Royal Navy officer rank insignia

Last updated

These are the official Royal Navy Officer ranks ordered by rank. These ranks are part of the NATO/United Kingdom ranks, including modern and past. Past insignia is in italic.

Contents

Officers

18th and First half of 19th Century

Royal Navy epaulettes for senior and junior officers, 18th and 19th centuries RNShoulderBoards.jpg
Royal Navy epaulettes for senior and junior officers, 18th and 19th centuries
Royal Navy epaulettes for flag officers, 18th and 19th centuries AdmiralBoards.jpg
Royal Navy epaulettes for flag officers, 18th and 19th centuries

Uniforms for naval officers were not authorised until 1748. At first the cut and style of the uniform differed considerably between ranks, and specific rank insignia were only sporadically used. By the 1790s, the Royal Navy's first established uniform regulations had been published.

Ranks could be indicated by embroidery on the cuffs, by arrangement of buttons or, after 1795, on epaulettes. See the link under title for this section.

Midshipmen received a white patch on the collar in 1758, the oldest badge still in use today.

Cuff Stripes

The modern system of gold rings on the cuffs originated on 11 April 1856. It had its antecedents in the previous uniforms of the 18th and 19th century, esp. those of 1827-1833. For the first time these were applied to all blue uniforms. Also, for the first time, the Executive curl made its definitive appearance in the regulations.


Admiral of the fleet1+34in below four 58in
Admiral1+34in below three 58in
Vice admiral1+34in below two 58in
Rear admiral and Commodore 1st class1+34 in below one 58in
Commodore 2nd classfour 58in
Captainthree 12in
Commandertwo 12in
Lieutenantone 12in
Mate one 14in braid


On 16 April 1861, mates were commissioned as sub-lieutenants and lieutenants were divided into those of over eight years seniority and those under. As a result, on 5 September 1861 the lower ranks' rings were changed:

Commodore 2nd class1+34in
Captainfour 12in
Commanderthree 12in
Lieutenant, over 8 yearstwo 12in
Lieutenant, under 8 yearsone 12in

and on 25 March 1863 to:

Commodore 2nd class1+34in
Captainfour 12in
Commanderthree 12in
Lieutenanttwo 12in
Sub-lieutenantone 12in

On 30 October 1877, a lieutenant of eight years'/ seniority got an additional half-ring of 316in, increased to 14in in 1891, and in 1914 became the new rank of lieutenant commander.

In 1919, the admiral's narrow stripe was reduced to 12in, but as King George V had not approved the change, the Royal Family continued to wear the wider ring.

In 1931, all the 12in rings were all increased to 916in.

The curl was introduced in 1856, but initially only the military (or executive) and navigating (masters) branches wore it.

Other (civil) branches had plain rings, from 1863 with coloured distinction cloth between or below them. Until 1891 officers of the 'civil' branches had single-breasted coats with different arrangements of buttons.

BranchDistinction cloth
(1863–1955)
Buttons
(1832–1891)
Masters (until 1867)Light blue9 evenly spaced
Masters (after 1867)None3 groups of 3 (on double breasted coat)
SurgeonsRed3 groups of 3
Pursers/accountingWhite4 groups of 2
Engineering (from 1853)Purple2 groups of 4
Instructors (from 1879) & schoolmasters (from 1917)Light blue9 evenly spaced
Shipwrights (from 1918)Silver grey
Wardmaster
(medical assistants) (from 1918)
Maroon till 1951, then salmon-pink
Electrical (from 1918)Dark green
Ordnance (1918–1950)Dark blue
Dentists (from 1924)Orange

Engineer officers received the curl in 1915 and all other officers in 1918. At the same time they also received other things such as oak leaves on the peaked cap that had formerly been the prerogative of the military branch.

In 1955 it was announced [1] that the distinction cloth worn between the stripes of officers of the non-executive branches of the Royal Navy was to be abolished, except for those who must be clearly recognisable as non-combatant under the Geneva Convention.

The residual use of distinction cloth for non-combatants is therefore:

From 1955 to 1993 there was a rank of acting sub-lieutenant, with the same rank insignia as a sub-lieutenant.

Naval pilots in the Fleet Air Arm (and earlier the Royal Naval Air Service) have wings above the curl on the left hand sleeve. Other Fleet Air Arm officers had a letter 'A' inside the curl.

