The Duke of Sussex fought in Afghanistan on the frontline, but is now severing his official ties to the military as he quits royal life completely.
Harry spent 10 years in the forces, and once said how his experience in the Army would stay with him for the rest of his life.
“The whole situation is extremely sad and I think it is unfortunate, after his splendid service in the military, that he will now no longer be involved with the military in the UK,” he told ITV News.
When Harry left the Army in 2015, he vowed to always maintain his links with his fellow servicemen and women.
He took over from his grandfather, the Duke of Edinburgh, as Captain General of the Royal Marines in 2017 – but now is stepping down after just two years and one month in the position.
Harry will also no longer be Honorary Air Force Commandant of the Royal Air Force Base Honington, and Honorary Commodore-in-Chief of the Royal Naval Commands’ Small Ships and Diving.
He will undoubtedly keep in touch with the comrades he trained and served with, and he is continuing his work with the Invictus Games, the competition he set up for sick, injured and wounded servicemen and women.
Harry had always dreamed of a life in the Army – and his honorary military appointments will have been important to him.
As a child, his bedroom was filled with pictures of tanks and helicopters and in 1993, as an eight-year-old, he was clearly in his element when dressed up in a miniature combat suit and helmet to ride in a tank on a visit to Germany.
A planned tour to Iraq was scrapped after it was found he was to be a target for insurgents, but two tours to Afghanistan followed including one as an Apache helicopter pilot.
It was the Army which offered Harry his first taste of life away from being a royal.
“I’ve always been like that. My father’s always trying to remind me about who I am and stuff like that,” he said. “But it’s very easy to forget about who I am when I am in the Army.”