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Master (naval)

The master, or sailing master, is a historical rank for a naval officer trained in and responsible for the navigation of a sailing vessel.

John Fryer, Master of HMAV Bounty.

In the Royal Navy, the master was originally a warrant officer who ranked with, but after, the lieutenants. The rank became a commissioned officer rank and was renamed navigating lieutenant in 1867; the rank gradually fell out of use from around 1890 since all lieutenants were required to pass the same examinations.

When the United States Navy was formed in 1794, master was listed as one of the warrant officer ranks and ranked between midshipmen and lieutenants. The rank was also a commissioned officer rank from 1837 until it was replaced with the current rank of lieutenant, junior grade in 1883.

Russia edit

Until 1733 the sailing masters in the Imperial Russian Navy were rated as petty officers, but in that year the rank of Master was introduced after the British model. Masters ranked above sub-lieutenants, but under lieutenants. Meritorious masters could be given lieutenant's rank, but only if they were noblemen. In 1741 the rank of master was abolished, and the officers holding that rank were promoted to lieutenants, while second masters and master's mates became ensigns. Henceforth masters could be promoted to sea officers, even if they were commoners.[1]

The Pauline military reforms also included the navy, and the sailing department henceforth contained masters of VIII Class (rank as lieutenant commanders); masters of IX Class (below lieutenant commander but above lieutenant); masters of XII Class (rank as sub-lieutenants); masters of XIV Class (junior to sub-lieutenants); as well as master's mates and master's apprentices which were rated as petty officers.[2]

In 1827 a navigation corps was founded, which also was in charge of the hydrographic service. In common with other non-executive corps in the Russian navy, members of the navigation corps were given military ranks. This corps contained one major general, and a number of colonels, lieutenant colonels, captains, staff captains, lieutenants, second lieutenants and ensigns, as well as conductors (warrant officers). In 1885 the navigation corps was put under abolishment, and its responsibilities were transferred to the executive corps.[3][4]

Spain edit

Spanish sailing masters belonged to a navigation corps, called Cuerpo de Pilotos. They were, unlike their British counterparts, theoretically trained at the famous navigation schools, called Real Colegios Seminarios de San Telmo, in Seville and Málaga. In order to be accepted at these schools, the applicant had to be a Spaniard between eight and 14 years of age. Colored persons, Romani people, heretics, Jews, those punished by the Inquisition, and those whose parents pursued disreputable professions, were not eligible for enrollment. The master's apprentices were called meritorios de pilotaje and were at sea rated as common seamen. In order to become a master's assistant, called pilotín, during the 18th century, three voyages in Europe and one back and forth to America was required, as well as having passed a special examination. Promotion to second master could only take place if a berth was available.[5]

Masters, called primeros pilotos, were originally ranked as ensigns, while the second masters, called pilotos, were ranked below officers but above petty officers. Later the masters were given rank as lieutenant commanders or lieutenants, while the second masters were ranked as sub-lieutenants or ensigns according to seniority. Master's assistant lacked formal rank. From 1821, masters ranked as lieutenants, second masters as sub-lieutenants, and third masters as ensigns. Promotion from the navigation corps to the sea officer corps was not unusual.[6]

Early on, members of the navigation corps sought to improve its status. It was not until 1770, however, that the sailing masters received a uniform different from the petty officers. Under royal orders members of the navigation corps were from 1781 to be called Don, be regarded as caballeros (gentlemen), carry small swords, and take oaths by swearing by a crucifix. In 1823, the senior ranks of the navigation corps was transferred to the executive corps, and in 1846 the corps was abolished and its remaining members included among the sea officers with the rank of sub-lieutenant.[5]

Sweden edit

Sailing master (ansvarsstyrman, literally: "responsible navigator") was in the Royal Swedish Navy until 1868 a berth, held by the ship's senior warrant officer of the sailing branch, in charge of navigation, steering, anchors, and ballast. In 1868, the responsibility for navigation was transferred to a commissioned officer berth, the navigating officer, and the sailing master became an assistant navigator in charge of navigation stores.[7]

Royal Navy edit

In the Middle Ages, when 'warships' were typically merchant vessels hired by the crown, the man in charge of the ship and its mariners, as with all ships and indeed most endeavours ashore, was termed the master; the company of embarked soldiers was commanded by their own captain.

From the time of the reforms of Henry VIII, the master was a warrant officer, appointed by the Council of the Marine (later the Navy Board) who also built and provisioned the Navy's ships. The master was tasked with sailing the ship as directed by the captain, who fought the ship when an enemy was engaged. The captain had a commission from (and was responsible to) the Admiralty, who were in charge of the Navy's strategy and tactics.

Duties edit

The master's main duty was navigation, taking the ship's position at least daily and setting the sails as appropriate for the required course and conditions. During combat, he was stationed on the quarterdeck, next to the captain. The master was responsible for fitting out the ship, and making sure they had all the sailing supplies necessary for the voyage. The master also was in charge of stowing the hold and ensuring the ship was not too weighted down to sail effectively. The master, through his subordinates, hoisted and lowered the anchor, docked and undocked the ship, and inspected the ship daily for problems with the anchors, sails, masts, ropes, or pulleys. Issues were brought to the attention of the master, who would notify the captain. The master was in charge of the entry of parts of the official log such as weather, position, and expenditures.[8][9]

Promotion edit

Masters were promoted from the rank of the master's mates, quartermasters, or midshipmen. Masters were also recruited from the merchant service. A prospective master had to pass an oral examination before a senior captain and three masters at Trinity House.[8] After passing the examination, they would be eligible to receive a warrant from the Navy Board, but promotion was not automatic.[10]

Second master edit

Second master was a rating introduced in 1753 that indicated a deputy master on a first-, second- or third-rate ship-of-the-line. A second master was generally a master's mate who had passed his examination for master and was deemed worthy of being master of a vessel. Master's mates would act as second master of vessels too small to be allocated a warranted master.[11] Second masters were paid significantly more than master's mates, £5 5s per month.[12] Second masters were given the first opportunity for master vacancies as they occurred.[13]

Uniforms edit

Originally, the sailing master did not have an official officer uniform, which caused problems when they were captured because they had trouble convincing their captors they should be treated as officers and not ordinary sailors. In 1787 the warrant officers of wardroom rank (master, purser and surgeon) received an official uniform, but it did not distinguish them by rank. In 1807, masters, along with pursers, received their own uniform.[14]

Transition to commissioned officer edit

By the classic Age of Sail the Master in the Royal Navy had become the warrant officer trained specifically in navigation, the senior warrant officer rank, and the second most important officer aboard rated ships.[15] In 1808, Masters (along with Pursers and Surgeons) were given similar status to commissioned officers, as warrant officers of wardroom rank. The master ate in the wardroom with the other officers, had a large cabin in the gunroom, and had a smaller day cabin next to the captain's cabin on the quarterdeck for charts and navigation equipment.[14]

However, the number of sailing-masters halved from 140 to 74 between the years 1840–1860:[16] partly because the pay and privileges were less than equivalent ranks in the military branch, and also because the master's responsibilities had been largely assumed by the executive officers.[17][18] In 1843 the wardroom warrant officers were given commissioned status. The Admiralty, under the First Lord of the Admiralty the Duke of Somerset, began to phase out the title of master after 1862.[19] The ranks of staff commander and staff captain were introduced in 1863 and 1864 respectively; and in 1867 the Masters Branch was re-organised as the Navigating Branch with a new pay scale, with the following ranks:[20][21]

  • staff captain
  • staff commander
  • navigating lieutenant (formerly Master)
  • navigating sub-lieutenant (second Master)
  • navigating midshipman (Master's assistant)
  • navigating cadet (formerly Naval cadet 2nd class)

The Royal Naval College exams for navigating lieutenant and lieutenant were the same after 1869.[22] By 1872 the number of navigating cadets had fallen to twelve, and an Admiralty experiment in 1873 under the First Sea Lord George Goschen further merged the duties of navigating lieutenants and sailing masters with those of lieutenants and staff commanders.[16] There were no more masters warranted after 1883, and the last one retired in 1892.[23]

Although the actual rank of navigating lieutenant fell out of use about the same time,[17] lieutenants who had passed their navigating exams were distinguished in the Navy List by an N in a circle by their name, and by N† for those passed for first-class ships. The last staff commander disappeared in around 1904, and the last staff captain left the Active List in 1913.[24][25]