Rank groupFlag officersSenior officersJunior officersTrainee
1856–1861 Generic-Navy-13.svg Generic-Navy-12.svg Generic-Navy-11.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-8.svg Generic-Navy-6.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-2.svg Generic-Navy-1.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg British Royal Navy OF-Student.svg
Admiral of the Fleet Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Commodore 1st class Commodore 2nd class Captain Commander Lieutenant Mate Midshipman Officer cadet
1861–1863 Generic-Navy-13.svg Generic-Navy-12.svg Generic-Navy-11.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-9.svg Generic-Navy-8.svg Generic-Navy-6.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-2.svg Generic-Navy-1.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg British Royal Navy OF-Student.svg
Admiral of the Fleet Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Commodore 1st class Commodore 2nd class Captain Commander Lieutenant, over 8 years Lieutenant, under 8 years Sub-Lieutenant Midshipman Officer cadet
1863–1877 Generic-Navy-13.svg Generic-Navy-12.svg Generic-Navy-11.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-9.svg Generic-Navy-8.svg Generic-Navy-6.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-2.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg British Royal Navy OF-Student.svg
Admiral of the Fleet Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Commodore 1st class Commodore 2nd class Captain Commander Lieutenant, over 8 years Lieutenant, under 8 years Sub-Lieutenant Midshipman Officer cadet
1877–1891 Generic-Navy-13.svg Generic-Navy-12.svg Generic-Navy-11.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-9.svg Generic-Navy-8.svg Generic-Navy-6.svg Generic-Navy-5.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-2.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg British Royal Navy OF-Student.svg
Admiral of the Fleet Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Commodore 1st class Commodore 2nd class Captain Commander Lieutenant, over 8 years Lieutenant, under 8 years Sub-Lieutenant Midshipman Officer cadet
1891–1914 Generic-Navy-13.svg Generic-Navy-12.svg Generic-Navy-11.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-9.svg Generic-Navy-8.svg Generic-Navy-6.svg Generic-Navy-5.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-2.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg British Royal Navy OF-Student.svg
Admiral of the Fleet Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Commodore 1st class Commodore 2nd class Captain Commander Middle stripe increased from 3⁄16in to 1⁄4in
Lieutenant, over 8 years
Lieutenant, under 8 years Sub-Lieutenant Midshipman Officer cadet
1914-interwar period Generic-Navy-13.svg Generic-Navy-12.svg Generic-Navy-11.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg Generic-Navy-9.svg Generic-Navy-8.svg Generic-Navy-6.svg Generic-Navy-5.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-2.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg British Royal Navy OF-Student.svg
Admiral of the Fleet Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Commodore 1st class Commodore 2nd class Captain Commander Lieutenant Commander Lieutenant (under 8 years) Sub-Lieutenant Midshipman Officer cadet
interwar period/1939-present Generic-Navy-13.svg Generic-Navy-12.svg Generic-Navy-11.svg Generic-Navy-10.svg N/A Generic-Navy-9.svg Generic-Navy-8.svg Generic-Navy-6.svg Generic-Navy-5.svg Generic-Navy-4.svg Generic-Navy-2.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg British Royal Navy OF-Student.svg
Admiral of the Fleet Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral N/A Commodore Captain Commander Lieutenant Commander Lieutenant (under 8 years) Sub-Lieutenant Midshipman Officer cadet


Rank Badges

From 1795 rank badges could also be shown on epaulettes. The system changed several times, but after 1864 was as follows:

Admiral of the fleetCrown, crossed batons, and four stars
AdmiralCrown, crossed baton & sword, and three stars
Vice admiralCrown, crossed baton & sword, and two stars
Rear admiralCrown, crossed baton & sword, and one (larger) star
Commodore & captain over three yearsCrown, two stars, and foul anchor
Captain under 3 yearsCrown, one star, and foul anchor
CommanderCrown and foul anchor
Lieutenant over eight years after 1914 Lieutenant commanderStar and foul anchor
Lieutenant under 8 yearsFoul anchor

Sub-lieutenants and commissioned warrant officers wore scales (epaulettes without fringes, officially termed "shoulder straps") and the same device as a lieutenant.

Epaulettes of the military branch were gold throughout with silver devices, while those of the civil branches had a silver edging and gold devices. Instead of the baton and sword or foul anchor, civil branch epaulettes substituted a star. Navigating branch epaulettes were the same as the military branch, but with crossed plain anchors in place of the foul anchor. The epaulette stars had eight points, quite unlike the Order of the Bath stars worn by army officers. [lower-alpha 2]

In 1891 the admiral of the fleet changed to a crown above two crossed batons within a wreath, similar to the badge of a field marshal.

Also in 1891 shoulder-straps were introduced for use on white uniforms and on the greatcoat, and more recently in "shirt sleeve order". For these commodores first class and above used the same badge as on their epaulettes, and commodores second class and below used their rank rings.

