THE Duke of Sussex will return to the UK in just over a week for a ceremony marking the 10th anniversary of the Invictus Games.
Prince Harry will attend the thanksgiving service at St Paul’s Cathedral, London, on 8 May.
The prince will give a reading during the service, while actor Damian Lewis will recite a poem.
Prince Harry was last seen in the UK in February for a brief visit to see King Charles after his cancer diagnosis.
It is the first major event he will have attended in the UK for some time.
The prince launched the Invictus Games, a sport event for military personnel wounded in action, in 2014.
The ceremony will mark “a decade of changing lives and saving lives through sport,” a spokesperson for the Games said.
The duke moved to the US with his wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, after they stepped back as senior royals in 2020.
The spokesperson did not say whether the prince would be joined by Meghan for the ceremony.
However, the duchess will join the prince after the event on a trip to Nigeria – their first time visiting the country as a couple.
They will meet service members and their families, and participate in traditional cultural activities, Nigerian media reported.
In an interview in February with ABC News, Harry said he “jumped on a plane” as soon as possible to see his father after the cancer diagnosis – and was “grateful” for the time spent together.
He also suggested there would be more visits to the UK, saying: “I’ll stop in and see my family as much as I can.”
The upcoming visit comes as Buckingham Palace confirmed Charles, 75, will resume public engagements next week after making encouraging progress in his cancer treatment.
The King will begin with a symbolic trip to a cancer treatment centre next Tuesday, while his summer plans include a state visit, where he will host the Emperor and Empress of Japan.
“It is too early to say” for how much longer his treatment will continue, the palace said.
It added that doctors were “very encouraged by the progress made so far and remain positive about the King’s continued recovery”.
The type of cancer has not been disclosed, but the King’s medical team are “sufficiently pleased with the progress made so far that the King is now able to resume a number of public-facing duties”.