20th century edit

An anonymous article in The Naval Review in 1927[26] included a number of suggestions for the instruction and duties of Navigating Officers: the author recommended that they should complete (as part of their first-class ship course) a period of one or two months at either the Naval Staff College or the Senior Officers' Technical School at Portsmouth. During this period they were to be instructed in:

  • Appreciating situations
  • Drafting orders
  • Staff organisation
  • Battle orders and instructions
  • Technical capabilities of all types of vessels and weapons
  • Methods in use or suggested, for using the Fleet both strategically and tactically
  • Methods of using all arms and weapons
  • Principal methods of attack and defence of Trade

They should also, during their time at the Navigation School, be more fully instructed in:[26]

  • All varieties of battle manoeuvres
  • Searching, sweeping, and patrolling problems
  • Strategical plotting
  • Tactical plotting

"In ships at sea the navigating officer should be regarded as the Captain's Staff Officer. All Operational questions should be dealt with by him and the captain should regard him as his expert assistant in such matters. The drafting of orders and the writing of reports on operations, exercises, etc., should be his responsibility and not that of the captain's secretary."[26]

United States Navy edit

Master, originally sailing master, was a historic warrant officer rank of the United States Navy, above that of a midshipman, after 1819 passed midshipman, after 1862 ensign, and below a lieutenant.[27]

Some masters were appointed to command ships, with the rank of master commandant.[28] In 1837, sailing master was renamed master, master commandant was renamed commander, and some masters were commissioned as officers, formally "master in line for promotion" to distinguish them from the warrant masters who would not be promoted.[28]

After 1855, passed midshipmen who were graduates of the Naval Academy filled the positions of master.[29] Both the commissioned officer rank of master and warrant officer rank of master were maintained until both were merged into the current rank of lieutenant, junior grade on 3 March 1883.[30]

In 1862 masters wore a gold bar for rank insignia, which became a silver bar in 1877. In 1881 they started wearing sleeve stripes of one 12-inch (13 mm) and one 14-inch-wide (6.4 mm) strip of gold lace, still used for the rank of lieutenant, junior grade.[29]

Master as a non-commissioned officer rank edit

France edit

Within the French Navy, there exists a number of "master" ranks.[31]

OR-9 OR-8 OR-6 OR-5
Shoulder        
Sleeve        
French Maître principal Premier maître Maître Second-maître
English translation Chief master First master Master Second master