From 1926 only commodores had two stars, other captains one.

Epaulettes were not worn after 1939 except by the royal family and in attendance on the royal family on ceremonial occasions by admirals.

In 2001, [lower-alpha 3] the shoulder boards on dress uniforms were changed to match the NATO system of stars for Flag Officers and are currently:

Admiral of the fleetCrown, 2 crossed batons within a wreath
AdmiralCrown, crossed baton & sword and 4 stars
Vice admiralCrown, crossed baton & sword and 3 stars
Rear admiralCrown, crossed baton & sword and 2 stars
CommodoreCrown, crossed baton & sword and 1 star
CaptainCrown, one star, and foul anchor
CommanderCrown and foul anchor

Warrant officers

An example of a Royal Navy officer of the lieutenant rank - Lieutenant Carre Tupper, 1814 Lieut carre tupper RN.JPG
An example of a Royal Navy officer of the lieutenant rank – Lieutenant Carre Tupper, 1814

Warrant officers first received their uniforms in 1787. The navigators, surgeons and pursers were commissioned in 1843 and their insignia are described above.

In 1865 chief (later commissioned) gunners, boatswains, and carpenters were given a single 12in ring, with the curl, though the carpenters lost the curl in 1879.

In 1891 ordinary warrant officers of 10 years' standing were given a half-ring of 14in, with or without curl as above.

In 1918 this ring, with the curl, was extended to all non-commissioned warrant officers.

In 1949 WOs and CWOs became "commissioned branch officers" and "senior commissioned branch officers" and were admitted to the wardroom, but their insignia remained the same.

In 1956 they were integrated into the line officers as sub-lieutenants and lieutenants, and class distinctions finally disappeared from the uniform.

Reserves

From 1863 officers were commissioned in the Royal Naval Reserve this was for serving merchant navy officers only. They had rings each formed from two 14 inch wavy lines intersecting each other. The curl was formed into a six-pointed star. The lieutenant commander's half-ring was straight, but only 18 inch wide. The commodore had a broad straight ring, but the same star for a curl. Midshipmen had a blue collar patch.

Officers of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (formed 1903) for civilians, had single wavy rings 14 inch wide, with the curl a squarish shape. The lieutenant commander's narrow ring was originally straight, but after 1942 was waved also. This system of rank insignia is still worn today by officers in the Sea Cadets. Midshipmen in the RNVR had a maroon collar patch.

In 1951 both reserves lost their distinctive insignia and got normal straight stripes like the regulars, but with a letter 'R' inside the curl. The two organisations were merged in 1958. In 2007 officers of the Royal Naval Reserve had the 'R' distinction from badges of rank removed. Honorary officers in the RNR however continue to wear the 'R' inside the curl.

Rank groupGeneral / flag officersSenior officersJunior officersOfficer cadet
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Royal Naval Reserve
(1916-1951)
Royal Naval Reserve OF-6 - Commodore (cuff) 1916-1951.png Royal Naval Reserve OF-5 - Captain (cuff) 1916-1951.png Royal Naval Reserve OF-4 - Commander (cuff) 1916-1951.png Royal Naval Reserve OF-3 - Lieutenant Commander (cuff) 1916-1951.png Royal Naval Reserve OF-2 - Lieutenant (cuff) 1916-1951.png Royal Naval Reserve OF-1b - Sub lieutenant (cuff) 1916-1951.png Mishipman of the RNR.png Lapel of Cadet RNR 1916-1951.png
Commodore Captain Commander Lieutenant commander Lieutenant Sub lieutenant Midshipman Naval Cadet
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
(1916-1941)
RNVR OF-6 - Commodore (cuffs) 1916-1958.png RNVR CPT.png RNVR CDR.png RNVR LTCDR 1916-1941.png RNVR LT.png RNVR SLT.png Mishipman of the RNVR.png Lapel of Cadet RNVR 1916-1951.png
Commodore Captain Commander Lieutenant commander Lieutenant Sub lieutenant Midshipman Naval Cadet
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
(1942-1951)
RNVR OF-6 - Commodore (cuffs) 1916-1958.png RNVR CPT.png RNVR CDR.png RNVR LTCDR.png RNVR LT.png RNVR SLT.png Mishipman of the RNVR.png Lapel of Cadet RNVR 1916-1951.png
Commodore Captain Commander Lieutenant commander Lieutenant Sub lieutenant Midshipman Naval Cadet
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Royal Naval Reserve
(1952-2006)
Blank.svg Royal Naval Reserve OF-5 1952.svg Royal Naval Reserve OF-4 1952.svg Royal Naval Reserve OF-3 1952.svg Royal Naval Reserve OF-2 1952.svg Royal Naval Reserve OF-1b 1952.svg UK-Navy-OFD.svg Lapel of Cadet RNR.png
Commodore Captain Commander Lieutenant commander Lieutenant Sub lieutenant Midshipman Naval Cadet
NATO codeOF-10OF-9OF-8OF-7OF-6OF-5OF-4OF-3OF-2OF-1 OF(D) Student officer

Wrens

Officers in the Women's Royal Naval Service had straight rings in light blue, with a diamond shape instead of the curl. The Women's Royal Naval Service was abolished in 1994 and female officers now have the same gold rings as male officers.

