Name of royal
|
Branch of service
|
Rank whilst active
|
Years of service
|
Current rank worn
|
Wartime service
|
Unit
|
Military training and qualifications
|
Medals
|
Appointments and other roles
|
Prince William, Duke of Cambridge
as Colonel of the Irish Guards (2011)
|
RN, British Army, RAF
|
Lieutenant RN, Captain, Squadron Leader
|
2005–2013[4]
|
Lieutenant Commander, Major, Squadron Leader
|
None
|
Blues and Royals, No. 22 Squadron (RAF Search and Rescue Force)[4]
|
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst RAF Cranwell and shorter training course at Britannia Royal Naval College
RAF pilot's flying badge/brevet (wings)
|
|
Commodore-in-Chief of HMNB Clyde; Commodore-in-Chief of the Royal Navy Submarine Service; Commodore-in-Chief of Scotland; Honorary Air Commandant of RAF Coningsby; Colonel of the Irish Guards
|
Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex
as a Captain in Household Cavalry Regiment (Blues and Royals) (2013)
|
British Army
|
Captain
|
2005–2015
|
Major,[5] Captain General Royal Marines, Squadron Leader
|
Afghanistan
|
Blues and Royals, Household Cavalry, 1st Mechanised Brigade of the 3rd Mechanised Division,
Army Air Corps, 662 Squadron of 3 Regiment
|
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, Forward Air Controller
Army Air Corps Pilot brevet
RAF Regiment Shoulder Flash
|
|
Canadian Ranger; Captain General Royal Marines; Honorary Air Commandant of RAF Honington; Commodore-in-Chief of Small Ships and Diving
|
Charles, Prince of Wales
as Field marshal of the New Zealand Army (2015)
|
RN, British Army and RAF
|
Commander, Flight Lieutenant
|
1971–1976
|
Admiral of the Fleet, Field Marshal, Marshal of the Royal Air Force
|
None
|
845 Naval Air Squadron
|
Royal Naval College, Dartmouth Commando Training Centre Royal Marines Royal Air Force College, Cranwell
Parachutist Badge
RAF pilot's flying badge/brevet (wings)
|
(It should be noted not all of these are regularly worn).
|
Field Marshal, Colonel-in-Chief, Colonel, Honorary Air Commodore, Air Commodore-in-Chief, Deputy Colonel-in-Chief, Royal Honorary Colonel, Royal Colonel, and Honorary Commodore of at least 32 military formations throughout the Commonwealth of Nations[6]
|
Prince Andrew, Duke of York
as Colonel-in-Chief of the Yorkshire Regiment
|
RN and RAF
|
Commander (Ret'd)[7]
|
1980–2001
|
Vice Admiral, Air Commodore
|
Falklands War
|
815 Naval Air Squadron
|
Royal Naval College, Dartmouth Commando Training Centre Royal Marines
Fleet Air Arm pilot's wings
Parachutist Badge
|
|
Admiral of the Sea Cadet Corps, Commodore in Chief of the Fleet Air Arm, Honorary Air Commodore Royal Air Force Lossiemouth, Honorary Vice Admiral, Colonel-in-Chief of various units in the Canadian Forces, Colonel-in-Chief and Royal Colonel of various regiments in the British Armed Forces and Colonel of the Grenadier Guards. Personal Aide-de-Camp
|
Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex as Commodore-in-Chief of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary
|
RM[8]
|
Acting Lieutenant (withdrew from training)
|
1986–1987
|
See appointments
|
None
|
N/A
|
Commando Training Centre Royal Marines (did not finish)
|
Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, New Zealand Commemorative Medal, Sultan of Brunei Silver Jubilee Medal, Honorary Member of the Saskatchewan Order of Merit (SOM), Commemorative Medal for the Centennial of Saskatchewan, Canadian Forces' Decoration and Sultan of Brunei Golden Jubilee Medal
|