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Порядок прохождения службы штурманскими чинами в период с 1725 по 1797 гг. Retrieved 2012-08-24
  2. ^ Организация и структура штурманской службы на флоте в период правления императора Павла I Retrieved 2012-08-24.
  3. ^ Кризис штурманского дела. Реформы 1802-1804 гг. Изменения в прохождении службы штурманскими чинами в первой половине XIX века Retrieved 2012-08-24.
  4. ^ Корпус флотских штурманов Retrieved 2012-08-24.
  5. ^ a b Oficiales y dotación de los navíos de la Real Armada española de finales del siglo XVIII. Organización Retrieved 2013-01-04.
  6. ^ José Mª Blanca Carlier, El Cuerpo de Pilotos de la Armada Retrieved 2012-01-04.
  7. ^ Nordisk familjebok/1800-talsutgåvan 15. sp. 821-822 Retrieved 2012-08-19
  8. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 11 October 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2009.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 April 2001. Retrieved 23 April 2009.
  10. ^ Lavery 1989, p. 101
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 October 2014. Retrieved 25 April 2009.
  12. ^ Lavery 1989, p. 326.
  13. ^ Rodger 1986, p. 216.
  14. ^ a b Blake, Lawrence 2005, p. 71.
  15. ^ Lewis, Michael (1960). A Social History of the Navy. London: Ruskin House. p. 241. OCLC 2832855.
  16. ^ a b "House of Lords debate: Royal Navy promotion and retirement-observations". Hansard. 225: 862. 2 July 1875.
  17. ^ a b Colomb, Philip Howard (1898). Memoirs of Sir Astley Cooper Key, GCB, DCL. London: Methuen and Co. pp. 319–321.
  18. ^ "House of Commons reports: Masters in the Royal Navy". Hansard. 181: 1317–22. 1 March 1866.
  19. ^ "House of Lords debate: Staff Commanders and Navigating Lieutenants". Hansard. 212: 161–165. 25 June 1872.
  20. ^ Lewis 1939, pp. 212, 230.
  21. ^ "Admiralty Circular, No. 32.-W". . June 1870. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  22. ^ "Admiralty Circular, No. 16.-W". The Navy List. June 1870.
  23. ^ Cox, Noel (1999). "Officers' ranks and insignia (in 3 parts)". Navy Today. 1 (38, 39, 40). Wellington, NZ: Defence Communications Group.
  24. ^ Webb, Richard, ed. (November 1947). "Correspondence: Post Captain" (PDF). The Naval Review. XXX (4). Privately published: 384.
  25. ^ Staff Capt. John Davis Moulton, promoted staff captain 1903, seniority as navigating lieutenant 15 March 1876, Retired List September 1913.The Navy List. March 1913. p. 147L.
  26. ^ a b c "The duties of Navigating Officers" (PDF). The Naval Review. XV (3): 607–8 [171–2]. August 1927.
  27. ^ United States Department of the Navy (1877). Regulations for the Government of the Navy of the United States 1876. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. pp. 5–6.
  28. ^ a b "Proud Beginnings: History of Warrant Officers in the US Navy". Naval History and Heritage Command. 16 March 1999. Retrieved 15 September 2009.
  29. ^ a b "Lieutenant". Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  30. ^ Mallory, John A. (1914). Compiled Statutes of the United States 1913. Vol. 1. St. Paul: Wast Publishing Company. p. 1062.
  31. ^ (in French). 15 June 2004. pp. 3793–3867. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 4 June 2021.

Bibliography edit

  • Nicholas Blake, Richard Lawrence (August 2005). The Illustrated Companion to Nelson's Navy (2005 ed.). Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-3275-4. – Total pages: 207
  • Lavery, Brian (1989). Nelson's Navy: The Ships, Men and Organization. Annapolis, Md: Naval Institute Press. p. 326. ISBN 0-87021-258-3.
  • Lewis, Michael (1939). England's Sea-Officers. W.W. Norton & Co.
  • Rodger, N.A.M. (1986). The Wooden World: An Anatomy of the Georgian Navy. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-987-1.

