User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
Related terms
Extensive Definition
A General Officer is an officer of high military
rank. The term is used by nearly every country in the world.
General can be used as a generic term for all grades of general
officer, or it can specifically refer to a single rank that is just
called General.
All General officer ranks
The various grades of general officer are at the top of the rank structure. The General Officer ranks came about by adding General as an adjective to existing names of ranks, although in some countries the highest general officers are titled Field Marshal or Marshal. All officers who commanded more than a single regiment (the most significant level of unit) came to be known as a "general officer".Common systems
There are two common systems of using general ranks.One form, the old European system, is used in the
United
Kingdom from which it eventually spread to the Commonwealth
and the United States
of America. The system is not British in origin, and variations
of this system were once used throughout Europe.
The other is derived from the French
Revolution, where generals' ranks are named according to the
unit they (theoretically) command.
Old European system The system used either a
brigadier rank, or a colonel general rank (i.e. exclude one of the
italicised ranks.)
The rank of field
marshal was used by some countries as the highest rank, while
in other countries it was used as a divisional or brigade rank.
Many countries (notably pre-revolutionary France and eventually
much of Latin America) actually used two brigade command ranks,
which is why some countries now use two stars as their brigade
general insignia. (Mexico and Argentina still use two brigade
command ranks.)
In some nations (particularly in the Commonwealth),
the equivalent to Brigadier General is Brigadier, which
is not always considered by these armies to be a general officer
rank, although it is always treated as equivalent to the rank of
Brigadier General for comparative purposes.
French (Revolutionary) system More information
about this system can be found on the page: Général.
Other variations
Other nomenclatures for general officers include the titles and/or ranks:- Adjutant General
- Commandant-General
- Inspector General
- Captain General
- General of the Army (not to be confused with the title Army General)
- General of the Air Force (USA only)
- General of the Armies of the United States (of America), a title created for General John J. Pershing, and subsequently granted posthumously to George Washington.
- Admiral General (or General Admiral) (German Navy)
- Air General and Aviation General (Chilean Air Force; roughly equivalent to Air Chief Marshal and Air Vice-Marshal respectively)
- Wing General and Group General (Mexican Air Force; roughly equivalent to Air Commodore and Acting Air Commodore respectively)
- Lieutenant-Colonel General (A Serb rank immediately inferior to Colonel General, and roughly equivalent to Commonwealth/US Major General)
- Director General (a common admistrative term sometimes used as an appointment in military services)
- Director General of National Defence (most senior rank in the Mexican Armed Forces)
- Controller General (general officer rank in the French National Police)
- Prefect General (the most senior rank of the Argentine Naval Prefecture)
- Master-General of Ordnance
The specific General rank
In the Old European system, a General, without prefix or suffix (and sometimes referred to informally as a "full general"), is usually the most senior type of general, above Lieutenant General and directly below Field Marshal. Usually it is the most senior peace-time rank, with more senior ranks (for example, Field Marshal) being used only in war time, or as honorary titles.In some armies, however, the rank of Captain
General, General of the Army, Army General or Colonel
General occupied or occupies this position. Depending on
circumstances and the army in question, these ranks may be
considered to be equivalent to a full General or to a Field
Marshal.
The rank of General came about as a
"Captain-General", the captain of an army in general, i.e. the
whole army. The rank of Captain-General began appearing around the
time of the organization of professional armies in the 17th
century. In most countries "Captain-General"
contracted to just "General".
General ranks by country
The following articles deal with the rank of
General as it is employed in the militaries of those
countries.
General equivalent ranks
Other General ranks
Air Force and Navy Equivalents
Some countries (such as the United States) use the General Officer ranks for both the army and the air force. But some countries only use the General Officer ranks for the army, while in the air force they use Air Officers as the equivalent of General Officers. They use the air force rank of Air Marshal as the equivalent of the specific army rank of General. This latter group includes the British Royal Air Force and those based on it (e.g. India, Pakistan, New Zealand, Nigeria etc.).In most navies of the world, Flag
Officers are the equivalent of General Officers. And the naval
rank of Admiral is
equivalent to the specific army rank of General. However a
noteworthy historical exception was the Cromwellian
naval rank General at sea. In recent years in the American service
there is a tendency to use "Flag Officer" and "Flag Rank" to refer
to generals and admirals of the services collectively.
See also
External links
- Generals of World War II
- Schema-root.org: US Generals News feeds for US Generals in the news
- Marines.mil: General Officer Biographies Biographies of United States Marine Corps General Officers
generale in Arabic: فريق أول (رتبة عسكرية)
generale in Bulgarian: Генерал
generale in Bengali: জেনারেল অফিসার
generale in Bosnian: General
generale in Catalan: General
generale in Czech: Generál
generale in Danish: General
generale in German: General
generale in Estonian: Kindral
generale in Spanish: General
generale in Esperanto: Generalo
generale in Persian: تیمسار
generale in French: Général
generale in Korean: 장군
generale in Croatian: General
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generale in Ossetian: Инæлар
generale in Italian: Generale
generale in Hebrew: גנרל
generale in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Jenerali
generale in Lithuanian: Generolas
generale in Dutch: Generaal
generale in Japanese: 将軍
generale in Norwegian Nynorsk: General
generale in Norwegian: General
generale in Polish: Generał
generale in Portuguese: General
generale in Urdu: منصبِ جامع
generale in Russian: Генерал
generale in Simple English: General
generale in Slovak: Generál
generale in Slovenian: General
generale in Serbian: Генерал
generale in Finnish: Kenraali
generale in Swedish: General
generale in Vietnamese: Đại tướng
generale in Turkish: General
generale in Ukrainian: Генерал
generale in Yiddish: זשענעראל
generale in Chinese: 將軍 (中國古代)