Royal Honorary Colonel, of the Royal Wessex Yeomanry Royal Colonel, of the 2nd Battalion, The Rifles Commodore-in-Chief, of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary Honorary Air Commodore Royal Air Force Waddington Colonel-in-Chief, of The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment Colonel-in-Chief, of The Prince Edward Island Regiment Colonel-in-Chief, of the Saskatchewan Dragoons
|
Prince Michael of Kent
His Royal Highness Prince Michael of Kent
as a Honorary Vice-Admiral, Royal Naval Reserve
|
British Army
|
Major (Ret'd)
|
1963–1981
|
Vice-Admiral, Colonel, Air Marshal
|
None
|
11th Hussars (Prince Albert's Own)[9]
|
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
Prince Michael is a qualified military pilot[10] and wears the respective service's pilot badge with their uniform, i.e. when he is in RN uniform, he wears the Fleet Air Arm badge, likewise with Army - Army Air Corps wings and RAF - RAF wings
|
Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, Canadian Forces Decoration, United Nations Medal for UNFICYP, Order of Friendship (Russia), Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Order of Francis I and Order of the Sun (Peru)
|
Honorary Vice Admiral, Royal Naval Reserve, Colonel-in-Chief of The Essex and Kent Scottish (Canadian Forces), Senior Colonel of the King's Royal Hussars, Royal Honorary Colonel of the Honourable Artillery Company
|
Prince Edward, Duke of Kent as Colonel of the Scots Guards (2013)
|
British Army
|
Lieutenant-Colonel
|
1955–1976 (Ret'd)[11]
|
Field Marshal and Air Chief Marshal
|
None
|
Royal Scots Greys
|
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
RAF pilot's flying badge/brevet (wings)
|
Principal Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG), Royal Knight of the Order of the Garter (KG), King George VI Coronation Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal, United Nations Medal for the UNFICYP mission, Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal, Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, Sierra Leone Independence Medal, Guyana Independence Medal and Canadian Forces' Decoration (with two clasps) (CD)
|
Personal Aide-de-Camp to The Queen, Colonel of the Scots Guards, Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, Royal Colonel of 1st Battalion The Rifles, Colonel-in-Chief of the Lorne Scots Regiment, Canada, Deputy Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, Honorary Air Chief Marshal and Honorary Air Commodore of RAF Leuchars.
|
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh as Admiral of the Fleet
|
RN, British Army and RAF
|
Commander[12]
|
1940–1952[12]
|
Admiral of the Fleet, Field Marshal, Marshal of the Royal Air Force
|
World War II – Allied invasion of Sicily, Battle of Crete, Battle of Cape Matapan
|
British Pacific Fleet
|
Royal Naval College, Greenwich, Britannia Royal Naval College
RAF pilot's flying badge/brevet (wings)
|
War Medal 1939-1945 with Oak Leaf, Atlantic Star, Africa Star, Burma Star with Rosette, Italy Star, Greek War Cross, Croix de Guerre 1939-1945 with Palm
(The above are the current ribbons worn).[13][circular reference]
|
Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom and Field Marshal of the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, Marshal of the Royal Air Force, Marshal of the Royal Australian Air Force, Marshal of the Royal New Zealand Air Force, Colonel-in-Chief-The Royal Canadian Regiment, Colonel-in-Chief - Army Cadet Force.
