MAJOR
'Major' is a military rank the use of which varies according to country. Moreover, 'Major' frequently denotes a mid-level command status officer (immediately superior to the rank of Captain and immediately subordinate to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel), however in some armies 'major' is essentially a senior NCO (non-commissioned officer), a usage derived from "sergeant-major".
| Contents |
| Early history |
| Officer rank |
| Non-commissioned rank |
| Use as a suffix |
| Links to Major ranks by country |
| Links to ranks equivalent to Major by country |
| See also |
| Sources and references |
Early history
In considering terms of rank it is important to understand that the early evolution of the terms often was outside of English, and that the term always has been of essentially international distribution. In general European usage, the rank of ''Major'' originates from Romance comparative adjectives with the sense of Latin ''maior'' (also spelled ''major''), meaning 'senior' and 'greater'. Historically all Majors, Sergeants Major, and Major Generals (to use English forms) derive from the rank, or rather the office of Sergeant Major. The Sergeant Major was the senior sergeant responsible for marshalling a battalion of pike. He was presumably the senior Company Sergeant from among the companies providing the pikemen, or at least a commissioned officer considered analogous to such a non-commissioned officer (sergeant). Hence, ''Major'' is an abbreviation of ''Sergeant Major'': the (Sergeant) Major 'the senior sergeant'. This is obscured in French and English, by the later evolution of a separate, non-commissioned rank called ''sergent major'' or Sergeant Major. Similarly, the rank of Major General is truncated from original Sergeant Major General 'the sergeant major or sergeant major-like soldier with general authority over the marshalling of the whole army'. Originally, there existed a single Sergeant Major General in each major field force.
The original usage is illustrated in the first recorded(?) English (1643) attestation, as "Sergeant-Major", 'the third-in-command of a regiment'. The early German equivalent was Feld Wachtmeister, in which Feld functions as ''major'' and Wachtmeister ('watch master' or 'quarter[-ing] master') is the more commonly used term for a cavalry sergeant. Similarly we early on find Spanish Majors referred to Sargento Major.
In several European navies, the rank of Major was used in the sense or form "Pilot-Major" to denote the senior deck officer of a vessel in contrast to the Captain (or Captain General) who was typically an Army officer, with little naval knowledge, assigned to command the mission on which a vessel was embarked. The English equivalent of this usage is Master, as opposed to the Captain or Commander.
Officer rank
In most comparative military scales a Major is a senior officer ranking above company grade ranks that usually include captain and between one and three lower subaltern officer ranks. In the NATO rank code, Major as a Level 3 officer. The naval equivalent to a Major is, in some nations, the rank of Lieutenant Commander.
By the time of the English Civil War, Major had become a rank in itself, and was assigned to mid-level officers on the battlefield, and was most often used by those serving as aides to a superior General.
The rank of Major General arose during the 18th century, and was a shortening of the rank Sergeant Major General.
By the 19th century, the rank of Major was being used by nearly every English-speaking military, and some others. It quickly developed into a senior staff position, and was seen as the first of the "command" or "field" ranks, in contrast to the rank of Captain and below, which were regarded as "company ranks".
Non-commissioned rank
In the French military, a major is the most senior non-commissioned rank. This rank can only be awarded by senior NCO (''adjudants-chefs''), after a very selective exam. Officially it is not a non-commissioned rank, but an intermediate rank between non-commissioned and commissioned.
Use as a suffix
The rank of Major may still be found in its original form as a suffix (either hyphenated or not), to denote an officer more senior to the base rank. As a suffix, ''major'' derives from a comparative adjective major 'greater' and 'senior' following the modified Romance language noun; e.g. Adjutant-Major, and Colonel-Major. It is also still commonly used in the rank of Sergeant Major, and is also used in ceremonial appointments such as Drum-Major and Pipe-Major.
In Argentina, the armed forces all use the rank of sub-officer-major as the highest non-commissioned rank. The army and air force also use the officer rank of major. The army has a rank of colonel-major, but this is essentially an automatic promotion for long-serving colonels rather than a functional rank in its own right. The Argentine National Gendarmerie uses the rank of commandant-major, which is roughly equivalent to a colonel or chief superintendent in the commonwealth.
It is similarly still used as a prefix for the General officer rank of Major-General, which is similarly used in many other languages (e.g. Generaal-Majoor in Dutch).
Links to Major ranks by country
★ Major (Canada)
★ Major (Germany)
★ Commandant (the Netherlands)
★ Major (United Kingdom)
★ Major (United States)
★ Major (Sweden)
★ Maggiore in the Italian armed forces except navy
★ Major (Denmark)
★ Jagran (جګړن) (Afghanistan)
Links to ranks equivalent to Major by country
★ Commandant (France)
★ Commandant (Ireland)
★ Commandant (the Netherlands)
★ Sojwa (North Korea)
★ Soryong (South Korea)
★ Bojnik (Croatia)
★ Sturmbannführer (Nazi Germany)
★ Tagmatarkhis (Greece)
★ Binbaşı (Turkey)
★ Comandante (Spain)
★ å°‘æ ¡ (China)
See also
★ Comparative military ranks
★ British Army officer rank insignia
★ U.S. Army officer rank insignia
★ Swedish Army Rank Insignia
★ Mayor
Sources and references
★ Etymology on line
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