'Commandant General' is a rank.
Commandant-General was a
military rank in
South African Republic and the
Orange Free State Republic as well as in the
Union of South Africa and the
Republic of South Africa. The Commandant-General of one of the
Boer republics was the head of its
armed forces. The rank of full
General in the
South African Army was renamed "Commandant-General" from
1956 to
1968.
During the
Irish Civil War of 1922-23, the
Irregulars, or anti-Treaty IRA, applied this term to the leaders of their various brigades throughout the country. The term was acquired from the
Afrikaner rank, through veterans of the
Irish Transvaal Brigade.
Commandant General is the highest rank in the
Argentine National Gendarmerie, and is held by the National Director of the gendarmerie and his senior deputies. Depending on the appointment, it may be equal to any Argentine Army rank from
Brigade General to the highest Argentine Army rank,
Lieutenant General.
See also
★
Commandant General Royal Marines