Akapitan (derived fromFrench:capitaine; beforeLatin:capitaneus,lit. '(military) leader, count, or chairman of a parish council'; or Latin:caput,lit. 'head, main, chief, primary, principal, general, central, leading', etc.) is used manifold as rank, grade, or rank designation in the Army, Air Force or Navy of numerous countries and armed forces. In member countries of NATO-allianceKapitan is a commissioned officer rank, ratedOF-2 in line to the NATO officers rank system. The almostequivalent OF-2 officer, e.g. in the US Army, is theCaptain rank.
Kapitan (appointment, later rank) was used first in the middle age in France in order to designate leaders of the military districts or regions. In the second half of the 16th century, it came in use to specify commanding officers ofcompany-sized units. In the 19th century it became gradually a military rank, and was used in combination with other noun, e.g.Stabs-kapitan (ru:штабс-капитан Russian Imperial Army)Kapitan-leytenant (naval forces). The rank designationKapitan contains a common syllable and historical roots in a number of European countries at the one hand. Slight national variations of spelling are for the sake of the historical and heraldic tradition, at the other hand.
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| Kapitan Kапита́н | |
|---|---|
Army and air force insignia | |
| Country | |
| Service branch | |
| Non-NATO rank | OF-2 |
| Formation | 16th century |
| Next higher rank | Majór |
| Next lower rank | Stárshiy leytenánt |
| Equivalent ranks | Kapitan-leytenant |
In Russia, the military rankKapitan was introduced in the 16th century to foreign officers, appointed to commander of company-sized units. In the 17th – 18th century this rank became open to all company commanders, serving in the regular army. In the cavalierly (indragoon regiments andSpecial Corps of Gendarmes) the equivalent toKapitan wasRotmister (derived from the GermanRittmeister), and in theCossacks corps it wasYesaul.
In theRussian Army (1855–1917) and in the so-calledWhite Army braid shoulder boards with one central stripe have been worn (see picture 1, below). As the Major-rank was abolished in May 1884, the Kapitan-rank was upgraded to level VIII in the rank table. However, theGuards kapitan became equivalent to genericPodpolkovnik in the Army.
In the civil administrationKapitan of the infantry was equivalent to theCouncil assessor (ru:коллежский асессор; kollezhsky asessor) from 1884, andTitular adviser (ru:титулярный советник, tituljarny sovetnik) until 1884.
| lower rank: Shtabs-kapitan (en:Staff captain) | Kapitan (en:Captain) | higher rank: Major (en: Major) |
Some examples of rank insignia (epaulette, shoulder board), used byRIA IRA, are shown below:
In the armed forces of the Soviet Union (later Russian Federation) theKapitan´s rank (to Army, Air Force, and Navy land services) 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] It was equivalent to the rankkapitan-leytenant (ru:капитан-лейтенант) of the Navy.
If military personnel serves in a guards formation, or on a guards war ship, to the rank designation will be placed in front the noun guards (e.g. "Gurds kapitan"). Civil – or military personnel with a specific defined level of expertise or knowledge in medical or judicial professions, to the military rank will be added the noun "legal or the wording "medical service". Further adding to the military rank designation might be "retired" or "on retirement".
Personnel serving in the executive of the Russian Federation might be specified by rank designation as follows.
| lower rank: Starshy leytenant (en: 1st lieutenant) | Kapitan (en: Captain) | higher rank: Major (en: Major) |
Some examples of rank insignia (shoulder, collar, and sleeve), used by Russia and the USSR, are shown below: