Honorary Colonel Bear Grylls visits Skjold training area Norway during extreme cold weather training 2022 CREDIT Crown Copyright
Honorary Colonel Bear Grylls visits Skjold training area Norway during extreme cold weather training in 2022 (Picture: Crown Copyright).
TV

Bear Grylls discovers he is related to legendary warrior king on BBC's Who Do You Think You Are?

Honorary Colonel Bear Grylls visits Skjold training area Norway during extreme cold weather training 2022 CREDIT Crown Copyright
Honorary Colonel Bear Grylls visits Skjold training area Norway during extreme cold weather training in 2022 (Picture: Crown Copyright).

Honorary Royal Marines colonel and adventurer Bear Grylls has said it was "epic" to learn he is related to Scotland's great warrior king Robert the Bruce while filming Who Do You Think You Are? 

The new episode, which will air on 15 June on BBC One, will look at his links to the British Army and Scouting, as well as his Royal connections. 

Mr Grylls, who was a reservist in 21 SAS (Reserve) and in February 2022 joined the Royal Marines in Norway as they honed crucial Arctic warfare skills, travelled to Scotland to find out about the Royal connection, explaining that he did it for his mother, who "had hoped" they were related to royalty. 

Talking to Radio Times about his appearance in the latest series of the BBC ancestry show, Mr Grylls said: "My mother has always really wanted me to do it, because she had hoped we were related to someone royal. 

"She's now 82 and my sister took me to one side and said, 'mate, you have to do it'." 

He added: "I have always loved Scotland, it's where I met my wife Shara. 

"As soon as I was told we were going to Scotland I thought that was awesome because it's where my heart has always been." 

Robert the Bruce was the Scottish king who defeated Edward II at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314. 

Mr Grylls, who rose to fame as the face of several survival programmes such as Man vs. Wild and The Island with Bear Grylls, described Robert the Bruce as "a clansman who rewrote the rules of conventional soldiering". 

He said: "He was an inspirational leader who spent time in the great outdoors, he came back transformed and renewed. 

"It was epic for me to follow that, and to understand a connecting spirit through our lives." 

Bear Grylls with Royal Marines in Norway for the Cold Weather Warfare Course JANUARY 2022 CREDIT ROYAL NAVY
Bear Grylls with Royal Marines in Norway for the Cold Weather Warfare Course in January 2022 (Picture: Royal Navy).

Mr Grylls also discovers in the programme that he is related to Archibald Campbell, first Marquess of Argyll, who was beheaded in 1661 for supporting Oliver Cromwell. 

Campbell resisted religious changes that had been brought in by Charles I and was killed when he faced "The Scottish Maiden" – an early form of guillotine. 

It took some persuading for Mr Grylls to get on board with the show, which he had been turning down for more than a decade telling the Radio Times: "I just didn't want to do it. 

"I don't like doing TV and I didn't have an aspiration to do the show." 

Bear Grylls arriving at the annual Sun Millies awards at Banqueting House in Whitehall, London cropped CREDIT Crown Copyright
Bear Grylls arriving at the 2017 Sun Millies awards at Banqueting House in Whitehall, London (Picture: Crown Copyright).

He said he has always struggled with doing TV but has often found strength and resilience in pushing through, saying: "You can be good at something and still struggle. 

"I used to get annoyed about the fact that I found it difficult, but now I believe a sort of natural tension is quite good." 

Having finished filming, Mr Grylls now thinks the show was "made for me", saying: "All of it now makes sense, seeing people who took the road less trodden, who never gave up, people who valued scouting and family." 

The full Bear Grylls interview can be read in the Radio Times now. 

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