|
Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom
|
Auxiliary Territorial Service, British Army
|
Subaltern (equivalent to Army Lieutenant), Junior Commander (equivalent to Army Captain)
|
1945–1949
|
|
World War II ATS Service
|
None
|
None
|
War Medal 1939-1945 , Defence Medal
|
Ceremonial Colonel-in-Chief of Commonwealth armies and Air Commodore-in-Chief of Commonwealth air forces
|
George VI of the United Kingdom†
as Admiral of the Fleet during the Second World War
|
RN, RAF
|
Lieutenant (RN), Squadron Leader
|
1909–1919
|
(as monarch) Admiral of the Fleet, Field Marshal Marshal of the Royal Air Force
|
World War I
|
HMS Collingwood Royal Naval Air Service RAF Cranwell Independent Air Force
|
Britannia Royal Naval College
RAF pilot's flying badge/brevet (wings)
|
Royal Victorian Chain, 1914 Star, British War Medal, Victory Medal with Mention in Despatches, Queen Victoria Diamond Jubilee Medal, King Edward VII Coronation Medal, King George V Coronation Medal, King George V Silver Jubilee Medal, 1939-45 Star, Italy Star, France and Germany Star, Defence Medal (United Kingdom), War Medal 1939–1945, Canadian Forces Decoration
|
Colonel-in-Chief – Commonwealth armies (Canadian Army, Australian Imperial Force/Australian Army Reserve, New Zealand Expeditionary Force) and Air Commodore-in-Chief of Commonwealth air forces (RCAF, RAAF, RNZAF); Field Marshal of the British Army/Admiral of the Fleet of the Royal Navy/Marshal of the Royal Air Force
|
Edward VIII of the United Kingdom†
as a Second Lieutenant during the First World War
|
British Army, RAF
|
Lieutenant
|
1914–1918[citation needed]
|
N/A
|
World War I
|
Grenadier Guards
|
Osborne Naval College, Royal Naval College at Dartmouth
RAF pilot's flying badge/brevet (wings)
|
Military Cross
|
Colonel-in-Chief – Commonwealth armies (Canadian Army, Australian Imperial Force/Australian Army Reserve, New Zealand Expeditionary Force) and Air Commodore-in-Chief of Commonwealth air forces (Royal Canadian Air Force, RAAF, RNZAF); Field Marshal of the British Army/Admiral of the Fleet of the Royal Navy/Marshal of the Royal Air Force[14]
|
George V of the United Kingdom†
as Marshal of the Royal Air Force (1935)
|
RN
|
Commander
|
1877–1891
|
N/A
|
None
|
HMS Bacchante
|
None
|
None
|
Admiral of the Fleet of the Royal Navy, Field Marshal of the British Army and Marshal of the Royal Air Force
|
William IV of the United Kingdom†
|
RN
|
Rear-Admiral
|
1780–1789
|
N/A
|
American War of Independence
|
HMS Andromeda, HMS Pegasus
|
None
|
None
|
General of the British Army/Admiral of the Royal Navy
|
Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester†
as Governor General of Australia (c. 1945)
|
British Army
|
Major (last active service rank)
|
1919-1937 (active service) and 1940-1945 (war service)
|
Honorary Captain of the RNVR, Field Marshal and Marshal of the Royal Air Force (after retiring from Army)
|
World War II, Battle of France
|
King's Royal Rifle Corps, 10th Royal Hussars, British Expeditionary Force
|
Royal Military College Sandhurst
|
None
|
Colonel in Chief-Gloucestershire Regiment, Colonel in Chief-Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, Colonel-Ceylon Light Infantry, Colonel-Scots Guards, Marshal of the Royal Air Force
|
Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster
Crest of Lord Ulster
|
British Army
|
Major
|
1998–2008
|
Major (Ret'd)
|
Kosovo War, Iraq War
|
King's Royal Hussars
|
Royal Military College Sandhurst
|
General Service Medal, NATO Medal, Iraq Medal, Queen's Golden Jubilee Medal, Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal
|
|
Louis Mountbatten, 1st Marquess of Milford Haven†
The Marquess of Milford Haven
|
RN
|
Admiral of the Fleet
|
1868–1914
|
|
Anglo-Egyptian War, First World War
|
|
HMS Royal Alfred
|
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order, Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
|
First Sea Lord
|
George Mountbatten, 2nd Marquess of Milford Haven†
The Marquess of Milford Haven
|
RN
|
Captain
|
1904–1937
|
|
First World War
|
|
Royal Naval College, Dartmouth
|
Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order Order of St Vladimir, 4th class, with Swords, Knight of the Military Order of Savoy,
Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order
|
|
Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma†
as Admiral of the Fleet of the Royal Navy (1976)
|
RN
|
Admiral of the Fleet
|
1913–1965
|
|
First World War, Second World War
|
Supreme Allied Commander South East Asia (SACSEA) 1943-1945
|
Royal Naval College, Dartmouth
|
Knight of the Garter, Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, Member of the Order of Merit, Knight Grand Commander of the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India, Knight Grand Commander of the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire, Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order, Companion of the Distinguished Service Order, British War Medal, See list
|
Chief of the Defence Staff, First Sea Lord, Supreme Allied Commander South East Asia Command, Chief of Combined Operations, Colonel of the Life Guards, Colonel Commandant of the Royal Marines
|