master, naval, this, article, about, naval, rank, masters, military, nautical, vessels, captain, master, mariner, naval, rank, master, commander, commander, royal, navy, master, sailing, master, historical, rank, naval, officer, trained, responsible, navigatio. This article is about naval rank For masters of non military nautical vessels see Sea captain and Master Mariner For the naval rank Master and Commander see Commander Royal Navy The master or sailing master is a historical rank for a naval officer trained in and responsible for the navigation of a sailing vessel John Fryer Master of HMAV Bounty In the Royal Navy the master was originally a warrant officer who ranked with but after the lieutenants The rank became a commissioned officer rank and was renamed navigating lieutenant in 1867 the rank gradually fell out of use from around 1890 since all lieutenants were required to pass the same examinations When the United States Navy was formed in 1794 master was listed as one of the warrant officer ranks and ranked between midshipmen and lieutenants The rank was also a commissioned officer rank from 1837 until it was replaced with the current rank of lieutenant junior grade in 1883 Contents 1 Russia 2 Spain 3 Sweden 4 Royal Navy 4 1 Duties 4 2 Promotion 4 3 Second master 4 4 Uniforms 4 5 Transition to commissioned officer 4 6 20th century 5 United States Navy 6 Master as a non commissioned officer rank 6 1 France 7 See also 8 References 9 BibliographyRussia editUntil 1733 the sailing masters in the Imperial Russian Navy were rated as petty officers but in that year the rank of Master was introduced after the British model Masters ranked above sub lieutenants but under lieutenants Meritorious masters could be given lieutenant s rank but only if they were noblemen In 1741 the rank of master was abolished and the officers holding that rank were promoted to lieutenants while second masters and master s mates became ensigns Henceforth masters could be promoted to sea officers even if they were commoners 1 The Pauline military reforms also included the navy and the sailing department henceforth contained masters of VIII Class rank as lieutenant commanders masters of IX Class below lieutenant commander but above lieutenant masters of XII Class rank as sub lieutenants masters of XIV Class junior to sub lieutenants as well as master s mates and master s apprentices which were rated as petty officers 2 In 1827 a navigation corps was founded which also was in charge of the hydrographic service In common with other non executive corps in the Russian navy members of the navigation corps were given military ranks This corps contained one major general and a number of colonels lieutenant colonels captains staff captains lieutenants second lieutenants and ensigns as well as conductors warrant officers In 1885 the navigation corps was put under abolishment and its responsibilities were transferred to the executive corps 3 4 Spain editSpanish sailing masters belonged to a navigation corps called Cuerpo de Pilotos They were unlike their British counterparts theoretically trained at the famous navigation schools called Real Colegios Seminarios de San Telmo in Seville and Malaga In order to be accepted at these schools the applicant had to be a Spaniard between eight and 14 years of age Colored persons Romani people heretics Jews those punished by the Inquisition and those whose parents pursued disreputable professions were not eligible for enrollment The master s apprentices were called meritorios de pilotaje and were at sea rated as common seamen In order to become a master s assistant called pilotin during the 18th century three voyages in Europe and one back and forth to America was required as well as having passed a special examination Promotion to second master could only take place if a berth was available 5 Masters called primeros pilotos were originally ranked as ensigns while the second masters called pilotos were ranked below officers but above petty officers Later the masters were given rank as lieutenant commanders or lieutenants while the second masters were ranked as sub lieutenants or ensigns according to seniority Master s assistant lacked formal rank From 1821 masters ranked as lieutenants second masters as sub lieutenants and third masters as ensigns Promotion from the navigation corps to the sea officer corps was not unusual 6 Early on members of the navigation corps sought to improve its status It was not until 1770 however that the sailing masters received a uniform different from the petty officers Under royal orders members of the navigation corps were from 1781 to be called Don be regarded as caballeros gentlemen carry small swords and take oaths by swearing by a crucifix In 1823 the senior ranks of the navigation corps was transferred to the executive corps and in 1846 the corps was abolished and its remaining members included among the sea officers with the rank of sub lieutenant 5 Sweden editSailing master ansvarsstyrman literally responsible navigator was in the Royal Swedish Navy until 1868 a berth held by the ship s senior warrant officer of the sailing branch in charge of navigation steering anchors and ballast In 1868 the responsibility for navigation was transferred to a commissioned officer berth the navigating officer and the sailing master became an assistant navigator in charge of navigation stores 7 Royal Navy editIn the Middle Ages when warships were typically merchant vessels hired by the crown the man in charge of the ship and its mariners as with all ships and indeed most endeavours ashore was termed the master the company of embarked soldiers was commanded by their own captain From the time of the