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The Primus pilus was the senior centurion of a Roman legion.
In the late Roman republic, the cohort (of which there were between six and ten), became the basic tactical unit of the legions. The cohort was composed of five to eight centuries each led by a centurion assisted by an optio, a soldier who could read and write. The senior centurion of the legion and commander of the first cohort was called the primus pilus (first file), a career soldier and advisor to the legate. While every normal cohort was composed of 5 to 8 centuries (normally 6 in secondus to decius cohorts), the one that was led by the primus pilus (the first) had about 10 centuries, or 800 men. It also had "extra" men, who were cooks, clerks, etc. who did not fight.
The primus pilus was so called because his own century was in the first file (pilus) of the first cohort (primus). Only eight officers in a fully officered legion outranked the primus pilus: The legate (lēgātus legiōnis), commanding the legion; the senior tribune (tribunus laticlavus); the Camp Prefect (praefectus castrorum); and the five junior tribunes (tribūnī angusticlāviī).
In contrast to a modern military organization, a centurion is analogous to a whole range of modern ranks. Ordinary century commanders would be equivalent to a modern army's Captains or Majors that have been commissioned from the ranks. The primus pilus with his senior staff role might be considered equivalent to a modern Lt Colonel (again gaining his promotion through the ranks).
Due to similarity between Latin words pilus (file) and pilum, this rank is often incorrectly translated as "first spear centurion".[1]