Captain 1st rank
- This article is about the OF-5 rank Kapitan 1st rank in Russia and some other post-Soviet states. For the equivalent rank in Anglophone naval forces see Captain (naval); in Germany see Kapitän zur See or Kommodore. It should not be mixed up to the Commodore (rank), often regarded as a one-star rank with a NATO code of OF-6.
Kapitan 1st rank in the Russian navy | |
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Rank insignia | Russian Navy |
Introduction | 1971 |
Rank group | Staff officer |
Army / Air Force | Polkovnik |
NATO equivalent | OF-5 |
Kapitan 1st rank (Russian: Капитан 1-го ранга; literal: captain of the 1st rank) is in the Navy of the Russian Federation the designation to the most senior rank in the staff officer´s career group. The rank is equivalent to Polkovnik in Army and Air Force. The rank might be comparable to Captain (naval) (OF-5) in Anglophone/NATO naval forces.
The rank was introduced in Russia by Peter the Great in 1713. By decision of the so-called military navy commission (ru: Воинская морскaя комиссия) in 1732 the sequence of Kapitan ranks was abolished. However, until 1752 the grade rank Kapitan 1st rank was corresponding to Fleet kapitan (ru: Флота капитан). Finally, the Kapitan ranks were reintroduced September 5 (16), 1751. The Red Army introduced the Kapitan 1st rank rank in 1935, together with a number of other former Russian ranks, and it has been used in many ex-USSR countries, including Russia, to the present day.
Soviet Navy and Russian Federation
The first OF-5 equivalent rank in the Soviet Navy (from 1918 to 1935) was Ship komandir 1st rank, also Ship commander 1st rank, (ru: Командир корабля 1-ого ранга; literal: Commander of the ship 1st rank).
This particular rank was introduced by disposal of the Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union and the Council of People's Commissars, from September 22, 1935.[1]
Pertaining to Engineer aboard of war ships the equivalent rank designation in the Soviet Navy was Kapitan 1st rank-engineer. Any other naval personnel of OF-5 on-shore assignments (e.g. medical service, chemical defence, marines, and naval aviation) have been entitled Polkovnik.
In the navy of the Russian Federation there are three ranks in the staff officer´s (until 1917: stab-ofizer, derived from German Stabsoffizier) career group, which means:
- Kapitan 1st rank (OF-5)
- Kapitan 2nd rank (OF-4)
- Kapitan 3rd rank (OF-3)
junior rank: Kapitan 2nd rank |
Kapitan 1st rank |
senior rank: Kontr-admiral (OF-6) |
Types of rank insignia Kapitan 1st rank and naval equivalents
Rank | Imperial Russian Navy |
Soviet Navy |
Russian Navy | ||||||||||
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insignia shoulder sleeve |
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Kapitan 1st rank Polkovnik Kollezhski sekretar (1904–1917) |
Kapitan 1st rank (1904–1917) |
Commodore engineer mechanic (1896—1904) |
Engineer mechanic 1st rang (1913—1917) |
Polkovnik naval artillery (1913—1917) |
Ship commander 1st rank (1918–1935) |
Kapitan 1st rank (1935–1991) |
...service (1943–1955) |
... parade (1955-1991) |
... parade (1994–2010) |
... parade to white shirt (1994–2010) |
... everyday (1994–2010) |
... parade (since 2010) |
See also
- Ranks and rank insignia of the Russian armed forces until 1917
- Ranks and rank insignia of the Red Army 1918–1935, ... 1935–1940 and ... 1940–1943
- Ranks and rank insignia of the Soviet Army 1943–1955 and Ranks and rank insignia of the Soviet Army 1955–1991,
- Ranks and rank insignia of the Russian Federation´s armed forces 1994–2010
- Naval ranks and insignia of the Russian Federation
References
- This article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the Russian Wikipedia.
- ↑ Decree of the Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union and the Council of People's Commissars, from September 22, 1935, on introduction of individual military rank designation to commanding personnel of the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army.