Royal Marines

NATO Code OF-10OF-9OF-8OF-7OF-6OF-5OF-4OF-3OF-2OF-1 OF(D)
Flag of the Royal Marines.svg United Kingdom Epaulette Rank Insignia British Royal Marines OF-9.svg British Royal Marines OF-8.svg British Royal Marines OF-7.svg British Royal Marines OF-6.svg British Royal Marines OF-5.svg British Royal Marines OF-4.svg British Royal Marines OF-3.svg British Royal Marines OF-2.svg British Royal Marines OF-1b.svg British Royal Marines OF-1a.svg British Royal Marines OF-(D).svg
Rank title: General Lieutenant-general Major-general Brigadier Colonel Lieutenant colonel Major Captain Lieutenant Second lieutenant Officer cadet

Part of the RN as the Senior Service, the Royal Marines uses the same rank structure and insignia that the British Army has, save for the field marshal rank, and the RM initials for second lieutenants to lieutenant colonels to distinguish them from the Army itself. The major general rank since 1996 is the highest rank of the officer corps, but in the past, generals and lieutenant generals headed the Corps, and from 1857 to 1957 the Corps also had the unique ranks of colonel second commandant and colonel commandant. Rank insignia are on brown or dark blue shoulder boards in all dresses save for the combat and barracks duty dress uniforms. From 1911 to 1957 the officer corps even included warrant officers and commissioned warrant officers in the same way as the RN. Although the Royal Marines does not officially use the rank of field marshal, the Captain General Royal Marines, the ceremonial head of the corps, wears a field marshal's rank insignia. [4]

Officer ranks of the Royal Marines

Historical ranks in italic.

See also

Notes

  1. The requirement for civilian officers to wear uniform – refer BRd 81 – normally arises when deployed overseas, including periods of duty exceeding 24 hours when embarked on a UK or allied vessel operating outside UK territorial waters.
  2. Order of the Bath stars worn by army officers have four points and are sometimes referred to as "pips".
  3. Refer UK Defence Council Instruction (Joint Service) (DCI(JS)) 125/2001

    Related Research Articles

    Lieutenant Commander is a commissioned officer rank in many navies. The rank is superior to a lieutenant and subordinate to a commander. The corresponding rank in most armies and air forces is major, and in the Royal Air Force and other Commonwealth air forces is squadron leader. It is roughly equivalent to the Corvette Captain rank in central European countries and the Captain 3rd rank rank in eastern European/CIS countries.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Epaulette</span> Decorative shoulder covering for military uniforms

    Epaulette is a type of ornamental shoulder piece or decoration used as insignia of rank by armed forces and other organizations. Flexible metal epaulettes are referred to as shoulder scales.

    This is a table of the ranks and insignia of the Canadian Armed Forces. As the Canadian Armed Forces is officially bilingual, the French language ranks are presented following the English.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Cap badge</span> Badge worn on uniform headgear

    A cap badge, also known as head badge or hat badge, is a badge worn on uniform headgear and distinguishes the wearer's nationality and/or organisation. The wearing of cap badges is a convention commonly found among military and police forces, as well as uniformed civilian groups such as the Boy Scouts, civil defence organisations, ambulance services, customs services, fire services etc.

    Officer Cadet is a rank held by military cadets during their training to become commissioned officers. In the United Kingdom, the rank is also used by members of University Royal Naval Units, University Officer Training Corps and University Air Squadron; however, these are not trainee officers with many not choosing a career in the armed forces.

    Listed in the table below are the insignia—emblems of authority—of the British Army. Badges for field officers were introduced in 1810 and the insignia was moved to the epaulettes in 1880. On ceremonial or parade uniforms these ranks continue to be worn on the epaulettes, either as cloth slides or as metal clips, although on the modern 'working dress' they are usually worn as a cloth slide on the chest. Although these insignia apply across the British Army there is variation in the precise design and colours used and it can take some time to become familiar with them all.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">British Army other ranks rank insignia</span> Enlisted rank insignia of the British Army

    "Other ranks" is the term used to refer to all ranks below officers in the British Army and the Royal Marines. It includes warrant officers, non-commissioned officers ("NCOs") and ordinary soldiers with the rank of private or regimental equivalent. Officers may, in speaking, distinguish themselves from those "in the ranks".

