet), The Blues and Royals, 13 April 2006[30]
  • Lieutenant, The Blues and Royals, 13 April 2008 [31]

Honorary military appointments

Honours and Military decorations

Arms

Coat of arms of Prince Henry of Wales.

On his 18th birthday, his grandmother, Elizabeth II, granted Prince Harry his own personalised coat of arms, the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom with a label for difference: Quarterly, 1st and 3rd Gules three Lions passant guardant in pale Or (England), 2nd Or a Lion rampant within a Double Tressure flory counterflory Gules (Scotland), 4th Azure a Harp Or stringed Argent (Ireland), the whole differenced by a Label of five points Argent the first third and fifth points charged with an Escallop Gules.

Prince Harry's coat of arms has a label of five points, as the grandchild of the sovereign. The escallops (seashells) allude to his late mother Diana, Princess of Wales, whose Spencer coat of arms includes three escallops argent.

Ancestry

Family of Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex

See also

References

  1. ^ As a titled royal, Harry holds no surname, but, when one is used, it is Mountbatten-Windsor (or, more colloquially, his father's territorial designation, Wales)
  2. ^ Prince Harry on front line in Afghanistan, MSNBC, 2008-02-28, retrieved 2008-02-28 {{citation}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ Prince Harry secretly serving in Afghanistan
  4. ^ The Royal Family > Titles and succession > Royal Family name
  5. ^ Harry begins Sandhurst training, BBC News, May 8, 2005
  6. ^ Prince Harry to become Patron of three charities
  7. ^ a b "Harry Will Serve With Combat Unit in Iraq", AOL News, Apr 30, 2007
  8. ^ Harry Iraq deployment no surprise, BBC News; 22 February, 2007
  9. ^ BBC NEWS | UK | MoD to review Harry's Iraq role
  10. ^ "A ‘Wild West’ in the east where militias learn their deadly trade", The Times, 26 April 2007
  11. ^ Prince Harry will not go to Iraq, CNN, 16 May 2007.
  12. ^ Prince Harry deployment update, 16th May 2007
  13. ^ Staff (2007-05-02). "Harry's troops do a Spartacus". Ananova. Retrieved 2007-05-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  14. ^ Canadian Press; CTV News: Prince Harry may be training in Alberta: reports; June 2, 2007
  15. ^ Kennedy, Sarah; Fernandez, Pablo; Gilchrist, Emma; Sun Media: Prince Harry training in Alberta; June 2, 2007
  16. ^ Prince Harry in Taleban fighting
  17. ^ How the Prince Harry blackout was broken
  18. ^ Prince Harry Goes to War in Afghanistan
  19. ^ Cached link of article "Prince Harry Goes to War in Afghanistan"
  20. ^ Dunn, Tom Newton. Harry to come home, The Sun, February 29, 2008. Accessed June 2, 2008.
  21. ^ Staff Reporters. Hero Harry's Home, The Sun, February 29, 2008. Accessed June 2, 2008.
  22. ^ "Prince Harry in Taliban gun battle".
  23. ^ "On patrol with Prince Harry".
  24. ^ God's War, Crusade History - Tyerman
  25. ^ Prince Harry returns: Queen speaks of pride, The Daily Telegraph, 1 March 2008
  26. ^ Harry at 21 on Camilla, the media and Aids children in Africa, Stephen Bates, The Guardian, 15 September 2005
  27. ^ Harry says sorry for Nazi costume BBC News, January 13, 2005
  28. ^ Harry public apology 'not needed' BBC News, January 14, 2005
  29. ^ The Royal Family > Titles and succession > Royal Family name
  30. ^ "No. 57994". The London Gazette (invalid |supp= (help)). 30 May 2006. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  31. ^ "No. 58667". The London Gazette (invalid |supp= (help)). 15 April 2008. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

Template:Commons2

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex
Born: 15 September 1984
British royalty
Preceded by Line of succession to the British Throne
3rd position
Succeeded by
Orders of precedence in the United Kingdom
Preceded by Gentlemen
HRH Prince Henry of Wales
Succeeded by
Preceded by Gentlemen
in current practice
Order of precedence
Preceded by Canadian order of precedence Succeeded by

Template:Persondata