Commodore (naval): Difference between revisions
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A naval designation that may apply to the senior officer of a group of ships regardless of personal rank, or to a rank between [[captain (naval)]] and [[rear admiral]], which may be a wartime-only temporary rank or the lowest level of admiral | {{subpages}} | ||
A naval designation that may apply to the senior officer of a group of ships regardless of personal rank, or to a rank between [[captain (naval)]] and [[rear admiral]], which may be a wartime-only temporary rank or the lowest level of admiral. | |||
In military use, a commodore may hold the temporary rank in a relatively long-lived post, such as commanding task groups or serving as a chief of staff for a senior officer (e.g., [[Arleigh Burke]] in Fast Carrier Forces, Pacific Fleet). Alternatively, it may be used for a single mission, such as "convoy commodore" or "escort commodore". | |||
"Commodore" is also used in some civilian contexts. Tge senior captain of a maritime company that operates multiple ships usually has the courtesy title of commodore. It is also encountered as a leadership title in groups such as yacht clubs.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:00, 31 July 2024
A naval designation that may apply to the senior officer of a group of ships regardless of personal rank, or to a rank between captain (naval) and rear admiral, which may be a wartime-only temporary rank or the lowest level of admiral.
In military use, a commodore may hold the temporary rank in a relatively long-lived post, such as commanding task groups or serving as a chief of staff for a senior officer (e.g., Arleigh Burke in Fast Carrier Forces, Pacific Fleet). Alternatively, it may be used for a single mission, such as "convoy commodore" or "escort commodore".
"Commodore" is also used in some civilian contexts. Tge senior captain of a maritime company that operates multiple ships usually has the courtesy title of commodore. It is also encountered as a leadership title in groups such as yacht clubs.