reforms of Henry VIII the master was a warrant officer appointed by the Council of the Marine later the Navy Board who also built and provisioned the Navy s ships The master was tasked with sailing the ship as directed by the captain who fought the ship when an enemy was engaged The captain had a commission from and was responsible to the Admiralty who were in charge of the Navy s strategy and tactics Duties edit The master s main duty was navigation taking the ship s position at least daily and setting the sails as appropriate for the required course and conditions During combat he was stationed on the quarterdeck next to the captain The master was responsible for fitting out the ship and making sure they had all the sailing supplies necessary for the voyage The master also was in charge of stowing the hold and ensuring the ship was not too weighted down to sail effectively The master through his subordinates hoisted and lowered the anchor docked and undocked the ship and inspected the ship daily for problems with the anchors sails masts ropes or pulleys Issues were brought to the attention of the master who would notify the captain The master was in charge of the entry of parts of the official log such as weather position and expenditures 8 9 Promotion edit Masters were promoted from the rank of the master s mates quartermasters or midshipmen Masters were also recruited from the merchant service A prospective master had to pass an oral examination before a senior captain and three masters at Trinity House 8 After passing the examination they would be eligible to receive a warrant from the Navy Board but promotion was not automatic 10 Second master edit Second master was a rating introduced in 1753 that indicated a deputy master on a first second or third rate ship of the line A second master was generally a master s mate who had passed his examination for master and was deemed worthy of being master of a vessel Master s mates would act as second master of vessels too small to be allocated a warranted master 11 Second masters were paid significantly more than master s mates 5 5s per month 12 Second masters were given the first opportunity for master vacancies as they occurred 13 Uniforms edit Originally the sailing master did not have an official officer uniform which caused problems when they were captured because they had trouble convincing their captors they should be treated as officers and not ordinary sailors In 1787 the warrant officers of wardroom rank master purser and surgeon received an official uniform but it did not distinguish them by rank In 1807 masters along with pursers received their own uniform 14 Transition to commissioned officer edit See also Warrant officer gt Demise of the Royal Naval warrants By the classic Age of Sail the Master in the Royal Navy had become the warrant officer trained specifically in navigation the senior warrant officer rank and the second most important officer aboard rated ships 15 In 1808 Masters along with Pursers and Surgeons were given similar status to commissioned officers as warrant officers of wardroom rank The master ate in the wardroom with the other officers had a large cabin in the gunroom and had a smaller day cabin next to the captain s cabin on the quarterdeck for charts and navigation equipment 14 However the number of sailing masters halved from 140 to 74 between the years 1840 1860 16 partly because the pay and privileges were less than equivalent ranks in the military branch and also because the master s responsibilities had been largely assumed by the executive officers 17 18 In 1843 the wardroom warrant officers were given commissioned status The Admiralty under the First Lord of the Admiralty the Duke of Somerset began to phase out the title of master after 1862 19 The ranks of staff commander and staff captain were introduced in 1863 and 1864 respectively and in 1867 the Masters Branch was re organised as the Navigating Branch with a new pay scale with the following ranks 20 21 staff captain staff commander navigating lieutenant formerly Master navigating sub lieutenant second Master navigating midshipman Master s assistant navigating cadet formerly Naval cadet 2nd class The Royal Naval College exams for navigating lieutenant and lieutenant were the same after 1869 22 By 1872 the number of navigating cadets had fallen to twelve and an Admiralty experiment in 1873 under the First Sea Lord George Goschen further merged the duties of navigating lieutenants and sailing masters with those of lieutenants and staff commanders 16 There were no more masters warranted after 1883 and the last one retired in 1892 23 Although the actual rank of navigating lieutenant fell out of use about the same time 17 lieutenants who had passed their navigating exams were distinguished in the Navy List by an N in a circle by their name and by N for those passed for first class ships The last staff commander disappeared in around 1904 and the last staff captain left the Active List in 1913 24 25 20th century edit An anonymous article in The Naval Review in 1927 26 included a number of suggestions for the instruction and duties of Navigating Officers the author recommended that they should complete as part of their first class ship course a period of one or two months at either the Naval Staff College or the Senior Officers Technical School at Portsmouth During this period they were to be instructed in Appreciating situations Drafting orders Staff organisation Battle orders and instructions Technical capabilities of all types of vessels and weapons Methods in use or suggested for using the Fleet both strategically and tactically Methods of using all arms and weapons Principal methods of