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Mess dress uniform</span> Formal evening dress worn by military personnel

    Mess dress uniform is the most formal type of evening-wear uniform used by military personnel, police personnel, and other uniformed services members. It frequently consists of a mess jacket, trousers, white dress shirt and a black bow tie, along with orders and medals insignia. Design may depend on regiment or service branch, e.g. army, navy, air force, marines, etc. In modern Western dress codes, mess dress uniform is the supplementary alternative equivalent to the civilian black tie for evening wear. Mess dress uniforms are typically less formal than full dress uniform, but more formal than service dress uniform.

    A flag officer is a commissioned officer in a nation's armed forces senior enough to be entitled to fly a flag to mark the position from which the officer exercises command.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Ranks of the Imperial Japanese Navy</span>

    The Ranks of the Imperial Japanese Navy were the rank insignia of the Imperial Japanese Navy, used from its creation in 1868, until its dissolution in 1945 following the Surrender of Japan in World War II. The ranks were inspired by the ranks of the Royal Navy.

    The officer ranks of the Royal Air Force, as they are today, were introduced in 1919. Prior to that Army ranks were used.

    Before Unification as the Canadian Armed Forces in 1968, the Canadian military had three distinct services: the Royal Canadian Navy, the Royal Canadian Air Force, and the Canadian Army. All three services had a Regular (full-time) component and a reserve (part-time) component. The rank structure for these services were based on the services of the British military, the Royal Navy, the Royal Air Force, and the British Army. The change to a "Canadian" rank structure meant that many of the traditional (British) rank titles and insignia were removed or changed.

    United States Army commissioned officers rank insignia in use today.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">United States Marine Corps rank insignia</span> Marks distinguishing levels of hierarchy in the American maritime land forces service

    United States Marine Corps rank insignia are the devices worn by officers in the United States Marine Corps, in order to provide distinction from other ranks. Different styles of rank insignia are worn on different uniforms of the United States Marine Corps.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Uniforms of the Royal Navy</span> Clothes worn by the Royal Navy

    The uniforms of the Royal Navy have evolved gradually since the first uniform regulations for officers were issued in 1748. The predominant colours of Royal Navy uniforms are navy blue and white. Since reforms in 1997 male and female ratings have worn the same ceremonial uniform.

    Captain (Capt) is a junior officer rank of the British Army and Royal Marines and in both services it ranks above lieutenant and below major with a NATO ranking code of OF-2. The rank is equivalent to a lieutenant in the Royal Navy and to a flight lieutenant in the Royal Air Force. The rank of captain in the Royal Navy is considerably more senior and the two ranks should not be confused.

    A new law approved in July 2008 changed the military ranks of Venezuela, principally with regard to names, functions and commanding regulation of the armed forces. The law was sanctioned by Venezuela's National Assembly.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Executive curl</span> The name given to the ring above a naval officers gold lace or braid insignia

    The executive curl, or the "Elliot's Eye", is the name given to the ring above a naval officer's gold lace or braid insignia. It originated with the Royal Navy.

    The rank insignia of the federal armed forces of the Federal Republic of Germany indicate rank and branch of service in the German Army, German Air Force, or the German Navy.

    Lieutenant (abbreviated Lt, LT (U.S.), LT(USN), Lieut and LEUT, depending on nation) is a commissioned officer rank in many English-speaking nations' navies and coast guards. It is typically the most senior of junior officer ranks. In most navies, the rank's insignia may consist of two medium gold braid stripes, the uppermost stripe featuring an executive curl in many Commonwealth of Nations; or three stripes of equal or unequal width.

    References

    Citations

    1. "Statement of the First Lord of the Admiralty (Mr. J. P. L. Thomas)", Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) , vol. 537, cc2247-301, 3 March 1955
    2. "BR3 Volume 1 - Naval Personnel Management, Chapter 46, (Version 6), para 4603" (PDF). Royal Navy. June 2016.
    3. "BR3 Volume 1 - Naval Personnel Management, Chapter 39, (Version 6), para 3912" (PDF). Royal Navy. June 2016.
    4. "HRH Prince Philip lends support to the Royal Marines Charity with final official engagement". Royal Marines Charity . 27 July 2017. Retrieved 20 December 2017.

    Sources