Naval ranks: Difference between revisions
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (Cleaning up tables, still will take up non-officer ranks, need to clear up commodore mess--George Swan please check) |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
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|Brigadier, [[brigadier general|Brigadier General]], Air Commodore | |Brigadier, [[brigadier general|Brigadier General]], Air Commodore | ||
| | | Very complex usages; not present in all navies | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Captain (naval)]] | | [[Captain (naval)]] | ||
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| OF-3 | | OF-3 | ||
| O-3 | | O-3 | ||
| | | ''Kapitanleutnant'' | ||
| [[Captain (land forces)]] | | [[Captain (land forces)]] | ||
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==Non-commissioned officers== | ==Non-commissioned officers== | ||
Modern navies also employ various [[non-commissioned officers]], '''petty officers''' and '''warrant officers''' -- individuals who may be very skilled and experienced, but did not have military training at the University level. | Modern navies also employ various [[non-commissioned officers]], '''petty officers''' and '''warrant officers''' -- individuals who may be very skilled and experienced, but did not have military training at the University level. |
Revision as of 10:47, 23 April 2011
Modern militaries all use similar schema of military ranks.[1] Modern navies use naval ranks that are of comparable seniority to the ranks used by armies and air forces.
The most senior naval ranks, collectively called "flag ranks", include Fleet Admiral or Admiral of the Fleet, Admirals Vice Admirals, Rear Admirals and Commodores, have comparable seniority to Generals in the Army or Air Force. These ranks may have command of fleets, squadrons or task forces composed of multiple vessels.
The other commissioned ranks in modern navies include Captain, Commander, Lieutenant Commander and Lieutenant. These are roughly comparable seniority to the army ranks Colonel, Lieutenant Colonel, Major, Captain and Lieutenant.
Commissioned officers generally had military training at the University level.
Rank | NATO designation [2] | U.S. designation | Other names | Usual army/air equivalent | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fleet admiral or Admiral of the Fleet | OF-10 | O-11 | Field Marshal or General of the Army | Rarely used, and usually wartime only | |
Admiral | OF-9 | O-10 | General, Colonel General | ||
Vice admiral | OF-8 | O-9 | Lieutenant general, General of branch, Air Marshal | ||
Rear admiral | OF-7 | O-8 | Major general, lieutenant general*, Air Vice Marshal | ||
Commodore** | O-7 | Brigadier, Brigadier General, Air Commodore | Very complex usages; not present in all navies | ||
Captain (naval) | O-6 | Ship Captain, Captain 1st Rank | Colonel | ||
Commander | OF-4 or OF-5 | O-5 | Frigate Captain, Captain 2nd Rank | Lieutenant colonel, Wing Commander | |
Lieutenant commander | OF-3 or OF-4 | O-4 | Capitaine de corvette, Corvette Captain, Korvettencaptain, Captain 3rd Rank | Major | |
Lieutenant (naval forces) | OF-3 | O-3 | Kapitanleutnant | Captain (land forces) | |
Lieutenant junior grade | OF-2 | O-2 | Leutnant zur see | First lieutenant, senior lieutenant | |
Ensign (naval forces) | OF-1 | O-1 | Second lieutenant |
Non-commissioned officers
Modern navies also employ various non-commissioned officers, petty officers and warrant officers -- individuals who may be very skilled and experienced, but did not have military training at the University level.
Seamen
Seamen are the most junior enlisted personnel in many modern navies, roughly equivalent to a private in modern armies.
References
- ↑ Raymond Oliver. Why is the Colonel called "kernal"? The origin of the ranks and rank insignia now used by the United States armed forces, McClellan Aviation Museum. Retrieved on 2011-04-22. mirror
- ↑ NATO codes for grades of military personnel: Agreed English texts, 1992, NATO Standardization Agreement (STANAG) 2116