attack and defence of Trade They should also during their time at the Navigation School be more fully instructed in 26 All varieties of battle manoeuvres Searching sweeping and patrolling problems Strategical plotting Tactical plotting In ships at sea the navigating officer should be regarded as the Captain s Staff Officer All Operational questions should be dealt with by him and the captain should regard him as his expert assistant in such matters The drafting of orders and the writing of reports on operations exercises etc should be his responsibility and not that of the captain s secretary 26 United States Navy editMaster originally sailing master was a historic warrant officer rank of the United States Navy above that of a midshipman after 1819 passed midshipman after 1862 ensign and below a lieutenant 27 Some masters were appointed to command ships with the rank of master commandant 28 In 1837 sailing master was renamed master master commandant was renamed commander and some masters were commissioned as officers formally master in line for promotion to distinguish them from the warrant masters who would not be promoted 28 After 1855 passed midshipmen who were graduates of the Naval Academy filled the positions of master 29 Both the commissioned officer rank of master and warrant officer rank of master were maintained until both were merged into the current rank of lieutenant junior grade on 3 March 1883 30 In 1862 masters wore a gold bar for rank insignia which became a silver bar in 1877 In 1881 they started wearing sleeve stripes of one 1 2 inch 13 mm and one 1 4 inch wide 6 4 mm strip of gold lace still used for the rank of lieutenant junior grade 29 Master as a non commissioned officer rank editFrance edit Within the French Navy there exists a number of master ranks 31 OR 9 OR 8 OR 6 OR 5 Shoulder nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Sleeve nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp French Maitre principal Premier maitre Maitre Second maitre English translation Chief master First master Master Second masterSee also editMaster s mate QuartermasterReferences edit Poryadok prohozhdeniya sluzhby shturmanskimi chinami v period s 1725 po 1797 gg Retrieved 2012 08 24 Organizaciya i struktura shturmanskoj sluzhby na flote v period pravleniya imperatora Pavla I Retrieved 2012 08 24 Krizis shturmanskogo dela Reformy 1802 1804 gg Izmeneniya v prohozhdenii sluzhby shturmanskimi chinami v pervoj polovine XIX veka Retrieved 2012 08 24 Korpus flotskih shturmanov Retrieved 2012 08 24 a b Oficiales y dotacion de los navios de la Real Armada espanola de finales del siglo XVIII Organizacion Retrieved 2013 01 04 Jose Mª Blanca Carlier El Cuerpo de Pilotos de la Armada Retrieved 2012 01 04 Nordisk familjebok 1800 talsutgavan 15 sp 821 822 Retrieved 2012 08 19 a b Officer ranks in the Royal Navy Archived from the original on 11 October 2014 Retrieved 16 September 2009 Duties of the Master Archived from the original on 15 April 2001 Retrieved 23 April 2009 Lavery 1989 p 101 Officer ranks in the Royal Navy Archived from the original on 11 October 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2009 Lavery 1989 p 326 Rodger 1986 p 216 a b Blake Lawrence 2005 p 71 Lewis Michael 1960 A Social History of the Navy London Ruskin House p 241 OCLC 2832855 a b House of Lords debate Royal Navy promotion and retirement observations Hansard 225 862 2 July 1875 a b Colomb Philip Howard 1898 Memoirs of Sir Astley Cooper Key GCB DCL London Methuen and Co pp 319 321 House of Commons reports Masters in the Royal Navy Hansard 181 1317 22 1 March 1866 House of Lords debate Staff Commanders and Navigating Lieutenants Hansard 212 161 165 25 June 1872 Lewis 1939 pp 212 230 Admiralty Circular No 32 W The Navy List June 1870 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 2 April 2012 Admiralty Circular No 16 W The Navy List June 1870 Cox Noel 1999 Officers ranks and insignia in 3 parts Navy Today 1 38 39 40 Wellington NZ Defence Communications Group Webb Richard ed November 1947 Correspondence Post Captain PDF The Naval Review XXX 4 Privately published 384 Staff Capt John Davis Moulton promoted staff captain 1903 seniority as navigating lieutenant 15 March 1876 Retired List September 1913 The Navy List March 1913 p 147L a b c The duties of Navigating Officers PDF The Naval Review XV 3 607 8 171 2 August 1927 United States Department of the Navy 1877 Regulations for the Government of the Navy of the United States 1876 Washington DC Government Printing Office pp 5 6 a b Proud Beginnings History of Warrant Officers in the US Navy Naval History and Heritage Command 16 March 1999 Retrieved 15 September 2009 a b Lieutenant Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 21 September 2009 Mallory John A 1914 Compiled Statutes of the United States 1913 Vol 1 St Paul Wast Publishing Company p 1062 Instruction n 1 DEF EMM RH CPM relative aux uniformes et tenues dans la Marine du 15 juin 2004 in French 15 June 2004 pp 3793 3867 Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Bibliography editNicholas Blake Richard Lawrence August 2005 The Illustrated Companion to Nelson s Navy 2005 ed Stackpole Books ISBN 0 8117 3275 4 Total pages 207 Lavery Brian 1989 Nelson s Navy The Ships Men and Organization Annapolis Md Naval Institute Press p 326 ISBN 0 87021 258 3 Lewis Michael 1939 England s Sea Officers W W Norton amp Co Rodger N A M 1986 The Wooden World An Anatomy of the Georgian Navy Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 987 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Master naval amp oldid 1219957771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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